Roland,
The patch series that follows contains the iSER code which we want to submit
upstream for 2.6.18. Below i have placed some general information on iser for
LKML reviewers (please CC [email protected] on your responses).
Details are provided here on new some code which iser is dependent upon, and
is expected in 2.6.18, (i have communicated them already to you but prefer
to repeat it again for clarity).
iSER is dependent on three new changesets/functionalities which are expected
in 2.6.18, two in iscsi and one in infiniband.
+1 libiscsi - a kernel library (module) implementing lots of common code to
iscsi_tcp and iscsi_iser
+2 iscsi transport ep callbacks - the first patch in this RFC, which enables
an iscsi transport to establish/disconnect its connection from the kernel
+3 the rdma cm (CMA) - a module that implements RDMA transport neutral Address
Translation and Communication Management (CM). iSER as most of the inwork
IB RC ULPs (eg SDP, NFSoRDMA, Lustre, etc) are coded to the CMA api.
The patch adding libiscsi is one of 5 iSCSI patches present already in the
scsi-misc git tree, where the ep callbacks patch is expected to be pushed
by the end of this week. The CMA is present in the infiniband git tree.
To compile the code you would need to patch 2.6.17-rcX with the 6 iscsi patches
I have described above (iser is directly dependent only on two but the patches
might apply only in the full order), the patches are also present under
https://openib.org/svn/gen2/branches/backport/2.6.17
The code has been tested with 2.6.16 and 2.6.17-rc3 (drivers/infiniband and
include/rdma being latest openib) and the user space part of latest open-iscsi.
The only patches over this setting were the iscsi updates for 2.6.18.
Over the 2.6.17 testing an issue with kmem_cache_destroy crash which seems
unrelated to iSER has popped up, i have sent a bug report on the matter today.
The iSER targets in this testing were from two types: Voltaire's IB/FC router
and Voltaire's Native IB storage box, also recently an open source iSER target
was kickedoff.
OK, here is some general information on iSER:
iSER (iSCSI Extensions for RDMA) is defined by the IETF IP Storage (IPS) working
group, also an iSER annex was recently approved to appear in the IB spec.
This driver is an iSER transport implementation for the Open iSCSI initiator
(www.open-iscsi.org) whose kernel portion and TCP transport provider are merged
in as of 2.6.15 (iscsi_trasport_iscsi & iscsi_tcp and with 2.6.18 also libiscsi)
Hence iSER is both a provider of the Linux iSCSI transport api (scsi/
scsi_transport_iscsi.h) and a SCSI LLD (Low Level Driver) of the Linux SCSI
midlayer api (scsi/scsi_host.h)
The Open iSCSI initiator discovery of targets and login into a target is carried
out from user space, where once the login negotiation is done, the transport
connection is bounded to an iSCSI connection. The diagram under http://www.
open-iscsi.org/docs/open-iscsi-1.jpg shows the connecting sequence for TCP.
Upto 2.6.18, the transport is expected to use a socket for the connection where
Linux has the means to move a socket from user to kernel space. This restriction,
the inability to move an IB QP (Queue-Pair) from user to kernel space, and looking
forward to integrate with more transports such as iSCSI offloads lead to a change
in iscsi under which the transport is allowed to create/connect its native "end
point" either from user space (eg TCP/socket) or from the kernel (iSER/QP), later
the transport connection is bounded to an iSCSI connection.
Basically, it goes like:
+1 target discovery over TCP/IP with the discovery server
+2.TCP socket create/bind/setopt/connect to the target
+2.iSER CMA_ID/QP create/connect to the target
+3 iscsi session create
+4 iscsi connection create
+5 bind iscsi connection to the transport connection
+6 login request/response negotiation
+7 iscsi connection start
+8 the SCSI midlayer starts its inquiry and so on
Or Gerlitz
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