8a0fedf4e6
Signed-off-by: Michal Berger <michalx.berger@intel.com> Change-Id: Ifdd1d02b466b6496469c9ea1f09633b6e368ab57 Reviewed-on: https://review.spdk.io/gerrit/c/spdk/spdk/+/9617 Community-CI: Broadcom CI <spdk-ci.pdl@broadcom.com> Tested-by: SPDK CI Jenkins <sys_sgci@intel.com> Reviewed-by: Tomasz Zawadzki <tomasz.zawadzki@intel.com> Reviewed-by: Jim Harris <james.r.harris@intel.com> |
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.. | ||
autorun-spdk.conf | ||
create_nvme_img.sh | ||
create_vbox.sh | ||
local.conf | ||
README.md | ||
run-autorun.sh | ||
update.sh | ||
Vagrantfile |
SPDK Vagrant and VirtualBox
The following guide explains how to use the scripts in the spdk/scripts/vagrant
. Mac, Windows, and Linux platforms are supported.
- Install and configure Git on your platform.
- Install VirtualBox 5.1 or newer
- Install* VirtualBox Extension Pack
- Install and configure Vagrant 1.9.4 or newer
- Note: The extension pack has different licensing than main VirtualBox, please review them carefully as the evaluation license is for personal use only.
Mac OSX Setup (High Sierra)
Quick start instructions for OSX:
- Install Homebrew
- Install Virtual Box Cask
- Install Virtual Box Extension Pack*
- Install Vagrant Cask
- Note: The extension pack has different licensing than main VirtualBox, please review them carefully as the evaluation license is for personal use only.
/usr/bin/ruby -e "$(curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Homebrew/install/master/install)"
brew doctor
brew update
brew cask install virtualbox
brew cask install virtualbox-extension-pack
brew cask install vagrant
Windows 10 Setup
- Windows platforms should install some form of git.
- Install VirtualBox 5.1 or newer
- Install* VirtualBox Extension Pack
- Install and configure Vagrant 1.9.4 or newer
- Note: The extension pack has different licensing than main VirtualBox, please review them carefully as the evaluation license is for personal use only.
- Note: VirtualBox requires virtualization to be enabled in the BIOS.
- Note: You should disable Hyper-V in Windows RS 3 laptop. Search
windows features
un-check Hyper-V, restart laptop
Linux Setup
Following the generic instructions should be sufficient for most Linux distributions. For more thorough instructions on installing VirtualBox on your distribution of choice, please see the following guide.
Examples on Fedora26/Fedora27/Fedora28
- yum check-update
- yum update -y
- yum install qt*
- yum install libsdl*
- rpm -ivh VirtualBox-5.2-5.2.16_123759_fedora26-1.x86_64.rpm (select the right version in https://www.virtualbox.org/wiki/Linux_Downloads)
- VBoxManage extpack install Oracle_VM_VirtualBox_Extension_Pack-5.2.16.vbox-extpack(install the same pack* as your installed version of VirtualBox)
- rpm -ivh vagrant_2.1.2_x86_64.rpm
- Note: The extension pack has different licensing than main VirtualBox, please review them carefully as the evaluation license is for personal use only.
Configure Vagrant
If you are behind a corporate firewall, configure the following proxy settings.
- Set the http_proxy and https_proxy
- Install the proxyconf plugin
$ export http_proxy=....
$ export https_proxy=....
$ vagrant plugin install vagrant-proxyconf
Download SPDK from GitHub
Use git to clone a new spdk repository. GerritHub can also be used. See the instructions at spdk.io to setup your GerritHub account. Note that this spdk repository will be rsync'd into your VM, so you can use this repository to continue development within the VM.
Create a Virtual Box
Use the spdk/scripts/vagrant/create_vbox.sh
script to create a VM of your choice. Supported VM platforms are:
- centos7
- ubuntu16
- ubuntu18
- fedora26
- fedora27
- fedora28
- freebsd11
$ spdk/scripts/vagrant/create_vbox.sh -h
Usage: create_vbox.sh [-n <num-cpus>] [-s <ram-size>] [-x <http-proxy>] [-hvrld] <distro>
distro = <centos7 | ubuntu16 | ubuntu18 | fedora26 | fedora27 | fedora28 | freebsd11>
-s <ram-size> in kb default: 4096
-n <num-cpus> 1 to 4 default: 4
-x <http-proxy> default: ""
-p <provider> libvirt or virtualbox
--vhost-host-dir=<path> directory path with vhost test dependencies
(test VM qcow image, fio binary, ssh keys)
--vhost-vm-dir=<path> directory where to put vhost dependencies in VM
-r dry-run
-l use a local copy of spdk, don't try to rsync from the host.
-d deploy a test vm by provisioning all prerequisites for spdk autotest
-h help
-v verbose
Examples:
./scripts/vagrant/create_vbox.sh -x http://user:password@host:port fedora27
./scripts/vagrant/create_vbox.sh -s 2048 -n 2 ubuntu16
./scripts/vagrant/create_vbox.sh -rv freebsd
./scripts/vagrant/create_vbox.sh fedora26
It is recommended that you call the create_vbox.sh
script from outside of the spdk repository.
Call this script from a parent directory. This will allow the creation of multiple VMs in separate
directories, all using the same spdk repository. For example:
$ spdk/scripts/vagrant/create_vbox.sh -s 2048 -n 2 fedora26
This script will:
- create a subdirectory named in your $PWD
- copy the needed files from
spdk/scripts/vagrant/
into the directory - create a working virtual box in the directory
- rsync the
~/.gitconfig
file to/home/vagrant/
in the newly provisioned virtual box - rsync a copy of the source
spdk
repository to/home/vagrant/spdk_repo/spdk
(optional) - rsync a copy of the
~/vagrant_tools
directory to/home/vagrant/tools
(optional) - execute vm_setup.sh on the guest to install all spdk dependencies (optional)
This arrangement allows the provisioning of multiple, different VMs within that same directory hierarchy using thesame spdk repository. Following the creation of the vm you'll need to ssh into your virtual box and finish the VM initialization.
$ cd <distro>
$ vagrant ssh
Finish VM Initialization
A copy of the spdk
repository you cloned will exist in the spdk_repo
directory of the /home/vagrant
user
account. After using vagrant ssh
to enter your VM you must complete the initialization of your VM by running
the scripts/vagrant/update.sh
script. For example:
$ script -c 'sudo spdk_repo/spdk/scripts/vagrant/update.sh' update.log
The update.sh
script completes initialization of the VM by automating the following steps.
- Runs yum/apt-get update (Linux)
- Runs the scripts/pdkdep.sh script
- Installs the FreeBSD source in /usr/sys (FreeBSD only)
This only needs to be done once. This is also not necessary for Fedora VMs provisioned with the -d flag. The vm_setup
script performs these operations instead.
Post VM Initialization
Following VM initialization you must:
- Verify you have an emulated NVMe device
- Compile your spdk source tree
- Run the hello_world example to validate the environment is set up correctly
Verify you have an emulated NVMe device
$ lspci | grep "Non-Volatile"
00:0e.0 Non-Volatile memory controller: InnoTek Systemberatung GmbH Device 4e56
Compile SPDK
$ cd spdk_repo/spdk
$ git submodule update --init
$ ./configure --enable-debug
$ make
Run the hello_world example script
$ sudo scripts/setup.sh
$ sudo scripts/gen_nvme.sh --json-with-subsystems > ./build/examples/hello_bdev.json
$ sudo ./build/examples/hello_bdev --json ./build/examples/hello_bdev.json -b Nvme0n1
Running autorun.sh with vagrant
After running vm_setup.sh the run-autorun.sh
can be used to run spdk/autorun.sh
on a Fedora vagrant machine.
Note that the spdk/scripts/vagrant/autorun-spdk.conf
should be copied to ~/autorun-spdk.conf
before starting your tests.
$ cp spdk/scripts/vagrant/autorun-spdk.conf ~/
$ spdk/scripts/vagrant/run-autorun.sh -h
Usage: scripts/vagrant/run-autorun.sh -d <path_to_spdk_tree> [-h] | [-q] | [-n]
-d : Specify a path to an SPDK source tree
-q : No output to screen
-n : Noop - dry-run
-h : This help
Examples:
run-spdk-autotest.sh -d . -q
run-spdk-autotest.sh -d /home/vagrant/spdk_repo/spdk
FreeBSD Appendix
NOTE: As of this writing the FreeBSD Virtualbox instance does not correctly support the vagrant-proxyconf feature.
The following steps are done by the update.sh
script. It is recommended that you capture the output of update.sh
with a typescript. E.g.:
$ script update.log sudo spdk_repo/spdk/scripts/vagrant/update.sh
- Updates the pkg catalog
- Installs the needed FreeBSD packages on the system by calling pkgdep.sh
- Installs the FreeBSD source in /usr/src
$ sudo pkg upgrade -f
$ sudo spdk_repo/spdk/scripts/pkgdep.sh --all
$ sudo git clone --depth 10 -b releases/11.1.0 https://github.com/freebsd/freebsd.git /usr/src
To build spdk on FreeBSD use gmake MAKE=gmake
. E.g.:
$ cd spdk_repo/spdk
$ git submodule update --init
$ ./configure --enable-debug
$ gmake MAKE=gmake