This makes it possible to format stuff like this:
target xxx {
lun 0 { path /foo/bar; size 4G; }
}
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
are returned during discovery based on initiator portal, name, and CHAP
credentials.
Reviewed by: mav@
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
This fixes problems with passing strings that look like numbers to clauses
that expect strings; previously it caused syntax errors and had to be worked
by user, using quotes. The workaround introduced in r267833 is no longer
neccessary.
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
This makes ctld(8) register its iSCSI targets and portals on configured
iSNS servers to allow initiators find them without active discovery.
Fetching of allowed initiators from iSNS is not implemented now, so target
ACLs still should be configured manually.
Reviewed by: trasz@
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Such LUNs will be visible to initiators, but return "not ready" status
on media access commands. If backing storage become available later,
`ctladm modify ...` or `service ctld reload` can trigger its reopen.
reload also if that size was not specified in the new configuration.
Previously it happened only if size was explicitly changed in config.
MFC after: 3 days
when the initiator skips security negotiation. This fixes interoperability
with Xtend SAN initiator.
PR: 193021
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
teardown, and new port creation during `service ctld restart`.
Close it by returning iSCSI port internal state, that allows to identify
dying ports, which should not be counted as existing, from really alive.
Instead make ports provide wanted port and target IDs, and LUNs provide
wanted LUN IDs. After that core Device ID VPD code only had to link all
of them together and add relative port and port group numbers.
LUN ID for iSCSI LUNs no longer created by CTL, but by ctld, and passed
to CTL as "scsiname" LUN option. This makes LUNs to report the same set
of IDs, independently from the port through which it is accessed, as
required by SCSI specifications.
Having single port for all iSCSI connections makes problematic implementing
some more advanced SCSI functionality in CTL, that require proper ports
enumeration and identification.
This change extends CTL iSCSI API, making ctld daemon to control list of
iSCSI ports in CTL. When new target is defined in config fine, ctld will
create respective port in CTL. When target is removed -- port will be
also removed after all active commands through that port properly aborted.
This change require ctld to be rebuilt to match the kernel.
As a minor side effect, this allows to have iSCSI targets without LUNs.
While that may look odd and not very useful, that is not incorrect.
Before this it was impossible to use all 16 bytes of serial number, and
client always got serial number NULL-terminated, that is not required.
MFC after: 2 weeks