Command line options are described below.
-a asset_string
This option specifies an asset tag string to be written to the baseboard FRU Product area. The
asset tag length is limited by the existing FRU Product data, but is usually allowed up to 16
characters. The default is to not modify this FRU field.
-b Only show the Baseboard FRU data. The default behavior is to also scan for any SDR FRU data or
DIMM SPD data referenced by the SDRs.
-c Show FRU output in a canonical format, with a default delimiter of '|'.
-d file
Dump binary FRU data to the specified file.
-e Show Every FRU output in a bladed chassis, including those under child MCs. The default is to
show FRUs referred to by just the target MC.
-i 00 This option specifies a specific FRU ID to show. The input value should be in hex (0b, 1a, etc.),
as shown from the sensor SDR output. By default, all FRU IDs that are specified in the FRU
locator SDRs are shown.
-k <setsn | setmfgdate | nextboot>
These Kontron OEM functions set FRU data based on existing data stored elsewhere. The setsn
option sets the FRU Board and Product serial number, and the setmfgdate option sets the FRU Board
Mfg DateTime. The nextboot option specifies the boot device for the next boot: BIOS, FDD, HDD,
CDROM, or network. These options are only supported on Kontron ATCA boards which have this
functionality.
-m 002000
Show FRU for a specific MC (e.g. bus 00, sa 20, lun 00). This could be used for PICMG or ATCA
blade systems. The trailing character, if present, indicates SMI addressing if 's', or IPMB
addressing if 'i' or not present.
-s serial_num
This option specifies a serial number string to be written to the baseboard FRU Product area. The
serial number can be any string up to 16 characters. The default is to not modify this FRU field.
-v prod_ver
This option specifies a product version number string to be written to the baseboard FRU Product
area. The version number can be any string up to 16 characters. The default is to not modify
this FRU field.
-x Causes eXtra debug messages to be displayed.
-N nodename
Nodename or IP address of the remote target system. If a nodename is specified, IPMI LAN
interface is used. Otherwise the local system management interface is used.
-U rmt_user
Remote username for the nodename given. The default is a null username.
-P/-R rmt_pswd
Remote password for the nodename given. The default is a null password.
-E Use the remote password from Environment variable IPMI_PASSWORD.
-F drv_t
Force the driver type to one of the followng: imb, va, open, gnu, landesk, lan, lan2, lan2i, kcs,
smb. Note that lan2i means lan2 with intelplus. The default is to detect any available driver
type and use it.
-J Use the specified LanPlus cipher suite (0 thru 17): 0=none/none/none, 1=sha1/none/none,
2=sha1/sha1/none, 3=sha1/sha1/cbc128, 4=sha1/sha1/xrc4_128, 5=sha1/sha1/xrc4_40, 6=md5/none/none,
... 14=md5/md5/xrc4_40. Default is 3.
-T Use a specified IPMI LAN Authentication Type: 0=None, 1=MD2, 2=MD5, 4=Straight Password, 5=OEM.
-V Use a specified IPMI LAN privilege level. 1=Callback level, 2=User level, 3=Operator level,
4=Administrator level (default), 5=OEM level.
-Y Yes, do prompt the user for the IPMI LAN remote password. Alternatives for the password are -E or
-P.
-Z Set the slave address for a local MC