Daniel Verkamp 4662e22a99 ioat: allocate descriptor rings in parallel arrays
Rather than individually allocating each ring entry, use two large
allocations, one for the hardware descriptors and one for the software
descriptor contexts.

This allows the use of simple array indexing on the rings and also
allows the removal of most of the software descriptor structure,
since the necessary information can be retrieved based on the ring
index now.

Change-Id: I73ef24450f69ca0fc35e350286282c6b1c77a207
Signed-off-by: Daniel Verkamp <daniel.verkamp@intel.com>
2015-12-16 08:59:32 -07:00
2015-12-09 10:14:15 -07:00
2015-09-23 09:05:51 -07:00
2015-11-04 11:05:59 -07:00
2015-12-09 10:14:15 -07:00
2015-09-21 08:52:41 -07:00
2015-09-28 09:07:19 -07:00

Storage Performance Development Kit

Build Status

SPDK on 01.org

The Storage Performance Development Kit (SPDK) provides a set of tools and libraries for writing high performance, scalable, user-mode storage applications. It achieves high performance by moving all of the necessary drivers into userspace and operating in a polled mode instead of relying on interrupts, which avoids kernel context switches and eliminates interrupt handling overhead.

Documentation

Doxygen API documentation

Porting Guide

Prerequisites

To build SPDK, some dependencies must be installed.

Fedora/CentOS:

  • gcc
  • libpciaccess-devel
  • CUnit-devel

Ubuntu/Debian:

  • gcc
  • libpciaccess-dev
  • make
  • libcunit1-dev

FreeBSD:

  • gcc
  • libpciaccess
  • gmake
  • cunit

Additionally, DPDK is required.

1) cd /path/to/spdk
2) wget http://dpdk.org/browse/dpdk/snapshot/dpdk-2.1.0.tar.gz
3) tar xfz dpdk-2.1.0.tar.gz
4) cd dpdk-2.1.0

Linux:

5) make install T=x86_64-native-linuxapp-gcc

FreeBSD:

5) gmake install T=x86_64-native-bsdapp-clang

Building

Once the prerequisites are installed, run 'make' within the SPDK directory to build the SPDK libraries and examples.

make DPDK_DIR=/path/to/dpdk

If you followed the instructions above for building DPDK:

Linux:

make DPDK_DIR=./dpdk-2.1.0/x86_64-native-linuxapp-gcc

FreeBSD:

gmake DPDK_DIR=./dpdk-2.1.0/x86_64-native-bsdapp-clang

Hugepages and Device Binding

Before running an SPDK application, some hugepages must be allocated and any NVMe and I/OAT devices must be unbound from the native kernel drivers. SPDK includes scripts to automate this process on both Linux and FreeBSD.

1) scripts/configure_hugepages.sh
2) scripts/unbind.sh
Description
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