Hello Daniel, 

Welcome to the project. I'll try to answer your questions, and I'm sure others will contribute as well.

The OpenBMC Firmware stack is a Linux distribution that can be thought of as a toolkit for creating a firmware image that boots the Linux OS and contains numerous drivers and applications targeted for a specialized PSoC known as the Baseboard Management Controller (BMC). The OpenBMC project uses the Yocto project (www.yoctoproject.org) which uses Openembedded (www.openembedded.org) as the build automation framework to build the Linux distribution. 

There's not a simple answer to the question of what prerequisites a target BMC should have. It all depends upon your use cases and requirements. Most high-end servers contain the PSoC version of a BMC (e.g., ASpeed AST2500/2600 or Nuvoton NPCM7xx/NPCM8xx). Which have three functional component blocks consisting of what was referred to as the southbridge in the Intel Architecture (i.e., USB, keyboard controllers, UARTs, PCIe, SPI, network, ACPI, etc...), a video graphics controller, and then the management controller itself. If you don't need the video controller or southbridge, there are other controllers available. The key question is to determine what your requirements are and to look for a controller that is already supported in the Linux kernel. ASpeed and Nuvoton also make lower cost and simpler BMCs.

Can you install a BMC on an FPGA board?  
Yes, but the hardware requirements are dependent upon your use cases and the controller you choose. 
Here are some basic hardware requirements off the top of my head. I'm sure I'll think of more after I send this email.
Redfish is a standard that uses restful interface semantics to provide access to system components for the purpose of being able to manage the devices. Redfish uses the standard network interfaces and protocols to provide management capabilities for the system. Prior to Redfish, Server Management implemented the Intelligent Platform Management Interface (IPMI) specification. Which was created in the mid-1990s, and went through several revisions. There are several security vulnerabilities identified within the IPMI specification that require mitigations. The Redfish standard will be replacing the IPMI implementations.

>>> "Development board must support OpenBMC" what is the meaning of this statement? 
My thought here is that this is referring to be able to execute an OpenBMC FW stack and provide the necessary management interfaces per the product requirements; such as network interfaces and/or host interfaces.

Good night...
James.

On Wed, Feb 17, 2021 at 10:05 PM Daniel <sd2@maxvytech.com> wrote:
Hi,

I am new to OpenBMC or even BMC concept. Since a project requirement has come related to this concept , i want to learn about this concept. I am an embedded software developer.

Is OpenBMC an OS? somewhere i noticed that it will generate an image file to a target machine.

What are the prerequisites that a target BMC should have?

and please explain the following as well,

*Can we install in an FPGA board? if yes, what is the hardware requirement to install this OpenBMC?

*How redfish is used in OpenBMC?

*I would like to get some clarification in this concept.

*"Development board must support OpenBMC" what is the meaning of this statement?



Thank you,




Regards,
Daniel Kirubakaran S
Embedded SW Developer
Maxvy Technologies Pvt Ltd
Bangalore