# libnvme ![MesonBuild](https://github.com/linux-nvme/libnvme/actions/workflows/build.yml/badge.svg) ![PyBuild](https://github.com/linux-nvme/libnvme/actions/workflows/release-python.yml/badge.svg) [![PyPI](https://img.shields.io/pypi/v/libnvme)](https://pypi.org/project/libnvme/) [![PyPI - Wheel](https://img.shields.io/pypi/wheel/libnvme)](https://pypi.org/project/libnvme/) ![GitHub](https://img.shields.io/github/license/linux-nvme/libnvme) [![codecov](https://codecov.io/gh/linux-nvme/libnvme/branch/master/graph/badge.svg)](https://codecov.io/gh/linux-nvme/libnvme) [![Read the Docs](https://img.shields.io/readthedocs/libnvme)](https://libnvme.readthedocs.io/en/latest/) This is the libnvme development C library. libnvme provides type definitions for NVMe specification structures, enumerations, and bit fields, helper functions to construct, dispatch, and decode commands and payloads, and utilities to connect, scan, and manage nvme devices on a Linux system. The public specification is the authority to resolve any protocol discrepancies with this library. For more info on NVM Express, please see: https://nvmexpress.org Subscribe to linux-nvme@lists.infradead.org for linux-nvme related discussions and development for both kernel and userspace. The list is archived here: https://lists.infradead.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-nvme # License Except where otherwise stated, all software contained within this repo is currently licensed LGPL-2.1-or-later, see COPYING for more information. Keith Busch 2020-02-06 ------ # Dependency libnvme depends on minimum Linux kernel version v4.15, which introduced the /sys/class/nvme-subsystem. # Build from source ## Prerequisite A minimal build depends on a set of build tools - gcc - ninja - meson Not all feature will be present with such configuration, e.g. the fabrics part of the library wont support authentication or TLS over the nvme-tcp transport. To enable the optional features install following libraries `/etc/nvme/config.json`` support: - json-c (recommend) Authentication and TLS over nvme-tcp: - openssl - keyutils End point discovery for MI - libdbus Python bindings - Python 3 interpreter - Python 3 development libraries ## Minimal on embedded builds The reference implemention of the Meson specification is in Python 3. Installing or porting this dependency is not really feasible for embedded project. Though there are two project which implement the Ninja and the Meson API in pure C99 - samurai: https://github.com/michaelforney/samurai.git - muon: https://git.sr.ht/~lattis/muon The CI build helper script `scripts/build.sh` is able to setup and build this project in a minimal setup using samurai and muon and thus only depending on: - gcc - make - git `scripts/build.sh -m muon` ## To compile libnvme To `configure` the project: ``` meson setup .build ``` Which will default to build a shared library. To configure for static libraries call ``` meson setup --default-library=static .build ``` One nice feature of meson is that it doesn't mix build artifacts (e.g. `*.o`, `*.so`, etc.) with source code. In the above example, "`.build`" is the name of the directory where the build configuration as well as all the build artifacts will be saved. This directory can be named anything as long as it's not an existing source directory. To completely "clean" all the build artifacts, one need only delete the `.build` directory. To compile: ``` meson compile -C .build ``` ## To install libnvme To install `libnvme`: ``` meson install -C .build ``` ## To run unit tests To run unit tests: ``` meson test -C .build ``` ## To purge everything To completely clean all build artifacts, including the build configuration. ``` rm -rf .build ``` ## Supported build options A few build options can be specified on the command line when invoking meson. | Option | Values [default] | Description | | ----------- | ------------------------- | ------------------------------------------------------------ | | version-tag | none | Overwrite the git version string in the binary | | htmldir | none | Installation directory for the HTML documentation | | rstdir | none | Installation directory for the RST documentation | | docs | [false], html, man, rst, all | Install documentation | | docs-build | [false], true | Enable build documentation | | python | [auto], enabled, disabled | Whether to build the Python bindings. When set to `auto`, the default, meson will check for the presence of the tools and libraries (e.g. `swig`) required to build the Python bindings. If found, meson will configure the project to build the Python bindings. If a tool or library is missing, then the Python bindings won't be built. Setting this to `enabled`, forces the Python bindings to be built. When set to `disabled`, meson will configure the project to not build the Python bindings.
Example: `meson setup .build -Dpython=disabled` | | openssl | [auto], enabled, disabled | Enables OpenSSL dependent features (e.g. TLS over TCP), adds build dependency on OpenSSL | | libdbus | auto, enabled, [disabled] | Enables D-Bus dependent features (libnvme-mi: End point discovery), adds build dependency on libdbus | | json-c | [auto], enabled, disabled | (recommended) Enables JSON-C dependend features (e.g. config.json parsing), adds build depdency on json-c | | keyutils | [auto], enabled, disabled | Enables keyutils dependent features (e.g. authentication), adds build dependency on keyutils | See the full configuration options with ```bash meson configure .build ``` ### Changing the build options from the command-line (i.e. w/o modifying any files) To configure a build for debugging purposes (i.e. optimization turned off and debug symbols enabled): ```bash meson setup .build --buildtype=debug ``` To enable address sanitizer (advanced debugging of memory issues): ```bash meson setup .build -Db_sanitize=address ``` This option adds `-fsanitize=address` to the gcc options. The tests can then be run normally (`meson test -C .build`). Note that when using the sanitize feature, the library `libasan.so` must be available and must be the very first library loaded when running an executable. If experiencing linking issues, you can ensure that `libasan.so` gets loaded first with the `LD_PRELOAD` environment variable as follows: ``` meson setup .build -Db_sanitize=address && LD_PRELOAD=/lib64/libasan.so.6 ninja -C .build test ``` It's also possible to enable the undefined behavior sanitizer with `-Db_sanitize=undefined`. To enable both, use `-Db_sanitize=address,undefined`.