Blueprint process
When creating blueprints, you must supply contextual information in the blueprint, such as resource types, locations, sites, and resource pools. You must run this information in a blueprint before you onboard a server. For sample blueprints for creating a resource type, location, site, and resource pool, see Use cases for Imgr blueprint files. When the contextual information is supplied and the blueprint is run, you can then run a blueprint to onboard a server. When the server is onboarded, you can then make configurations to the server such as updating settings or installing applications. You can use blueprints to make the required configurations to the server.
Plug-ins
The use cases in this chapter are categorized by the plug-in that they require. For example, Imgr, Ansible, or Helm.
User levels
The use cases in this chapter can also be categorized by the role of the user who can perform the tasks. The following table outlines the use cases and the roles that can perform the task.
Use case | Role |
Create a resource type. | Developer |
Create a location. | |
Create a BMC site. | |
Create a resource pool. | |
Create a compute. | |
Invoke a change in BIOS hyperthreading. | |
Upload a blueprint. | Operator |