docs/ci: Add docs for using a POE switch to control boards, like nouveau.

Reviewed-by: Christian Gmeiner <christian.gmeiner@gmail.com>
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/mesa/mesa/-/merge_requests/15201>
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Emma Anholt 2022-01-23 21:40:45 -08:00 committed by Marge Bot
parent e8da28d5e8
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@ -3,7 +3,7 @@ Bare-metal CI
The bare-metal scripts run on a system with gitlab-runner and Docker,
connected to potentially multiple bare-metal boards that run tests of
Mesa. Currently only "fastboot" and "ChromeOS Servo" devices are
Mesa. Currently "fastboot", "ChromeOS Servo", and POE-powered devices are
supported.
In comparison with LAVA, this doesn't involve maintaining a separate
@ -77,6 +77,61 @@ call "servo"::
See `src/freedreno/ci/gitlab-ci.yml` for an example of servo on cheza. Note
that other servo boards in CI are managed using LAVA.
Requirements (POE)
------------------
For boards with 30W or less power consumption, POE can be used for the power
control. The parts list ends up looking something like (for example):
- x86-64 gitlab-runner machine with a mid-range CPU, and 3+ GB of SSD storage
per board. This can host at least 15 boards in our experience.
- Cisco 2960S gigabit ethernet switch with POE. (Cisco 3750G, 3560G, or 2960G
were also recommended as reasonable-priced HW, but make sure the name ends in
G, X, or S)
- POE splitters to power the boards (you can find ones that go to micro USB,
USBC, and 5V barrel jacks at least)
- USB serial cables (Adafruit sells pretty reliable ones)
- A large powered USB hub for all the serial cables
- A pile of ethernet cables
You'll talk to the Cisco for configuration using its USB port, which provides a
serial terminal at 9600 baud. You need to enable SNMP control, which we'll do
using a "mesaci" community name that the gitlab runner can access as its
authentication (no password) to configure. To talk to the SNMP on the router,
you need to put an ip address on the default vlan (vlan 1).
Setting that up looks something like:
.. code-block: console
Switch>
Password:
Switch#configure terminal
Switch(config)#interface Vlan 1
Switch(config-if)#ip address 10.42.0.2 255.255.0.0
Switch(config-if)#end
Switch(config)#snmp-server community mesaci RW
Switch(config)#end
Switch#copy running-config startup-config
With that set up, you should be able to power on/off a port with something like:
.. code-block: console
% snmpset -v2c -r 3 -t 30 -cmesaci 10.42.0.2 1.3.6.1.4.1.9.9.402.1.2.1.1.1.1 i 1
% snmpset -v2c -r 3 -t 30 -cmesaci 10.42.0.2 1.3.6.1.4.1.9.9.402.1.2.1.1.1.1 i 4
Note that the "1.3.6..." SNMP OID changes between switches. The last digit
above is the interface id (port number). You can probably find the right OID by
google, that was easier than figuring it out from finding the switch's MIB
database. You can query the POE status from the switch serial using the `show
power inline` command.
Other than that, find the dnsmasq/tftp/nfs setup for your boards "servo" above.
See `src/broadcom/ci/gitlab-ci.yml` and `src/nouveau/ci/gitlab-ci.yml` for an
examples of POE for Raspberry Pi 3/4, and Jetson Nano.
Setup
-----