NVMe Management Interface (NVMe-MI) support =========================================== This libnvme project also includes support for the NVMe Management Interface (NVMe-MI), currently over a Management Component Transport (MCTP) protocol link. This MCTP link will typically use i2c/SMBus as the hardware transport, enabling out-of-band management and control over NVMe devices using a simple SMBus interface. The MI interface is compiled into a separate shared object, ``libnvme-mi.so``. Most of the MI API is transport-agnostic, except for the endpoint constructor functions. Once an endpoint object (``nvme_mi_ep_t``) is created, the generic functions can be used to manage it. MCTP Transport -------------- The MI API is generally transport-agnostic, but the only currently-supported transport is MCTP, using the kernel ``AF_MCTP`` socket interface. MCTP endpoints are addressed by a (network-id, endpoint-id) pair. Endpoint IDs (EIDs) are defined by the MCTP standard as an 8-bit value. Since the address space is somewhat limited, the Linux `AF_MCTP` support allows for separate MCTP "networks", which provide separate address spaces. These networks each have a unique ``unsigned int`` as their ID. The default Network ID is 1; unless you have configured otherwise, MCTP endpoints will appear on this network. If compiled with D-Bus support, ``libnvme-mi`` can query the system MCTP daemon ("``mctpd``") to find attached NVMe devices, via the ``nvme_mi_scan_mctp()`` function. Calling this will establish a ``nvme_root_t`` object, populated with the results of that scan. Use the ``nvme_mi_for_each_endpoint`` macro to iterate through the scanned endpoints. Note that the MCTP daemon is provided separately, as part of the MCTP userspace tools, at https://github.com/CodeConstruct/mctp . ``mctpd`` is responsible for discovery and enumeration for MCTP endpoints on the system, and will query each for its protocol capabilities during enumeration. Consequently, NVMe-MI endpoints will need to report support for NVMe-MI-over-MCTP (protocol 0x4) in their supported protocols list (ie., as returned by the MCTP Get Message Type Support command) in order to be discovered.