Change-Id: I93647d2633f88522e3c0826eb7a379b9cfa0126d Signed-off-by: Tomasz Zawadzki <tomasz.zawadzki@intel.com> Reviewed-on: https://review.gerrithub.io/c/442563 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>
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Logical Volumes
The Logical Volumes library is a flexible storage space management system. It provides creating and managing virtual block devices with variable size. The SPDK Logical Volume library is built on top of @ref blob.
Terminology
Logical volume store
- Shorthand: lvolstore, lvs
- Type name: struct spdk_lvol_store
A logical volume store uses the super blob feature of blobstore to hold uuid (and in future other metadata). Blobstore types are implemented in blobstore itself, and saved on disk. An lvolstore will generate a UUID on creation, so that it can be uniquely identified from other lvolstores.
Logical volume
- Shorthand: lvol
- Type name: struct spdk_lvol
A logical volume is implemented as an SPDK blob created from an lvolstore. An lvol is uniquely identified by its UUID. Lvol additional can have alias name.
Logical volume block device
- Shorthand: lvol_bdev
- Type name: struct spdk_lvol_bdev
Representation of an SPDK block device (spdk_bdev) with an lvol implementation. A logical volume block device translates generic SPDK block device I/O (spdk_bdev_io) operations into the equivalent SPDK blob operations. Combination of lvol name and lvolstore name gives lvol_bdev alias name in a form "lvs_name/lvol_name". block_size of the created bdev is always 4096, due to blobstore page size. Cluster_size is configurable by parameter. Size of the new bdev will be rounded up to nearest multiple of cluster_size. By default lvol bdevs claim part of lvol store equal to their set size. When thin provision option is enabled, no space is taken from lvol store until data is written to lvol bdev. By default when deleting lvol bdev or resizing down, allocated clusters are unmapped. Optional --clear-method parameter can be passed on creation to change that behavior to writing zeroes or performing no operation.
Thin provisioning
Thin provisioned lvols rely on dynamic cluster allocation (e.g. when the first write operation on a cluster is performed), only space required to store data is used and unallocated clusters are obtained from underlying device (e.g. zeroes_dev).
Sample write operations of thin provisioned blob are shown on the diagram below:
Sample read operations and the structure of thin provisioned blob are shown on the diagram below:
Snapshots and clone
Logical volumes support snapshots and clones functionality. User may at any given time create snapshot of existing logical volume to save a backup of current volume state. When creating snapshot original volume becomes thin provisioned and saves only incremental differences from its underlying snapshot. This means that every read from unallocated cluster is actually a read from the snapshot and every write to unallocated cluster triggers new cluster allocation and data copy from corresponding cluster in snapshot to the new cluster in logical volume before the actual write occurs.
The read operation is performed as shown in the diagram below:
The write operation is performed as shown in the diagram below:
User may also create clone of existing snapshot that will be thin provisioned and it will behave in the same way as logical volume from which snapshot is created. There is no limit of clones and snapshots that may be created as long as there is enough space on logical volume store. Snapshots are read only. Clones may be created only from snapshots or read only logical volumes.
Inflation
Blobs can be inflated to copy data from backing devices (e.g. snapshots) and allocate all remaining clusters. As a result of this operation all dependencies for the blob are removed.
Decoupling
Blobs can be decoupled from all dependencies by copying data from backing devices (e.g. snapshots) for all allocated clusters. Remaining unallocated clusters are kept thin provisioned.
Configuring Logical Volumes
There is no static configuration available for logical volumes. All configuration is done trough RPC. Information about logical volumes is kept on block devices.
RPC overview
RPC regarding lvolstore:
construct_lvol_store [-h] [-c CLUSTER_SZ] bdev_name lvs_name
Constructs lvolstore on specified bdev with specified name. During
construction bdev is unmapped at initialization and all data is
erased. Then original bdev is claimed by
SPDK, but no additional spdk bdevs are created.
Returns uuid of created lvolstore.
Optional parameters:
-h show help
-c CLUSTER_SZ Specifies the size of cluster. By default its 4MiB.
destroy_lvol_store [-h] [-u UUID] [-l LVS_NAME]
Destroy lvolstore on specified bdev. Removes lvolstore along with lvols on
it. User can identify lvol store by UUID or its name. Note that destroying
lvolstore requires using this call, while deleting single lvol requires
using destroy_lvol_bdev rpc call.
optional arguments:
-h, --help show help
get_lvol_stores [-h] [-u UUID] [-l LVS_NAME]
Display current logical volume store list
optional arguments:
-h, --help show help
-u UUID, --uuid UUID show details of specified lvol store
-l LVS_NAME, --lvs_name LVS_NAME show details of specified lvol store
rename_lvol_store [-h] old_name new_name
Change logical volume store name
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
RPC regarding lvol and spdk bdev:
construct_lvol_bdev [-h] [-u UUID] [-l LVS_NAME] [-t] [-c CLEAR_METHOD] lvol_name size
Creates lvol with specified size and name on lvolstore specified by its uuid
or name. Then constructs spdk bdev on top of that lvol and presents it as spdk bdev.
User may use -t switch to create thin provisioned lvol.
Returns the name of new spdk bdev
optional arguments:
-h, --help show help
-c, --clear-method specify data clusters clear method "none", "unmap" (default), "write_zeroes"
get_bdevs [-h] [-b NAME]
User can view created bdevs using this call including those created on top of lvols.
optional arguments:
-h, --help show help
-b NAME, --name NAME Name of the block device. Example: Nvme0n1
destroy_lvol_bdev [-h] bdev_name
Deletes a logical volume previously created by construct_lvol_bdev.
optional arguments:
-h, --help show help
snapshot_lvol_bdev [-h] lvol_name snapshot_name
Create a snapshot with snapshot_name of a given lvol bdev.
optional arguments:
-h, --help show help
clone_lvol_bdev [-h] snapshot_name clone_name
Create a clone with clone_name of a given lvol snapshot.
optional arguments:
-h, --help show help
rename_lvol_bdev [-h] old_name new_name
Change lvol bdev name
optional arguments:
-h, --help show help
resize_lvol_bdev [-h] name size
Resize existing lvol bdev
optional arguments:
-h, --help show help
set_read_only_lvol_bdev [-h] name
Mark lvol bdev as read only
optional arguments:
-h, --help show help
inflate_lvol_bdev [-h] name
Inflate lvol bdev
optional arguments:
-h, --help show help
decouple_parent_lvol_bdev [-h] name
Decouple parent of a logical volume
optional arguments:
-h, --help show help