Interesting notes from LKML and openipmi. An estimate was that kipmid hogs 10W from a 70W server.
//Peter
----- Forwarded message from Bela Lubkin blubkin@vmware.com -----
From: Bela Lubkin blubkin@vmware.com To: 'Corey Minyard' minyard@acm.org, Randy Dunlap randy.dunlap@oracle.com CC: "discuss@LessWatts.org" discuss@LessWatts.org, "Kok, Auke" auke-jan.h.kok@intel.com, Arjan van de Ven arjan@linux.intel.com, "openipmi-developer@lists.sourceforge.net" openipmi-developer@lists.sourceforge.net, lkml linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org Subject: RE: [Openipmi-developer] [Discuss] [PATCH] ipmi: use round_jiffies on timers to reduce timer overhead/wakeups Date: Wed, 21 Oct 2009 16:46:41 -0700
Corey Minyard & Randy Dunlap wrote:
Randy>> From what I recall (probably 2 years ago), [older] ipmi hardware Randy>> does not generate event interrupts, so it has to be polled. Randy>> Randy>> Corey, can you elaborate on this?
Corey> Certainly. Yes, some (probably most) IPMI hardware does not use Corey> interrupts, and unfortunately, it's not just older machines. Corey> The driver used to poll more slowly, but in many cases the Corey> performance was unacceptable. Corey> Corey> kipmid is only started if the hardware doesn't support Corey> interrupts, so only users with sub-standard hardware have to Corey> suffer with this problem.
Regrettably, of the "big three" in the "PC Server" world, only HP's iLO2 BMC supports interrupts. Dell's DRAC4 & 5 don't, IBM's ASM, RSA, etc. don't. Also (at least out of a sample of one) SuperMicro also doesn't have an interrupt.
They also have all settled on the KCS interface, which dribbles one character through per non-interrupt. So sad. Dell's DRAC3 had a BT BMC which transferred whole IPMI packets via DMA _and_ had an interrupt. HP's ancient SMIC equipment also had an interrupt (but that's also char-by-char, and their current KCS has an interrupt, so at least they haven't regressed). I've guessed that some chip vendor must have come out with a Really Cheep KCS implementation and drove every other implementation out of the market. :-(
I've heard rumors that some current Sun hardware has BT.
Bela<--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/
----- End forwarded message -----