Provided by: freeipmi-ipmidetect_1.6.9-2_amd64 bug

NAME

       ipmidetect - list detected and/or undetected IPMI interfaces in a cluster

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 confused with regular expression character classes (also
       denoted by []). For  example,  foo[19]  does  not  represent  foo1  or  foo9,  but  rather
       represents 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  --undetected
       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) 2007-2015 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/