numam-spdk/doc/nvmf.md
Darek Stojaczyk 3e2297140c doc: describe dynamic memory management
Change-Id: I0ffa5a8ea0ffb46113c6a000546a445784ce7b2f
Signed-off-by: Darek Stojaczyk <dariusz.stojaczyk@intel.com>
Reviewed-on: https://review.gerrithub.io/431094
Reviewed-by: Tomasz Zawadzki <tomasz.zawadzki@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Jim Harris <james.r.harris@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ben Walker <benjamin.walker@intel.com>
Tested-by: SPDK CI Jenkins <sys_sgci@intel.com>
Chandler-Test-Pool: SPDK Automated Test System <sys_sgsw@intel.com>
2018-10-29 23:43:45 +00:00

9.5 KiB

NVMe over Fabrics Target

@sa @ref nvme_fabrics_host @sa @ref nvmf_tgt_tracepoints

NVMe-oF Target Getting Started Guide

The NVMe over Fabrics target is a user space application that presents block devices over the network using RDMA. It requires an RDMA-capable NIC with its corresponding OFED software package installed to run. The target should work on all flavors of RDMA, but it is currently tested against Mellanox NICs (RoCEv2) and Chelsio NICs (iWARP).

The NVMe over Fabrics specification defines subsystems that can be exported over the network. SPDK has chosen to call the software that exports these subsystems a "target", which is the term used for iSCSI. The specification refers to the "client" that connects to the target as a "host". Many people will also refer to the host as an "initiator", which is the equivalent thing in iSCSI parlance. SPDK will try to stick to the terms "target" and "host" to match the specification.

The Linux kernel also implements an NVMe-oF target and host, and SPDK is tested for interoperability with the Linux kernel implementations.

If you want to kill the application using signal, make sure use the SIGTERM, then the application will release all the share memory resource before exit, the SIGKILL will make the share memory resource have no chance to be released by application, you may need to release the resource manually.

Prerequisites

This guide starts by assuming that you can already build the standard SPDK distribution on your platform. By default, the NVMe over Fabrics target is not built. To build nvmf_tgt there are some additional dependencies.

Fedora:

dnf install libibverbs-devel librdmacm-devel

Ubuntu:

apt-get install libibverbs-dev librdmacm-dev

Then build SPDK with RDMA enabled:

./configure --with-rdma <other config parameters>
make

Once built, the binary will be in app/nvmf_tgt.

Prerequisites for InfiniBand/RDMA Verbs

Before starting our NVMe-oF target we must load the InfiniBand and RDMA modules that allow userspace processes to use InfiniBand/RDMA verbs directly.

modprobe ib_cm
modprobe ib_core
# Please note that ib_ucm does not exist in newer versions of the kernel and is not required.
modprobe ib_ucm || true
modprobe ib_umad
modprobe ib_uverbs
modprobe iw_cm
modprobe rdma_cm
modprobe rdma_ucm

Prerequisites for RDMA NICs

Before starting our NVMe-oF target we must detect RDMA NICs and assign them IP addresses.

Finding RDMA NICs and associated network interfaces

ls /sys/class/infiniband/*/device/net

Mellanox ConnectX-3 RDMA NICs

modprobe mlx4_core
modprobe mlx4_ib
modprobe mlx4_en

Mellanox ConnectX-4 RDMA NICs

modprobe mlx5_core
modprobe mlx5_ib

Assigning IP addresses to RDMA NICs

ifconfig eth1 192.168.100.8 netmask 255.255.255.0 up
ifconfig eth2 192.168.100.9 netmask 255.255.255.0 up

Configuring the SPDK NVMe over Fabrics Target

An NVMe over Fabrics target can be configured using JSON RPCs. The basic RPCs needed to configure the NVMe-oF subsystem are detailed below. More information about working with NVMe over Fabrics specific RPCs can be found on the @ref jsonrpc_components_nvmf_tgt RPC page.

Using .ini style configuration files for configuration of the NVMe-oF target is deprecated and should be replaced with JSON based RPCs. .ini style configuration files can be converted to json format by way of the new script scripts/config_converter.py.

Using RPCs

Start the nvmf_tgt application with elevated privileges and instruct it to wait for RPCs. The set_nvmf_target_options RPC can then be used to configure basic target parameters. Below is an example where the target is configured with an I/O unit size of 8192, 4 max qpairs per controller, and an in capsule data size of 0. The parameters controlled by set_nvmf_target_options may only be modified before the SPDK NVMe-oF subsystem is initialized. Once the target options are configured. You need to start the NVMe-oF subsystem with start_subsystem_init.

app/nvmf_tgt/nvmf_tgt --wait-for-rpc
scripts/rpc.py set_nvmf_target_options -u 8192 -p 4 -c 0
scripts/rpc.py start_subsystem_init

Note: The start_subsystem_init rpc is referring to SPDK application subsystems and not the NVMe over Fabrics concept.

Below is an example of creating a malloc bdev and assigning it to a subsystem. Adjust the bdevs, NQN, serial number, and IP address to your own circumstances.

scripts/rpc.py construct_malloc_bdev -b Malloc0 512 512
scripts/rpc.py nvmf_subsystem_create nqn.2016-06.io.spdk:cnode1 -a -s SPDK00000000000001
scripts/rpc.py nvmf_subsystem_add_ns nqn.2016-06.io.spdk:cnode1 Malloc0
scripts/rpc.py nvmf_subsystem_add_listener nqn.2016-06.io.spdk:cnode1 -t rdma -a 192.168.100.8 -s 4420

NQN Formal Definition

NVMe qualified names or NQNs are defined in section 7.9 of the NVMe specification. SPDK has attempted to formalize that definition using Extended Backus-Naur form. SPDK modules use this formal definition (provided below) when validating NQNs.


Basic Types
year = 4 * digit ;
month = '01' | '02' | '03' | '04' | '05' | '06' | '07' | '08' | '09' | '10' | '11' | '12' ;
digit = '0' | '1' | '2' | '3' | '4' | '5' | '6' | '7' | '8' | '9' ;
hex digit = 'A' | 'B' | 'C' | 'D' | 'E' | 'F' | 'a' | 'b' | 'c' | 'd' | 'e' | 'f' | '0' | '1' | '2' | '3' | '4' | '5' | '6' | '7' | '8' | '9' ;

NQN Definition
NVMe Qualified Name = ( NVMe-oF Discovery NQN | NVMe UUID NQN | NVMe Domain NQN ), '\0' ;
NVMe-oF Discovery NQN = "nqn.2014-08.org.nvmexpress.discovery" ;
NVMe UUID NQN = "nqn.2014-08.org.nvmexpress:uuid:", string UUID ;
string UUID = 8 * hex digit, '-', 3 * (4 * hex digit, '-'), 12 * hex digit ;
NVMe Domain NQN = "nqn.", year, '-', month, '.', reverse domain, ':', utf-8 string ;

Please note that the following types from the definition above are defined elsewhere:

  1. utf-8 string: Defined in rfc 3629.
  2. reverse domain: Equivalent to domain name as defined in rfc 1034.

While not stated in the formal definition, SPDK enforces the requirement from the spec that the "maximum name is 223 bytes in length". SPDK does not include the null terminating character when defining the length of an nqn, and will accept an nqn containing up to 223 valid bytes with an additional null terminator. To be precise, SPDK follows the same conventions as the c standard library function strlen().

NQN Comparisons

SPDK compares NQNs byte for byte without case matching or unicode normalization. This has specific implications for uuid based NQNs. The following pair of NQNs, for example, would not match when compared in the SPDK NVMe-oF Target:

nqn.2014-08.org.nvmexpress:uuid:11111111-aaaa-bbdd-ffee-123456789abc nqn.2014-08.org.nvmexpress:uuid:11111111-AAAA-BBDD-FFEE-123456789ABC

In order to ensure the consistency of uuid based NQNs while using SPDK, users should use lowercase when representing alphabetic hex digits in their NQNs.

Assigning CPU Cores to the NVMe over Fabrics Target

SPDK uses the DPDK Environment Abstraction Layer to gain access to hardware resources such as huge memory pages and CPU core(s). DPDK EAL provides functions to assign threads to specific cores. To ensure the SPDK NVMe-oF target has the best performance, configure the NICs and NVMe devices to be located on the same NUMA node.

The -m core mask option specifies a bit mask of the CPU cores that SPDK is allowed to execute work items on. For example, to allow SPDK to use cores 24, 25, 26 and 27:

app/nvmf_tgt/nvmf_tgt -m 0xF000000

Configuring the Linux NVMe over Fabrics Host

Both the Linux kernel and SPDK implement an NVMe over Fabrics host. The Linux kernel NVMe-oF RDMA host support is provided by the nvme-rdma driver.

modprobe nvme-rdma

The nvme-cli tool may be used to interface with the Linux kernel NVMe over Fabrics host.

Discovery:

nvme discover -t rdma -a 192.168.100.8 -s 4420

Connect:

nvme connect -t rdma -n "nqn.2016-06.io.spdk:cnode1" -a 192.168.100.8 -s 4420

Disconnect:

nvme disconnect -n "nqn.2016-06.io.spdk:cnode1"

Enabling NVMe-oF target tracepoints for offline analysis and debug

SPDK has a tracing framework for capturing low-level event information at runtime. @ref nvmf_tgt_tracepoints enable analysis of both performance and application crashes.

RDMA Limitations

As RDMA NICs put a limitation on the number of memory regions registered, the SPDK NVMe-oF target application may eventually start failing to allocate more DMA-able memory. This is an imperfection of the DPDK dynamic memory management and is most likely to occur with too many 2MB hugepages reserved at runtime. Some of our NICs report as many as 2048 for the maximum number of memory regions, meaning that exactly that many pages can be allocated. With 2MB hugepages, this gives us a 4GB memory limit. It can be overcome by using 1GB hugepages or by pre-reserving memory at application startup with --mem-size or -s option. All pre-reserved memory will be registered as a single region, but won't be returned to the system until the SPDK application is terminated.