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diff --git a/src/spdk/doc/iscsi.md b/src/spdk/doc/iscsi.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..7d81623d4 --- /dev/null +++ b/src/spdk/doc/iscsi.md @@ -0,0 +1,334 @@ +# iSCSI Target {#iscsi} + +# iSCSI Target Getting Started Guide {#iscsi_getting_started} + +The Storage Performance Development Kit iSCSI target application is named `iscsi_tgt`. +This following section describes how to run iscsi from your cloned package. + +## Prerequisites {#iscsi_prereqs} + +This guide starts by assuming that you can already build the standard SPDK distribution on your +platform. + +Once built, the binary will be in `build/bin`. + +If you want to kill the application by using signal, make sure use the SIGTERM, then the application +will release all the shared memory resource before exit, the SIGKILL will make the shared memory +resource have no chance to be released by applications, you may need to release the resource manually. + +## Introduction + +The following diagram shows relations between different parts of iSCSI structure described in this +document. + +![iSCSI structure](iscsi.svg) + +## Configuring iSCSI Target via config file {#iscsi_config} + +A `iscsi_tgt` specific configuration file is used to configure the iSCSI target. A fully documented +example configuration file is located at `etc/spdk/iscsi.conf.in`. + +The configuration file is used to configure the SPDK iSCSI target. This file defines the following: +TCP ports to use as iSCSI portals; general iSCSI parameters; initiator names and addresses to allow +access to iSCSI target nodes; number and types of storage backends to export over iSCSI LUNs; iSCSI +target node mappings between portal groups, initiator groups, and LUNs. + +You should make a copy of the example configuration file, modify it to suit your environment, and +then run the iscsi_tgt application and pass it the configuration file using the -c option. Right now, +the target requires elevated privileges (root) to run. + +~~~ +build/bin/iscsi_tgt -c /path/to/iscsi.conf +~~~ + +### Assigning CPU Cores to the iSCSI Target {#iscsi_config_lcore} + +SPDK uses the [DPDK Environment Abstraction Layer](http://dpdk.org/doc/guides/prog_guide/env_abstraction_layer.html) +to gain access to hardware resources such as huge memory pages and CPU core(s). DPDK EAL provides +functions to assign threads to specific cores. +To ensure the SPDK iSCSI target has the best performance, place the NICs and the NVMe devices on the +same NUMA node and configure the target to run on CPU cores associated with that node. The following +command line option is used to configure the SPDK iSCSI target: + +~~~ +-m 0xF000000 +~~~ + +This is a hexadecimal bit mask of the CPU cores where the iSCSI target will start polling threads. +In this example, CPU cores 24, 25, 26 and 27 would be used. + +### Configuring a LUN in the iSCSI Target {#iscsi_lun} + +Each LUN in an iSCSI target node is associated with an SPDK block device. See @ref bdev +for details on configuring SPDK block devices. The block device to LUN mappings are specified in the +configuration file as: + +~~~~ +[TargetNodeX] + LUN0 Malloc0 + LUN1 Nvme0n1 +~~~~ + +This exports a malloc'd target. The disk is a RAM disk that is a chunk of memory allocated by iscsi in +user space. It will use offload engine to do the copy job instead of memcpy if the system has enough DMA +channels. + +## Configuring iSCSI Target via RPC method {#iscsi_rpc} + +In addition to the configuration file, the iSCSI target may also be configured via JSON-RPC calls. See +@ref jsonrpc for details. + +### Portal groups + + - iscsi_create_portal_group -- Add a portal group. + - iscsi_delete_portal_group -- Delete an existing portal group. + - iscsi_target_node_add_pg_ig_maps -- Add initiator group to portal group mappings to an existing iSCSI target node. + - iscsi_target_node_remove_pg_ig_maps -- Delete initiator group to portal group mappings from an existing iSCSI target node. + - iscsi_get_portal_groups -- Show information about all available portal groups. + +~~~ +/path/to/spdk/scripts/rpc.py iscsi_create_portal_group 1 10.0.0.1:3260 +~~~ + +### Initiator groups + + - iscsi_create_initiator_group -- Add an initiator group. + - iscsi_delete_initiator_group -- Delete an existing initiator group. + - iscsi_initiator_group_add_initiators -- Add initiators to an existing initiator group. + - iscsi_get_initiator_groups -- Show information about all available initiator groups. + +~~~ +/path/to/spdk/scripts/rpc.py iscsi_create_initiator_group 2 ANY 10.0.0.2/32 +~~~ + +### Target nodes + + - iscsi_create_target_node -- Add an iSCSI target node. + - iscsi_delete_target_node -- Delete an iSCSI target node. + - iscsi_target_node_add_lun -- Add a LUN to an existing iSCSI target node. + - iscsi_get_target_nodes -- Show information about all available iSCSI target nodes. + +~~~ +/path/to/spdk/scripts/rpc.py iscsi_create_target_node Target3 Target3_alias MyBdev:0 1:2 64 -d +~~~ + +## Configuring iSCSI Initiator {#iscsi_initiator} + +The Linux initiator is open-iscsi. + +Installing open-iscsi package +Fedora: +~~~ +yum install -y iscsi-initiator-utils +~~~ + +Ubuntu: +~~~ +apt-get install -y open-iscsi +~~~ + +### Setup + +Edit /etc/iscsi/iscsid.conf +~~~ +node.session.cmds_max = 4096 +node.session.queue_depth = 128 +~~~ + +iscsid must be restarted or receive SIGHUP for changes to take effect. To send SIGHUP, run: +~~~ +killall -HUP iscsid +~~~ + +Recommended changes to /etc/sysctl.conf +~~~ +net.ipv4.tcp_timestamps = 1 +net.ipv4.tcp_sack = 0 + +net.ipv4.tcp_rmem = 10000000 10000000 10000000 +net.ipv4.tcp_wmem = 10000000 10000000 10000000 +net.ipv4.tcp_mem = 10000000 10000000 10000000 +net.core.rmem_default = 524287 +net.core.wmem_default = 524287 +net.core.rmem_max = 524287 +net.core.wmem_max = 524287 +net.core.optmem_max = 524287 +net.core.netdev_max_backlog = 300000 +~~~ + +### Discovery + +Assume target is at 10.0.0.1 +~~~ +iscsiadm -m discovery -t sendtargets -p 10.0.0.1 +~~~ + +### Connect to target + +~~~ +iscsiadm -m node --login +~~~ + +At this point the iSCSI target should show up as SCSI disks. Check dmesg to see what +they came up as. + +### Disconnect from target + +~~~ +iscsiadm -m node --logout +~~~ + +### Deleting target node cache + +~~~ +iscsiadm -m node -o delete +~~~ + +This will cause the initiator to forget all previously discovered iSCSI target nodes. + +### Finding /dev/sdX nodes for iSCSI LUNs + +~~~ +iscsiadm -m session -P 3 | grep "Attached scsi disk" | awk '{print $4}' +~~~ + +This will show the /dev node name for each SCSI LUN in all logged in iSCSI sessions. + +### Tuning + +After the targets are connected, they can be tuned. For example if /dev/sdc is +an iSCSI disk then the following can be done: +Set noop to scheduler + +~~~ +echo noop > /sys/block/sdc/queue/scheduler +~~~ + +Disable merging/coalescing (can be useful for precise workload measurements) + +~~~ +echo "2" > /sys/block/sdc/queue/nomerges +~~~ + +Increase requests for block queue + +~~~ +echo "1024" > /sys/block/sdc/queue/nr_requests +~~~ + +### Example: Configure simple iSCSI Target with one portal and two LUNs + +Assuming we have one iSCSI Target server with portal at 10.0.0.1:3200, two LUNs (Malloc0 and Malloc1), + and accepting initiators on 10.0.0.2/32, like on diagram below: + +![Sample iSCSI configuration](iscsi_example.svg) + +#### Configure iSCSI Target + +Start iscsi_tgt application: +``` +./build/bin/iscsi_tgt +``` + +Construct two 64MB Malloc block devices with 512B sector size "Malloc0" and "Malloc1": + +``` +./scripts/rpc.py bdev_malloc_create -b Malloc0 64 512 +./scripts/rpc.py bdev_malloc_create -b Malloc1 64 512 +``` + +Create new portal group with id 1, and address 10.0.0.1:3260: + +``` +./scripts/rpc.py iscsi_create_portal_group 1 10.0.0.1:3260 +``` + +Create one initiator group with id 2 to accept any connection from 10.0.0.2/32: + +``` +./scripts/rpc.py iscsi_create_initiator_group 2 ANY 10.0.0.2/32 +``` + +Finally construct one target using previously created bdevs as LUN0 (Malloc0) and LUN1 (Malloc1) +with a name "disk1" and alias "Data Disk1" using portal group 1 and initiator group 2. + +``` +./scripts/rpc.py iscsi_create_target_node disk1 "Data Disk1" "Malloc0:0 Malloc1:1" 1:2 64 -d +``` + +#### Configure initiator + +Discover target + +~~~ +$ iscsiadm -m discovery -t sendtargets -p 10.0.0.1 +10.0.0.1:3260,1 iqn.2016-06.io.spdk:disk1 +~~~ + +Connect to the target + +~~~ +iscsiadm -m node --login +~~~ + +At this point the iSCSI target should show up as SCSI disks. + +Check dmesg to see what they came up as. In this example it can look like below: + +~~~ +... +[630111.860078] scsi host68: iSCSI Initiator over TCP/IP +[630112.124743] scsi 68:0:0:0: Direct-Access INTEL Malloc disk 0001 PQ: 0 ANSI: 5 +[630112.125445] sd 68:0:0:0: [sdd] 131072 512-byte logical blocks: (67.1 MB/64.0 MiB) +[630112.125468] sd 68:0:0:0: Attached scsi generic sg3 type 0 +[630112.125926] sd 68:0:0:0: [sdd] Write Protect is off +[630112.125934] sd 68:0:0:0: [sdd] Mode Sense: 83 00 00 08 +[630112.126049] sd 68:0:0:0: [sdd] Write cache: enabled, read cache: disabled, doesn't support DPO or FUA +[630112.126483] scsi 68:0:0:1: Direct-Access INTEL Malloc disk 0001 PQ: 0 ANSI: 5 +[630112.127096] sd 68:0:0:1: Attached scsi generic sg4 type 0 +[630112.127143] sd 68:0:0:1: [sde] 131072 512-byte logical blocks: (67.1 MB/64.0 MiB) +[630112.127566] sd 68:0:0:1: [sde] Write Protect is off +[630112.127573] sd 68:0:0:1: [sde] Mode Sense: 83 00 00 08 +[630112.127728] sd 68:0:0:1: [sde] Write cache: enabled, read cache: disabled, doesn't support DPO or FUA +[630112.128246] sd 68:0:0:0: [sdd] Attached SCSI disk +[630112.129789] sd 68:0:0:1: [sde] Attached SCSI disk +... +~~~ + +You may also use simple bash command to find /dev/sdX nodes for each iSCSI LUN +in all logged iSCSI sessions: + +~~~ +$ iscsiadm -m session -P 3 | grep "Attached scsi disk" | awk '{print $4}' +sdd +sde +~~~ + +# iSCSI Hotplug {#iscsi_hotplug} + +At the iSCSI level, we provide the following support for Hotplug: + +1. bdev/nvme: + At the bdev/nvme level, we start one hotplug monitor which will call + spdk_nvme_probe() periodically to get the hotplug events. We provide the + private attach_cb and remove_cb for spdk_nvme_probe(). For the attach_cb, + we will create the block device base on the NVMe device attached, and for the + remove_cb, we will unregister the block device, which will also notify the + upper level stack (for iSCSI target, the upper level stack is scsi/lun) to + handle the hot-remove event. + +2. scsi/lun: + When the LUN receive the hot-remove notification from block device layer, + the LUN will be marked as removed, and all the IOs after this point will + return with check condition status. Then the LUN starts one poller which will + wait for all the commands which have already been submitted to block device to + return back; after all the commands return back, the LUN will be deleted. + +## Known bugs and limitations {#iscsi_hotplug_bugs} + +For write command, if you want to test hotplug with write command which will +cause r2t, for example 1M size IO, it will crash the iscsi tgt. +For read command, if you want to test hotplug with large read IO, for example 1M +size IO, it will probably crash the iscsi tgt. + +@sa spdk_nvme_probe |