IPMI101

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Guide to IPMI (IPMI 101)

IPMI is a necessary evil. Let’s learn to make the best of it.

Setting up IPMI

  1. Install ipmitool
# apt-get install ipmitool
  1. Load IPMI modules (they are included in most upstream kernels)

You may also need a kernel module specific to your motherboard’s manufacture as some BMC/LOMs do not conform to IPMI spec and thus need a translation layer.

# modprobe ipmi_*
  1. Locally connect to the /dev/ipmi interface
# ipmitool shell
> help
> mc info

Securing IPMI

Note that root on the machine is root on the BMC and vice versa.

  1. User administration

(re)set the password, rename the admin account to root and delete any extra users as they can have surprising privilege. You may have to use the BMC’s web interface delete accounts.

# ipmitool shell
> user list 1
ID Name ...
2  ADMIN ...
> user set password 2
User id 2: *******
User id 2: *******
> user set username 2 root
> user disable $other_user_ids
  1. Disable NULL password and cipher suite 0

Note that the $channel is usually 0 but can range from 0-10 and there can be multiple NICs and so multiple channels to fix.

# ipmitool shell
> lan print $channel
> lan set $channel auth ADMIN MD5
> lan set $channel auth CALLBACK MD5
> lan set $channel auth USER MD5
> lan set $channel auth OPERATOR MD5
> lan set $channel cipher_privs XXXaXXXXXXXXXXX
> lan print $channel

Configuring networking

Note once again that there are sometimes multiple channels, to find the correct channel it is helpful to use either trial and error and/or an ARP scanner to find the correct MAC address. Usually the channel is 0 but I have seen 1, 8 and 17. Especially when there are multiple NICs.

# ipmitool shell
> lan print $channel
> lan set $channel ipsrc static
> lan set $channel ipaddr 10.15.134.?
> lan set $channel defgw ipaddr 10.15.134.1
> lan set $channel netmask 255.255.255.0
// if you have vlan tagging enabled on the switch port, useful for a shared NIC
> lan set $channel vlan id 520

Configuring Serial over LAN

To enable serial over LAN you need to ensure that it is enabled in your BIOS or EFI setup utility and further note the baud rate. 115200 is used as an example below. Note that GRUB is the only boot loader that takes input via serial properly, in my experience. Syslinux failed horribly on corn-syrup.

Paste the following into /etc/default/grub.d/99-csclub.cfg:

GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX="console=tty1 console=ttyS1,115200n8"
GRUB_TERMINAL_INPUT="console serial"
GRUB_TERMINAL_OUTPUT="console serial"
GRUB_SERIAL_COMMAND="serial --speed=115200 --unit=1 --word=8 --parity=no --stop=1"

and then run:

// on debian based distros
// Yay, Debian magic :\
# update-grub
// on upstream packages (Arch, Fedora, etc.)
# grub-mkconfig -o /boot/grub/grub.cfg

# reboot

iDRAC

riboflavin

riboflavin is using iDRAC 6. The web console can be viewed from https://riboflavin-ipmi.csclub.uwaterloo.ca; if you are not on campus, you can use a SOCKS proxy. Unfortunately, the virtual console uses Java Web Start, which is now deprecated. Here's a workaround which you can use instead.

From the web UI, go to the "Console/Media" tab and click the "Launch virtual console" button. This will download a file whose name starts with "viewer.jnlp". Now go to https://www.java.com and download JRE 8; any later version will not have support for JWS (note that OpenJDK will not work; JWS was a proprietary framework from Sun/Oracle). Unpack the tarball, open jre1.8.0_391/lib/security/java.security in a text editor, and comment out the following properties (note that each property spans multiple lines):

  • jdk.certpath.disabledAlgorithms
  • jdk.jar.disabledAlgorithms
  • jdk.tls.disabledAlgorithms

If you are off-campus, you will need to setup some proxying so that the Java application can access ports 443 and 5900 on riboflavin-ipmi. In the example below, I am using caffeine as a jump host, but any machine on campus should do:

ssh -L 5443:localhost:5443 -L 5900:localhost:5900 caffeine.csclub.uwaterloo.ca

Now on caffeine, open a tmux/screen session, and run the following commands in two different panes:

  • socat TCP-LISTEN:5443,fork TCP:riboflavin-ipmi:443
  • socat TCP-LISTEN:5900,fork TCP:riboflavin-ipmi:5900

Back on your personal machine, open the viewer.jnlp file in a text editor and perform the following:

  1. Replace all instances of riboflavin-ipmi.csclub.uwaterloo.ca:443 with localhost:5443
  2. Under the application-desc element, the first argument child element should say ip=riboflavin-ipmi. Replace this with ip=localhost
  3. .
  4. Under the application-desc element, there are child argumentelements for user and passwd. For some reason these are set to numbers; set these to the username and password for IPMI (username should be root).

Now run:

jre1.8.0_391/bin/javaws viewer.jnlp

If all goes well, the virtual console should eventually appear: Riboflavin-idrac-virtual-console.png

Supermicro

ginkgo

To access the virtual console on ginkgo, the steps are the same as those for riboflavin, with the following changes:

  • In the launch.jnlp file, in the first <argument> element under <application-desc>, replace ginkgo-ipmi.csclub.uwaterloo.ca with localhost. This is the only change which you should make to this file (unless you are already on the campus network, in which case you do not need to modify this file at all).
  • Run jre1.8.0_391/bin/ControlPanel, go to the Security tab, click "Edit Site List", and add https://ginkgo-ipmi.csclub.uwaterloo.ca as an exception.