mirror of
https://github.com/SCST-project/scst.git
synced 2026-05-21 04:31:26 +00:00
svn+ssh://yanb123@svn.code.sf.net/p/scst/svn/trunk
........
r5785 | bvassche | 2014-09-09 14:09:20 +0300 (Tue, 09 Sep 2014) | 9 lines
scst_local: Change max_lun into SCST_MAX_LUN (16383)
Today SCST does not support LUN numbers >= 16384. Additionally,
there is a bug in older Linux initiator systems that prevents
proper handling of LUN numbers >= 2**32. See also Hannes Reinecke,
scsi_scan: Fixup scsilun_to_int(), June 25, 2014 (commit ID
d9e5d6183715e691b37afd3785c311d05cd1338d). Hence set max_lun to
16383.
........
r5786 | bvassche | 2014-09-09 14:27:27 +0300 (Tue, 09 Sep 2014) | 6 lines
scst_local: Set max_id to 1
The value 0 is not valid for the max_id member of struct Scsi_Host.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Herbszt <herbszt@gmx.de>
........
r5793 | bvassche | 2014-09-10 14:42:54 +0300 (Wed, 10 Sep 2014) | 1 line
scstadmin: Sync saved configuration files
........
r5794 | bvassche | 2014-09-10 14:44:14 +0300 (Wed, 10 Sep 2014) | 2 lines
scstadmin test 06-cont-on-err.t: Filter out scstadmin version number
........
r5795 | bvassche | 2014-09-10 15:18:09 +0300 (Wed, 10 Sep 2014) | 1 line
ib_srpt: Add max_sge_delta kernel module parameter
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r5796 | bvassche | 2014-09-10 15:20:30 +0300 (Wed, 10 Sep 2014) | 1 line
ib_srpt: Update Subversion ignore lists
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r5798 | bvassche | 2014-09-12 14:16:35 +0300 (Fri, 12 Sep 2014) | 1 line
fcst/Makefile: Add release-archive target
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r5801 | bvassche | 2014-09-12 14:20:16 +0300 (Fri, 12 Sep 2014) | 1 line
fcst: Change version number from 0.3 into 3.1.0-pre
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r5802 | vlnb | 2014-09-13 04:13:29 +0300 (Sat, 13 Sep 2014) | 3 lines
Fix autofinding SCST headers in fileio_tgt
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r5804 | vlnb | 2014-09-13 04:35:12 +0300 (Sat, 13 Sep 2014) | 3 lines
Web updates
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r5805 | vlnb | 2014-09-13 04:37:12 +0300 (Sat, 13 Sep 2014) | 3 lines
Update root README to use symlink instead of bind mount for QLogic git driver integration
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r5806 | bvassche | 2014-09-15 15:30:43 +0300 (Mon, 15 Sep 2014) | 1 line
ib_srpt: Make "make -j<n> install" work for n >= 2 if "make all" has not been run first
........
r5808 | bvassche | 2014-09-16 14:06:00 +0300 (Tue, 16 Sep 2014) | 6 lines
scst/src/Makefile: Make "make install" without prior "make" work
Avoid that MOD_VERS and MODS_VERS evaluate to an empty string.
Reported-by: Yan Burman <yanb@mellanox.com>
........
r5810 | bvassche | 2014-09-17 13:54:25 +0300 (Wed, 17 Sep 2014) | 1 line
scst_vdisk: Insert a blank line
........
r5811 | bvassche | 2014-09-17 13:56:40 +0300 (Wed, 17 Sep 2014) | 14 lines
vdisk_blockio: Make large COMPARE AND WRITE requests work for stacked block devices
Stacked block devices impose weird restrictions on S/G-lists. Hence
make the COMPARE AND WRITE implementation independent of these
restrictions.
Additionally, reduce the MAXIMUM COMPARE AND WRITE LENGTH limit from
0xff (no limit) to 0xfe to reduce the maximum amount of memory allocated
during a COMPARE AND WRITE. Also serialize COMPARE AND WRITE
operations, fix the offset reported for miscompares and fix the start
offset of the region that is synchronized if the FUA bit has been set.
Reported-by: Vishal Tripathi <vishal.tripathi@calsoftinc.com>
........
r5814 | bvassche | 2014-09-18 10:08:49 +0300 (Thu, 18 Sep 2014) | 1 line
nightly build: Update kernel versions
........
r5816 | vlnb | 2014-09-20 09:31:43 +0300 (Sat, 20 Sep 2014) | 3 lines
Web updates
........
r5817 | bvassche | 2014-09-28 21:54:04 +0200 (Sun, 28 Sep 2014) | 1 line
scripts/rebuild-rhel-kernel-rpm: Enable put_page_callback patch for RHEL 7
........
git-svn-id: http://svn.code.sf.net/p/scst/svn/branches/iser@5819 d57e44dd-8a1f-0410-8b47-8ef2f437770f
463 lines
19 KiB
Plaintext
463 lines
19 KiB
Plaintext
SCSI RDMA Protocol (SRP) Target driver for Linux
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=================================================
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The SRP target driver has been designed to work on top of the Linux RDMA
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kernel drivers -- either the RDMA drivers included with a Linux distribution
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or the OFED RDMA drivers. For more information about using the SRP target
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driver in combination with OFED, see also README.ofed.
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The SRP target driver has been implemented as an SCST driver. This
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makes it possible to support a lot of I/O modes on real and virtual
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devices. A few examples of supported device handlers are:
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1. scst_disk. This device handler implements transparent pass-through
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of SCSI commands and allows SRP to access and to export real
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SCSI devices, i.e. disks, hardware RAID volumes, tape libraries
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as SRP LUNs.
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2. scst_vdisk, either in fileio or in blockio mode. This device handler
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allows to export software RAID volumes, LVM volumes, IDE disks, and
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normal files as SRP LUNs.
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3. nullio. The nullio device handler allows to measure the performance
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of the SRP target implementation without performing any actual I/O.
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Installation
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------------
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Building and installing the SRP target driver is possible as follows:
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cd ${SCST_DIR}
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if type -p rpm >/dev/null; then
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make -s rpm
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sudo rpm -U rpmbuilddir/RPMS/*/*rpm scstadmin/rpmbuilddir/RPMS/*/*rpm
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else
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make -s scst_clean srpt_clean scst srpt scstadmin
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sudo make -s scst_install srpt_install scstadm_install
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fi
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The ib_srpt kernel module supports the following parameters:
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* max_sge_delta (unsigned): Number to subtract from max_sge. Some but not
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all HCA's allow to use up to max_sge S/G-list elements in RDMA
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communication. The default value of this parameter is 3 and works with all
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HCA's. If you know that the HCA's that are used by the ib_srpt driver allow
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to use S/G-lists that are longer than max_sge - 3 then you can decrease this
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parameter. Note: setting this parameter too low will cause SRP every login
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to fail and will cause a message similar to the following to be logged on
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the target system: "ib_srpt: RDMA t ... for idx ... failed with status 12".
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* one_target_per_port (boolean) and
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* use_node_guid_in_target_name (boolean)
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ib_srpt can operate in one of the following three modes:
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1. Access control configuration per HCA and assigning a "ib_srpt_target_<n>"
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style name to each HCA.
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2. Access control configuration per HCA and referring to a HCA via its node
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GUID (e.g. 0002:c903:0005:f34a).
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3. Access control configuration per HCA port and referring to a HCA via its
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port GID (e.g. fe80:0000:0000:0000:0002:c903:0005:f34b).
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Mode (1) is choosen if both one_target_per_port and
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use_node_guid_in_target_name are false. Mode (2) is choosen if
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one_target_per_port is false and use_node_guid_in_target_name is true. Mode
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(3) is choosen if one_target_per_port is true. This last mode is the
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default mode.
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* rdma_cm_port (number)
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A 16-bit number that specifies the port number to be registered via the
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RDMA/CM. Must be specified to make communication over RoCE or iWARP
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possible. If this parameter is zero (the default value) the SRP target
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driver does not register with the RDMA/CM.
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* srp_max_req_size (number)
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Maximum size of an SRP control message in bytes. Examples of SRP control
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messages are: login request, logout request, data transfer request, ...
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The larger this parameter, the more scatter/gather list elements can be
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sent at once. Use the following formula to compute an appropriate value
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for this parameter: 68 + 16 * (sg_tablesize). The default value of
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this parameter is 4148, which corresponds to an sg table size of 255.
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* srp_max_rsp_size (number)
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Maximum size of an SRP response message in bytes. Sense data is sent back
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via these messages towards the initiator. The default size is 256 bytes.
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With this value there remains (256-36) = 220 bytes for sense data.
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* srp_max_rdma_size (number)
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Maximum number of bytes that may be transferred at once via RDMA. Defaults
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to 65536 bytes, which is sufficient to use the full bandwidth of low-latency
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HCAs. Increasing this value may decrease latency for applications
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transferring large amounts of data at once.
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* srpt_srq_size (number, default 4095)
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ib_srpt uses a shared receive queue (SRQ) for processing incoming SRP
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requests. This number may have to be increased when a large number of
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initiator systems is accessing a single SRP target system.
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* srpt_sq_size (number, default 4096)
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Per-channel InfiniBand send queue size. The default setting is sufficient
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for a credit limit of 128. Changing this parameter to a smaller value may
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cause RDMA requests to be retried and hence may slow down data transfer
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severely.
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* trace_flag (unsigned integer, only available in debug builds)
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The individual bits of the trace_flag parameter define which categories of
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trace messages should be sent to the kernel log and which ones not.
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Configuring the SRP Target System
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---------------------------------
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The first step is to choose whether access control will be controlled per
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HCA or per HCA port and to create a modprobe configuration file that reflects
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this choice. An example:
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# cat /etc/modprobe.d/ib_srpt.conf
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options ib_srpt one_target_per_port=1
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Next, create the file /etc/scst.conf. You can create this file with
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the scstadmin tool as follows:
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/etc/init.d/scst stop
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/etc/init.d/scst start
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Now configure SCST using scstadmin - see also the scstadmin documentation for
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further information. Once finished, save the configuration to /etc/scst.conf:
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scstadmin -write_config /etc/scst.conf (sysfs version)
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or
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scstadmin -WriteConfig /etc/scst.conf (procfs version)
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One can verify the contents of scst.conf e.g. as follows:
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cat /etc/scst.conf
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Now verify that loading the configuration from file works correctly:
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/etc/init.d/scst reload
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Note: when using InfiniBand loading the ib_ipoib kernel module and assigning
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an IP address to each IPoIB interface is only needed when using the RDMA/CM.
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When using the IB/CM however, it is allowed but not necessary to load the
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ib_ipoib kernel module.
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Configuring the SRP Initiator System
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------------------------------------
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First of all, load the SRP kernel module as follows:
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modprobe ib_srp
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Next, when using InfiniBand, discover the new SRP target by running the
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srp_daemon command:
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for d in /dev/infiniband/umad*; do srp_daemon -oacd$d; done
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If you want to let the initiator system log in to all SRP targets available
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in the same InfiniBand subnet that is possible as follows (-e = execute):
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for d in /dev/infiniband/umad*; do srp_daemon -oecd$d; done
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If you want to let the initiator log in to a specific target you can do that
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e.g. as follows:
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echo "id_ext=0002c903000f1366,ioc_guid=0002c903000f1366,dgid=fe800000000000000002c903000f1367,pkey=ffff,service_id=0002c903000f1366" > /sys/class/infiniband_srp/${SRP_HCA_NAME}/add_target; done
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The meaning of the parameters in the above command is as follows:
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* id_ext: must match ioc_guid.
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* ioc_guid: see also the documentation of the ib_srpt ioc_guid parameter.
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* dgid: target HCA port GID to connect to.
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* pkey: IB partition key (P_Key) of the target to connect to.
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* service_id: must match ioc_guid.
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When using RoCE or iWARP, log in to the target system to determine the id_ext
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and ioc_guid parameters and use these to log in. An example:
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[ target system ]
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# sed 's/,\(pkey\|dgid\|service_id\)=[^,]*//g' $(find /sys/kernel/scst_tgt/targets/ib_srpt -name login_info) | uniq
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id_ext=0002c90300a34270,ioc_guid=0002c90300a34270
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[ initiator system ]
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echo dest=192.168.5.1:5000,id_ext=0002c90300a34270,ioc_guid=0002c90300a34270
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>/sys/class/infiniband_srp/srp-mlx4_0-1/add_target
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echo dest=192.168.6.1:5000,id_ext=0002c90300a34270,ioc_guid=0002c90300a34270
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>/sys/class/infiniband_srp/srp-mlx4_0-2/add_target
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Initiator port GIDs can be queried e.g. via sysfs:
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$ for f in /sys/devices/*/*/*/infiniband/*/ports/*/gids/0; do echo $f; \
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cat $f | sed 's/://g'; done
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/sys/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:01.0/0000:01:00.0/infiniband/mlx4_0/ports/1/gids/0
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fe800000000000000002c9030005f34b
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/sys/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:01.0/0000:01:00.0/infiniband/mlx4_0/ports/2/gids/0
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fe800000000000000002c9030005f34c
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/sys/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1c.0/0000:05:00.0/infiniband/mlx4_1/ports/1/gids/0
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fe800000000000000002c9030003cca7
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/sys/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1c.0/0000:05:00.0/infiniband/mlx4_1/ports/2/gids/0
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fe800000000000000002c9030003cca8
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Finally run lsscsi to display the details of the newly discovered SCSI disks:
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lsscsi
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SRP targets can be recognized in the output of lsscsi by looking for
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the disk names assigned on the SCST target ("disk01" in the example below):
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[8:0:0:0] disk SCST_FIO disk01 102 /dev/sdb
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Target names
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------------
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The name assigned by the ib_srpt target driver to an SCST target is either
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ib_srpt_target_<n>, the node GUID of a HCA in hexadecimal form with a colon
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after every fourth digit or the port GID with a colon afer every fourth
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digit. The HCA node GUID and the port GIDs can be obtained via the
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ibv_devinfo command. An example:
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# ibv_devinfo -v | grep -E '[^a-z]port:|guid|GID'
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node_guid: 0002:c903:0005:f34e
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sys_image_guid: 0002:c903:0005:f351
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port: 1
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GID[0]: fe80:0000:0000:0000:0002:c903:0005:f34f
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port: 2
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GID[0]: fe80:0000:0000:0000:0002:c903:0005:f350
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Once the ib_srpt driver has been loaded the available SCST targets can be
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queried as follows:
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# (cd /sys/kernel/scst_tgt/targets/ib_srpt && ls -d [0-9a-f]*)
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fe80:0000:0000:0000:0002:c903:0005:f34f
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fe80:0000:0000:0000:0002:c903:0005:f350
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Session names
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-------------
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The name assigned by the ib_srpt target driver to a session depends on the
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mode in which it is operating. If one_target_per_port=y then the source port
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GID is used as the session name. If one_target_per_port=n then the 128-bit SRP
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initiator port identifier is used as the session name. This identifier is sent
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by the SRP initiator to the SRP target via the SRP_LOGIN_REQ information unit.
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The Linux SRP initiator (ib_srp) generates the initiator port identifier as
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follows:
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- The first eight bytes are the identifier extension ('initiator_ext' parameter
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specified in the login string echoed into the sysfs file 'add_target').
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- The last eight bytes are the GUID of the initiator HCA port used to
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communicate with the target.
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An example:
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[ INITIATOR ]
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$ for f in /sys/devices/*/*/*/infiniband/*/ports/*/gids/0; do echo
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f; cat $f; done
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/sys/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:01.0/0000:01:00.0/infiniband/mlx4_0/ports/1/gids/0
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fe80:0000:0000:0000:0002:c903:0005:f34b
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/sys/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:01.0/0000:01:00.0/infiniband/mlx4_0/ports/2/gids/0
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fe80:0000:0000:0000:0002:c903:0005:f34c
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/sys/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1c.0/0000:05:00.0/infiniband/mlx4_1/ports/1/gids/0
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fe80:0000:0000:0000:0002:c903:0003:cca7
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/sys/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1c.0/0000:05:00.0/infiniband/mlx4_1/ports/2/gids/0
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fe80:0000:0000:0000:0002:c903:0003:cca8
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[ TARGET, after login ]
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$ (cd /sys/kernel/scst_tgt/targets/ib_srpt/[0-9a-f]* && ls -d sessions/*)
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sessions/fe80:0000:0000:0000:0002:c903:0003:cca7
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sessions/fe80:0000:0000:0000:0002:c903:0005:f34b
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LUN masking
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-----------
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In a straightforward configuration every LUN is visible to every initiator.
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It is possible however to make a different set of LUNs visible to each
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initiator by using the LUN masking feature of SCST. SRP initiators are
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identified by their session name (see above). An example of an scst.conf
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file using LUN masking for ib_srpt:
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TARGET_DRIVER ib_srpt {
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TARGET fe80:0000:0000:0000:0002:c903:0005:f34b {
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enabled 1
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rel_tgt_id 1
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# LUNs visible by all initiators not listed below
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LUN 0 disk01
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GROUP grp1 {
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# LUNs visible by initiator system 1
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LUN 0 disk02
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INITIATOR fe80:0000:0000:0000:0002:c903:0005:f34b
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}
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GROUP grp2 {
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# LUNs visible by initiator system 2
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LUN 0 disk03
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INITIATOR fe80:0000:0000:0000:0002:c903:0005:f34c
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}
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}
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}
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Adding and Removing LUNs Dynamically
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------------------------------------
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It is possible to add and/or remove LUNs on the target without restarting
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target or initiator. This can be done either via scstadmin or directly via the
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sysfs interface. Although the SCST core will notify the initiator about LUN
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changes, Linux initiators will ignore these notifications. In order to bring a
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Linux initiator again in sync after a LUN change, the initiator has to be told
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to rescan SCSI devices. Rescanning SCSI devices is e.g. possible via the
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rescsan-scsi-bus.sh script that can be found here:
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http://www.garloff.de/kurt/linux/#rescan-scsi. An example:
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$ rescan-scsi-bus --hosts=${srp_host_id} --channels=0 --ids=0 --luns=0-31
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InfiniBand Partitions
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---------------------
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Just like a VLAN allows to segment traffic on an Ethernet network partitions
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allow to segment traffic on an InfiniBand network. Each InfiniBand partition
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is identified by a partition key which is a 16-bit number. During fabric
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initialization the subnet manager assigns one or more partition keys to
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each InfiniBand port. For opensm partitions are defined in
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/etc/opensm/partitions.conf. ib_srpt uses the partition with index 0. Which
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partition key corresponds to index 0 can be found out by querying sysfs:
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$ head /sys/class/infiniband/*/ports/*/pkeys/0
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==> /sys/class/infiniband/mlx4_0/ports/1/pkeys/0 <==
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0xffff
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==> /sys/class/infiniband/mlx4_0/ports/2/pkeys/0 <==
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0xffff
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High availability
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-----------------
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If there are redundant paths in the IB network between initiator and target,
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automatic path failover can be set up on the initiator as follows:
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* Edit /etc/infiniband/openib.conf to load the SRP driver and SRP HA daemon
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automatically: set SRP_LOAD=yes and SRPHA_ENABLE=yes.
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* To set up and use the high availability feature you need the dm-multipath
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driver and multipath tool.
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* Please refer to the OFED-1.x user manual for more detailed instructions
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on how to enable and how to use the HA feature. See e.g.
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http://www.mellanox.com/related-docs/prod_software/Mellanox_OFED%20_Linux_user_manual_1_5_1_2.pdf.
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A setup with automatic failover between redundant targets is possible by
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installing and configuring DRBD on both targets. If the initiator system
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|
supports mirroring (e.g. Linux), you can use the following approach:
|
|
* Configure DRBD in Active/Active mode.
|
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* Configure the initiator(s) for mirroring between the redundant targets.
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|
If the initiator system does not support mirroring (e.g. VMware ESX), you
|
|
can use the following approach:
|
|
* Configure DRBD in Active/Passive mode and enable STONITH mode in the
|
|
Heartbeat software.
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|
|
|
For more information, see also:
|
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* http://www.drbd.org/
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|
* http://www.linux-ha.org/wiki/Main_Page
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|
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Performance Notes - Target Side
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|
-------------------------------
|
|
|
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* Building the SCST core and the ib_srpt target driver in release mode
|
|
improves performance compared to debug mode.
|
|
|
|
* When using high-latency storage devices (hard disks), the default value
|
|
choosen by SCST for DEVICE.threads_num should be fine. When using
|
|
low-latency storage devices though (SSDs), DEVICE.threads_num should be set
|
|
to 1 or 2 in /etc/scst.conf in order to reach optimal performance for small
|
|
block sizes (e.g. 4 KB).
|
|
|
|
* When multiple InfiniBand HCA's are present in a target system the Linux
|
|
kernel by default will assign the associated interrupt handlers to CPU 0.
|
|
Even irqbalance will often assign the interrupt handlers of multiple HCA's
|
|
to the same CPU. That is unfortunate because it leads to unfair handling of
|
|
SRP sessions. The solution is to assign InfiniBand HCA interrupts manually
|
|
to different CPU's. That's possible by writing looking up the InfiniBand
|
|
interrupt numbers in /proc/interrupts and by writing proper bitmasks into
|
|
/proc/irq/<n>/smp_affinity.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Performance Notes - Initiator Side
|
|
----------------------------------
|
|
|
|
* Choose a proper value for the ib_srp kernel module parameter
|
|
cmd_sg_entries. The default value 12 works well for buffered reads while
|
|
the throughput for write-dominated workloads improves by changing this value
|
|
into 255. One way to set this kernel module parameter is as follows:
|
|
|
|
echo options ib_srp cmd_sg_entries=255 >>/etc/modprobe.d/ib_srp.conf
|
|
|
|
* For multithreaded workloads using small block sizes changing rq_affinity
|
|
into 2 improves IOPS significantly (Linux kernel 3.1 and later; see also
|
|
commit 5757a6d76cdf6dda2a492c09b985c015e86779b1).
|
|
|
|
* For latency sensitive applications, using the noop scheduler at the initiator
|
|
side can give significantly better results than with other schedulers.
|
|
|
|
* The SRP initiator limits by default the queue depth to 64 commands. If your
|
|
workload benefits from a larger queue depth, enlarge the queue depth by
|
|
setting the max_cmd_per_lun and queue_size parameters in the SRP login
|
|
string.
|
|
|
|
* The following parameters have a small but measurable impact on SRP
|
|
performance:
|
|
* /sys/class/block/${dev}/queue/rotational
|
|
* /sys/class/block/${dev}/queue/rq_affinity
|
|
* /proc/irq/${ib_int_no}/smp_affinity
|
|
|
|
|
|
Performance Notes - Both Sides
|
|
------------------------------
|
|
|
|
* Disabling CONFIG_SCHED_DEBUG and CONFIG_SCHEDSTATS in the kernel config
|
|
improves performance.
|
|
|
|
* Disable CONFIG_IRQSOFF_TRACER such that CONFIG_TRACE_IRQFLAGS is disabled.
|
|
|
|
* Consider which memory allocator to use. With recent kernels using the SLUB
|
|
memory allocator instead of SLAB may help. On multi-socket systems the SLAB
|
|
memory allocator may result in better performance. Please note that SLAB is
|
|
tunable while SLUB is not. See also http://lkml.org/lkml/2010/7/9/264 and
|
|
http://www.ibm.com/developerworks/linux/library/l-linux-slab-allocator/.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Frequently Asked Questions
|
|
--------------------------
|
|
|
|
Q: Every now and then "SRP abort called" and "SRP reset_device called"
|
|
messages are logged at the initiator side. Around the same time I see the
|
|
following message in the target log: "ib_srpt: ***ERROR***: Command ...: IB
|
|
completion for idx ... has not been received in time (SRPT command state
|
|
...)". What is the meaning of these messages mean and how can I fix this ?
|
|
|
|
A: This means that a timeout occurred while a HCA was waiting for an
|
|
acknowledge message. Check the IB network for bad IB cables, bad HCA's
|
|
and/or bad switch ports. Also make sure that the HCA firmware is up to
|
|
date.
|
|
|
|
Q: Loading the kernel module ib_srpt triggers a kernel panic with a call trace
|
|
like the one below. What is the cause of this and how can this be solved ?
|
|
|
|
Call Trace:
|
|
[<ffffffffa02f2a50>] srpt_alloc_ioctx+0x60/0xb0 [ib_srpt]
|
|
[<ffffffffa02f2f0a>] srpt_alloc_ioctx_ring+0xea/0x1e0 [ib_srpt]
|
|
[<ffffffffa02f32e9>] srpt_add_one+0x2e9/0x670 [ib_srpt]
|
|
[<ffffffffa015a480>] ib_register_client+0x80/0xa0 [ib_core]
|
|
[<ffffffffa02421eb>] srpt_init_module+0x1eb/0x235 [ib_srpt]
|
|
[<ffffffff81000344>] do_one_initcall+0x34/0x1a0
|
|
[<ffffffff8107a63c>] sys_init_module+0xdc/0x260
|
|
[<ffffffff81002e3b>] system_call_fastpath+0x16/0x1b
|
|
|
|
A: This means that you are using a system on which OFED has been installed but
|
|
that ib_srpt has been compiled against the in-tree kernel headers instead
|
|
of the OFED kernel headers. You can fix this by rebuilding ib_srpt against
|
|
the OFED kernel headers. The ib_srpt makefile should detect the OFED kernel
|
|
headers automatically - at least if ib_srpt is built after OFED has been
|
|
installed.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Feedback
|
|
--------
|
|
|
|
Send questions about this driver to scst-devel@lists.sourceforge.net.
|