1/* $FreeBSD$ */ 2 3CTL - CAM Target Layer Description 4 5Revision 1.4 (December 29th, 2011) 6Ken Merry <ken@FreeBSD.org> 7 8Table of Contents: 9================= 10 11Introduction 12Features 13Configuring and Running CTL 14Revision 1.N Changes 15To Do List 16Code Roadmap 17Userland Commands 18 19Introduction: 20============ 21 22CTL is a disk, processor and cdrom device emulation subsystem originally 23written for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been 24shipping in Copan (now SGI) products since 2005. 25 26It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI 27(who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is 28available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was 29that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree. 30 31Features: 32======== 33 34 - Disk, processor and cdrom device emulation. 35 - Tagged queueing 36 - SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags) 37 - SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode 38 select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.) 39 - Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.) 40 - Support for multiple ports 41 - Support for multiple simultaneous initiators 42 - Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores 43 - Support for VMWare VAAI: COMPARE AND WRITE, XCOPY, WRITE SAME and 44 UNMAP commands 45 - Support for Microsoft ODX: POPULATE TOKEN/WRITE USING TOKEN, WRITE SAME 46 and UNMAP commands 47 - Persistent reservation support 48 - Mode sense/select support 49 - Error injection support 50 - High Availability clustering support with ALUA 51 - All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead. 52 53Configuring and Running CTL: 54=========================== 55 56 - Add 'device ctl' to your kernel configuration file or load the module. 57 58 - If you're running with a 8Gb or 4Gb Qlogic FC board, add 59 'options ISP_TARGET_MODE' to your kernel config file. 'device ispfw' or 60 loading the ispfw module is also recommended. 61 62 - Rebuild and install a new kernel. 63 64 - Reboot with the new kernel. 65 66 - To add a LUN with the RAM disk backend: 67 68 ctladm create -b ramdisk -s 10485760000000000000 69 ctladm port -o on 70 71 - You should now see the CTL disk LUN through camcontrol devlist: 72 73scbus6 on ctl2cam0 bus 0: 74<FREEBSD CTLDISK 0001> at scbus6 target 1 lun 0 (da24,pass32) 75<> at scbus6 target -1 lun -1 () 76 77 This is visible through the CTL CAM SIM. This allows using CTL without 78 any physical hardware. You should be able to issue any normal SCSI 79 commands to the device via the pass(4)/da(4) devices. 80 81 If any target-capable HBAs are in the system (e.g. isp(4)), and have 82 target mode enabled, you should now also be able to see the CTL LUNs via 83 that target interface. 84 85 Note that all CTL LUNs are presented to all frontends. There is no 86 LUN masking, or separate, per-port configuration. 87 88 - Note that the ramdisk backend is a "fake" ramdisk. That is, it is 89 backed by a small amount of RAM that is used for all I/O requests. This 90 is useful for performance testing, but not for any data integrity tests. 91 92 - To add a LUN with the block/file backend: 93 94 truncate -s +1T myfile 95 ctladm create -b block -o file=myfile 96 ctladm port -o on 97 98 - You can also see a list of LUNs and their backends like this: 99 100# ctladm devlist 101LUN Backend Size (Blocks) BS Serial Number Device ID 102 0 block 2147483648 512 MYSERIAL 0 MYDEVID 0 103 1 block 2147483648 512 MYSERIAL 1 MYDEVID 1 104 2 block 2147483648 512 MYSERIAL 2 MYDEVID 2 105 3 block 2147483648 512 MYSERIAL 3 MYDEVID 3 106 4 block 2147483648 512 MYSERIAL 4 MYDEVID 4 107 5 block 2147483648 512 MYSERIAL 5 MYDEVID 5 108 6 block 2147483648 512 MYSERIAL 6 MYDEVID 6 109 7 block 2147483648 512 MYSERIAL 7 MYDEVID 7 110 8 block 2147483648 512 MYSERIAL 8 MYDEVID 8 111 9 block 2147483648 512 MYSERIAL 9 MYDEVID 9 112 10 block 2147483648 512 MYSERIAL 10 MYDEVID 10 113 11 block 2147483648 512 MYSERIAL 11 MYDEVID 11 114 115 - You can see the LUN type and backing store for block/file backend LUNs 116 like this: 117 118# ctladm devlist -v 119LUN Backend Size (Blocks) BS Serial Number Device ID 120 0 block 2147483648 512 MYSERIAL 0 MYDEVID 0 121 lun_type=0 122 num_threads=14 123 file=testdisk0 124 1 block 2147483648 512 MYSERIAL 1 MYDEVID 1 125 lun_type=0 126 num_threads=14 127 file=testdisk1 128 2 block 2147483648 512 MYSERIAL 2 MYDEVID 2 129 lun_type=0 130 num_threads=14 131 file=testdisk2 132 3 block 2147483648 512 MYSERIAL 3 MYDEVID 3 133 lun_type=0 134 num_threads=14 135 file=testdisk3 136 4 block 2147483648 512 MYSERIAL 4 MYDEVID 4 137 lun_type=0 138 num_threads=14 139 file=testdisk4 140 5 block 2147483648 512 MYSERIAL 5 MYDEVID 5 141 lun_type=0 142 num_threads=14 143 file=testdisk5 144 6 block 2147483648 512 MYSERIAL 6 MYDEVID 6 145 lun_type=0 146 num_threads=14 147 file=testdisk6 148 7 block 2147483648 512 MYSERIAL 7 MYDEVID 7 149 lun_type=0 150 num_threads=14 151 file=testdisk7 152 8 block 2147483648 512 MYSERIAL 8 MYDEVID 8 153 lun_type=0 154 num_threads=14 155 file=testdisk8 156 9 block 2147483648 512 MYSERIAL 9 MYDEVID 9 157 lun_type=0 158 num_threads=14 159 file=testdisk9 160 10 ramdisk 0 0 MYSERIAL 0 MYDEVID 0 161 lun_type=3 162 11 ramdisk 204800000000000 512 MYSERIAL 1 MYDEVID 1 163 lun_type=0 164 165Revision 1.4 Changes 166==================== 167 - Added in the second HA mode (where CTL does the data transfers instead 168 of having data transfers done below CTL), and abstracted out the Copan 169 HA API. 170 171 - Fixed the phantom device problem in the CTL CAM SIM and improved the 172 CAM SIM to automatically trigger a rescan when the port is enabled and 173 disabled. 174 175 - Made the number of threads in the block backend configurable via sysctl, 176 loader tunable and the ctladm command line. (You can now specify 177 -o num_threads=4 when creating a LUN with ctladm create.) 178 179 - Fixed some LUN selection issues in ctlstat(8) and allowed for selection 180 of LUN numbers up to 1023. 181 182 - General cleanup. 183 184 - This version intended for public release. 185 186Revision 1.3 Changes 187==================== 188 - Added descriptor sense support to CTL. It can be enabled through the 189 control mode page (10), but is disabled by default. 190 191 - Improved error injection support. The number of errors that can be 192 injected with 'ctladm inject' has been increased, and any arbitrary 193 sense data may now be injected as well. 194 195 - The port infrastructure has been revamped. Individual ports and types 196 of ports may now be enabled and disabled from the command line. ctladm 197 now has the ability to set the WWNN and WWPN for each port. 198 199 - The block backend can now send multiple I/Os to backing files. Multiple 200 writes are only allowed for ZFS, but multiple readers are allowed for 201 any filesystem. 202 203 - The block and ramdisk backends now support setting the LUN blocksize. 204 There are some restrictions when the backing device is a block device, 205 but otherwise the blocksize may be set to anything. 206 207Revision 1.2 Changes 208==================== 209 210 - CTL initialization process has been revamped. Instead of using an 211 ad-hoc method, it is now sequenced through SYSINIT() calls. 212 213 - A block/file backend has been added. This allows using arbitrary files 214 or block devices as a backing store. 215 216 - The userland LUN configuration interface has been completely rewritten. 217 Configuration is now done out of band. 218 219 - The ctladm(8) command line interface has been revamped, and is now 220 similar to camcontrol(8). 221 222To Do List: 223========== 224 225 - Use devstat(9) for CTL's statistics collection. CTL uses a home-grown 226 statistics collection system that is similar to devstat(9). ctlstat 227 should be retired in favor of iostat, etc., once aggregation modes are 228 available in iostat to match the behavior of ctlstat -t and dump modes 229 are available to match the behavior of ctlstat -d/ctlstat -J. 230 231 - ZFS ARC backend for CTL. Since ZFS copies all I/O into the ARC 232 (Adaptive Replacement Cache), running the block/file backend on top of a 233 ZFS-backed zdev or file will involve an extra set of copies. The 234 optimal solution for backing targets served by CTL with ZFS would be to 235 allocate buffers out of the ARC directly, and DMA to/from them directly. 236 That would eliminate an extra data buffer allocation and copy. 237 238 - Switch CTL over to using CAM CCBs instead of its own union ctl_io. This 239 will likely require a significant amount of work, but will eliminate 240 another data structure in the stack, more memory allocations, etc. This 241 will also require changes to the CAM CCB structure to support CTL. 242 243Code Roadmap: 244============ 245 246CTL has the concept of pluggable frontend ports and backends. All 247frontends and backends can be active at the same time. You can have a 248ramdisk-backed LUN present along side a file backed LUN. 249 250ctl.c: 251----- 252 253This is the core of CTL, where all of the command handlers and a lot of 254other things live. Yes, it is large. It started off small and grew to its 255current size over time. Perhaps it can be split into more files at some 256point. 257 258Here is a roadmap of some of the primary functions in ctl.c. Starting here 259and following the various leaf functions will show the command flow. 260 261ctl_queue() This is where commands from the frontend ports come 262 in. 263 264ctl_queue_sense() This is only used for non-packetized SCSI. i.e. 265 parallel SCSI prior to U320 and perhaps U160. 266 267ctl_work_thread() This is the primary work thread, and everything gets 268 executed from there. 269 270ctl_scsiio_precheck() This where all of the initial checks are done, and I/O 271 is either queued for execution or blocked. 272 273ctl_scsiio() This is where the command handler is actually 274 executed. (See ctl_cmd_table.c for the mapping of 275 SCSI opcode to command handler function.) 276 277ctl_done() This is the routine called (or ctl_done_lock()) to 278 initiate the command completion process. 279 280ctl_process_done() This is where command completion actually happens. 281 282ctl.h: 283----- 284 285Basic function declarations and data structures. 286 287ctl_backend.c, 288ctl_backend.h: 289------------- 290 291These files define the basic CTL backend API. The comments in the header 292explain the API. 293 294ctl_backend_block.c 295------------------- 296 297The block and file backend. This allows for using a disk or a file as the 298backing store for a LUN. Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the 299backing device, primarily because the VFS API requires that to get any 300concurrency. 301 302ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: 303--------------------- 304 305A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a small amount of memory to 306act as a source and sink for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore 307it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be used to test for 308throughput. It can also be used to test initiators' support for extremely 309large LUNs. 310 311ctl_cmd_table.c: 312--------------- 313 314This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes, and command handler 315functions defined for supported opcodes. It is included in ctl.c. 316 317ctl_debug.h: 318----------- 319 320Simplistic debugging support. 321 322ctl_error.c, 323ctl_error.h: 324----------- 325 326CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building functions. 327 328ctl_frontend.c, 329ctl_frontend.h: 330-------------- 331 332These files define the basic CTL frontend port API. The comments in the 333header explain the API. 334 335ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: 336---------------------- 337 338This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM. The idea is that this 339frontend allows for using CTL without any target-capable hardware. So any 340LUNs you create in CTL are visible via this port. 341 342ctl_ha.c: 343ctl_ha.h: 344-------- 345 346This is a High Availability API and TCP-based interlink implementation. 347 348ctl_io.h: 349-------- 350 351This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures. union ctl_io is 352conceptually very similar to CAM's union ccb. 353 354ctl_ioctl.h: 355----------- 356 357This defines all ioctls available through the CTL character device, and 358the data structures needed for those ioctls. 359 360ctl_private.h: 361------------- 362 363Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and function prototypes. This also 364includes the SCSI vendor and product names used by CTL. 365 366ctl_scsi_all.c 367ctl_scsi_all.h: 368-------------- 369 370CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions. 371 372ctl_ser_table.c: 373--------------- 374 375Command serialization table. This defines what happens when one type of 376command is followed by another type of command. e.g., what do you do when 377you have a mode select followed by a write? You block the write until the 378mode select is complete. That is defined in this table. 379 380ctl_util.c 381ctl_util.h: 382---------- 383 384CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be used from userland. See 385ctladm for the primary consumer of these functions. These include CDB 386building functions. 387 388scsi_ctl.c: 389---------- 390 391CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port. This is the path into 392CTL for commands from target-capable hardware/SIMs. 393 394Userland Commands: 395================= 396 397ctladm(8) fills a role similar to camcontrol(8). It allow configuring LUNs, 398issuing commands, injecting errors and various other control functions. 399 400ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8). It reports I/O statistics 401for CTL. 402