This patch adds getting started guide for SPDK vhost. This document describes how to build and run vhost application. Signed-off-by: Piotr Pelplinski <piotr.pelplinski@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Tomasz Zawadzki <tomasz.zawadzki@intel.com> Change-Id: Icab3ad75f1ebf4d53153fb7070151a7244f1dfa9
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SPDK Directory Structure
Overview
SPDK is primarily a collection of C libraries intended to be consumed directly by applications, but the repository also contains many examples and full-fledged applications. This will provide a general overview of what is where in the repository.
Applications
The app
top-level directory contains four applications:
app/iscsi_tgt
: An iSCSI targetapp/nvmf_tgt
: An NVMe-oF targetapp/iscsi_top
: Informational tool (liketop
) that tracks activity in the iSCSI target.app/trace
: A tool for processing trace points output from the iSCSI and NVMe-oF targets.app/vhost
: A vhost application that presents virtio controllers to QEMU-based VMs and process I/O submitted to those controllers.
The application binaries will be in their respective directories after compiling and all
can be run with no arguments to print out their command line arguments. For the iSCSI
and NVMe-oF targets, they both need a configuration file (-c option). Fully commented
examples of the configuration files live in the etc/spdk
directory.
Build Collateral
The build
directory contains all of the static libraries constructed during
the build process. The lib
directory combined with the include/spdk
directory are the official outputs of an SPDK release, if it were to be packaged.
Documentation
The doc
top-level directory contains all of SPDK's documentation. API Documentation
is created using Doxygen directly from the code, but more general articles and longer
explanations reside in this directory, as well as the Doxygen config file.
To build the documentation, just type make
within the doc directory.
Examples
The examples
top-level directory contains a set of examples intended to be used
for reference. These are different than the applications, which are doing a "real"
task that could reasonably be deployed. The examples are instead either heavily
contrived to demonstrate some facet of SPDK, or aren't considered complete enough
to warrant tagging them as a full blown SPDK application.
This is a great place to learn about how SPDK works. In particular, check out
examples/nvme/hello_world
.
Include
The include
directory is where all of the header files are located. The public API
is all placed in the spdk
subdirectory of include
and we highly
recommend that applications set their include path to the top level include
directory and include the headers by prefixing spdk/
like this:
#include "spdk/nvme.h"
Most of the headers here correspond with a library in the lib
directory and will be
covered in that section. There are a few headers that stand alone, however. They are:
assert.h
barrier.h
endian.h
fd.h
mmio.h
queue.h
andqueue_extras.h
string.h
There is also an spdk_internal
directory that contains header files widely included
by libraries within SPDK, but that are not part of the public API and would not be
installed on a user's system.
Libraries
The lib
directory contains the real heart of SPDK. Each component is a C library with
its own directory under lib
.
Block Device Abstraction Layer
The bdev
directory contains a block device abstraction layer that is currently used
within the iSCSI and NVMe-oF targets. The public interface is include/spdk/bdev.h
.
This library lacks clearly defined responsibilities as of this writing and instead does a
number of
things:
- Translates from a common
block
protocol to specific protocols like NVMe or to system calls like libaio. There are currently three block device backend modules that can be plugged in - libaio, SPDK NVMe, CephRBD, and a RAM-based backend called malloc. - Provides a mechanism for composing virtual block devices from physical devices (to do RAID and the like).
- Handles some memory allocation for data buffers.
This layer also could be made to do I/O queueing or splitting in a general way. We're open to design ideas and discussion here.
Configuration File Parser
The conf
directory contains configuration file parser. The public header
is include/spdk/conf.h
. The configuration file format is kind of like INI,
except that the directives are are "Name Value" instead of "Name = Value". This is
the configuration format for both the iSCSI and NVMe-oF targets.
... Lots more libraries that need to be described ...
Makefile Fragments
The mk
directory contains a number of shared Makefile fragments used in the build system.
Scripts
The scripts
directory contains convenient scripts for a number of operations. The two most
important are check_format.sh
, which will use astyle and pep8 to check C, C++, and Python
coding style against our defined conventions, and setup.sh
which binds and unbinds devices
from kernel drivers.
Tests
The test
directory contains all of the tests for SPDK's components and the subdirectories mirror
the structure of the entire repository. The tests are a mixture of unit tests and functional tests.