ipmidetect man page on Oracle

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/* Copyright (C) 1991‐2012 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
   This file is part of the GNU C Library.

   The	GNU  C	Library is free software; you can redistribute it
and/or
   modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public
   License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
   version 2.1 of the License, or (at your option) any later ver‐
sion.

   The	GNU  C Library is distributed in the hope that it will be
useful,
   but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
   MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.	 See  the
GNU
   Lesser General Public License for more details.

   You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Pub‐
lic
   License along with the GNU C Library; if not, see
   <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.  */ /* This header is separate
from features.h so that the compiler can
   include  it	implicitly at the start of every compilation.  It
must
   not itself include <features.h> or any other header	that  in‐
cludes
   <features.h>	 because  the  implicit	 include comes before any
feature
   test macros that may be defined in a	 source	 file  before  it
first
   explicitly  includes	 a  system header.  GCC knows the name of
this
   header in order to preinclude it.  */ /* We do support the IEC
559  math  functionality,  real	 and complex.  */ /* wchar_t uses
ISO/IEC 10646 (2nd ed., published 2011‐03‐15) /
Ipmidetect(8)			  Ipmidetect			 Ipmidetect(8)

   Unicode 6.0.	 */ /* We do not support C11 <threads.h>.  */

NAME
       ipmidetect - list detected and/or undetected IPMI interfaces in a clus‐
       ter

SYNOPSIS
       ipmidetect [OPTION...] [NODES...]

DESCRIPTION
       ipmidetect lists which IPMI nodes have been detected or undetected in a
       cluster.	 This information is provided by the libipmidetect(3)  library
       and ipmidetectd(8) daemon.

       ipmidetect  will	 output	 the  status of each IPMI node configured with
       ipmidetectd(8) unless they are specified on the command	line.  If  the
       first  node  listed  is "-", nodes will be read in from standard input.
       The nodes can be listed in hostrange format, comma separated lists,  or
       space  separated lists. See the section below on HOSTRANGED SUPPORT for
       instructions on how to list hosts in range format. The hostnames listed
       must be the shortened names of hostnames.

OPTIONS
       -h, --help
	      Print help and exit

       -v, --version
	      Print version and exit

       -o STRING, --hostname=STRING
	      server hostname (default=localhost)

       -p INT, --port=INT
	      server port (default=8649)

       -d, --detected
	      List only detected nodes

       -u, --undetected
	      List only undetected nodes

       -q, --hostrange
	      List nodes in hostrange format (default)

       -c, --comma
	      List nodes in comma separated list

       -n, --newline
	      List nodes in newline separated list

       -s, --space
	      List nodes in space separated list

HOSTRANGED SUPPORT
       Multiple hosts can be input either as an explicit comma separated lists
       of hosts or a range of hostnames in  the	 general  form:	 prefix[n-m,l-
       k,...],	where  n < m and l < k, etc. The later form should not be con‐
       fused with regular expression character classes (also denoted  by  []).
       For example, foo[19] does not represent foo1 or foo9, but rather repre‐
       sents a degenerate range: foo19.

       This range syntax is meant only as a convenience	 on  clusters  with  a
       prefixNN	 naming	 convention  and specification of ranges should not be
       considered necessary -- the list foo1,foo9 could be specified as	 such,
       or by the range foo[1,9].

       Some examples of range usage follow:
	   foo[01-05] instead of foo01,foo02,foo03,foo04,foo05
	   foo[7,9-10] instead of foo7,foo9,foo10
	   foo[0-3] instead of foo0,foo1,foo2,foo3

       As a reminder to the reader, some shells will interpret brackets ([ and
       ]) for pattern matching. Depending on your shell, it may	 be  necessary
       to enclose ranged lists within quotes.

DIAGNOSTICS
       The  exit  value	 of ipmidetect depends on the options performed on the
       command line. If the default output is used, the exit value will	 be  0
       if the command succeeds without error. If the --detected option is used
       and no undetected nodes have been discovered, the exit value will be 0.
       If undetected nodes are found, the exit value will be 1. If the --unde‐
       tected option is used and no detected nodes have been  discovered,  the
       exit  value will be 0. If detected nodes are found, the exit value will
       be 1. On errors, the exit value will be 2.

REPORTING BUGS
       Report bugs to <freeipmi-users@gnu.org> or <freeipmi-devel@gnu.org>.

COPYRIGHT
       Copyright (C) 2007-2012 Lawrence Livermore National Security, LLC.
       Copyright (C) 2007 The Regents of the University of California.

       This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
       under  the  terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the
       Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or (at  your
       option) any later version.

SEE ALSO
       libipmidetect(3), ipmidetect.conf(5), ipmidetectd(8)

       http://www.gnu.org/software/freeipmi/

Ipmidetect 1.2.9		  2014-05-01			 Ipmidetect(8)
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