Commit Graph

11 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
jimharris
c4799f93b1 Add unmapped bio support to nvme(4) and nvd(4).
Sponsored by:	Intel
2013-04-01 16:23:34 +00:00
jimharris
61a3cd77cc Change a number of malloc(9) calls to use M_WAITOK instead of
M_NOWAIT.

Sponsored by:	Intel
Suggested by:	carl
Reviewed by:	carl
2013-03-26 22:11:34 +00:00
jimharris
69d2e13801 Add the ability to internally mark a controller as failed, if it is unable to
start or reset.  Also add a notifier for NVMe consumers for controller fail
conditions and plumb this notifier for nvd(4) to destroy the associated
GEOM disks when a failure occurs.

This requires a bit of work to cover the races when a consumer is sending
I/O requests to a controller that is transitioning to the failed state.  To
help cover this condition, add a task to defer completion of I/Os submitted
to a failed controller, so that the consumer will still always receive its
completions in a different context than the submission.

Sponsored by:	Intel
Reviewed by:	carl
2013-03-26 21:58:38 +00:00
jimharris
aa210ff37b Have nvd(4) register for controller notifications.
Also have nvd maintain controller/namespace relationships internally.

Sponsored by:	Intel
Reviewed by:	carl
2013-03-26 21:45:37 +00:00
jimharris
3c0b8367a2 Create struct nvme_status.
NVMe error log entries include status, so breaking this out into
its own data structure allows it to be included in both the
nvme_completion data structure as well as error log entry data
structures.

While here, expose nvme_completion_is_error(), and change all of
the places that were explicitly looking at sc/sct bits to use this
macro instead.

Sponsored by:	Intel
Reviewed by:	carl
2013-03-26 21:00:18 +00:00
jimharris
3af2a639e2 Add an interface for nvme shim drivers (i.e. nvd) to register for
notifications when new nvme controllers are added to the system.

Sponsored by:	Intel
2013-03-26 18:39:54 +00:00
jimharris
4ff82f24cf Add ability to queue nvme_request objects if no nvme_trackers are available.
This eliminates the need to manage queue depth at the nvd(4) level for
Chatham prototype board workarounds, and also adds the ability to
accept a number of requests on a single qpair that is much larger
than the number of trackers allocated.

Sponsored by:	Intel
2012-10-18 00:45:53 +00:00
jimharris
c070c3fe81 Add return codes to all functions used for submitting commands to I/O
queues.

Sponsored by:	Intel
2012-10-18 00:32:07 +00:00
kevlo
ceb08698f2 Revert previous commit...
Pointyhat to:	kevlo (myself)
2012-10-10 08:36:38 +00:00
kevlo
8747a46991 Prefer NULL over 0 for pointers 2012-10-09 08:27:40 +00:00
jimharris
99662f533f This is the first of several commits which will add NVM Express (NVMe)
support to FreeBSD.  A full description of the overall functionality
being added is below.  nvmexpress.org defines NVM Express as "an optimized
register interface, command set and feature set fo PCI Express (PCIe)-based
Solid-State Drives (SSDs)."

This commit adds nvme(4) and nvd(4) driver source code and Makefiles
to the tree.

Full NVMe functionality description:
Add nvme(4) and nvd(4) drivers and nvmecontrol(8) for NVM Express (NVMe)
device support.

There will continue to be ongoing work on NVM Express support, but there
is more than enough to allow for evaluation of pre-production NVM Express
devices as well as soliciting feedback.  Questions and feedback are welcome.

nvme(4) implements NVMe hardware abstraction and is a provider of NVMe
namespaces.  The closest equivalent of an NVMe namespace is a SCSI LUN.
nvd(4) is an NVMe consumer, surfacing NVMe namespaces as GEOM disks.
nvmecontrol(8) is used for NVMe configuration and management.

The following are currently supported:
nvme(4)
- full mandatory NVM command set support
- per-CPU IO queues (enabled by default but configurable)
- per-queue sysctls for statistics and full command/completion queue
     dumps for debugging
- registration API for NVMe namespace consumers
- I/O error handling (except for timeoutsee below)
- compilation switches for support back to stable-7

nvd(4)
- BIO_DELETE and BIO_FLUSH (if supported by controller)
- proper BIO_ORDERED handling

nvmecontrol(8)
- devlist: list NVMe controllers and their namespaces
- identify: display controller or namespace identify data in
      human-readable or hex format
- perftest: quick and dirty performance test to measure raw
      performance of NVMe device without userspace/physio/GEOM
      overhead

The following are still work in progress and will be completed over the
next 3-6 months in rough priority order:
- complete man pages
- firmware download and activation
- asynchronous error requests
- command timeout error handling
- controller resets
- nvmecontrol(8) log page retrieval

This has been primarily tested on amd64, with light testing on i386.  I
would be happy to provide assistance to anyone interested in porting
this to other architectures, but am not currently planning to do this
work myself.  Big-endian and dmamap sync for command/completion queues
are the main areas that would need to be addressed.

The nvme(4) driver currently has references to Chatham, which is an
Intel-developed prototype board which is not fully spec compliant.
These references will all be removed over time.

Sponsored by:        Intel
Contributions from:  Joe Golio/EMC <joseph dot golio at emc dot com>
2012-09-17 19:23:01 +00:00