Signed-off-by: Jim Harris <james.r.harris@intel.com> Change-Id: I2cc4e486f110bb860affc3ee4c66264813c72719 Reviewed-on: https://review.gerrithub.io/435346 Tested-by: SPDK CI Jenkins <sys_sgci@intel.com> Chandler-Test-Pool: SPDK Automated Test System <sys_sgsw@intel.com> Reviewed-by: Ben Walker <benjamin.walker@intel.com> Reviewed-by: Xiaodong Liu <xiaodong.liu@intel.com> Reviewed-by: Shuhei Matsumoto <shuhei.matsumoto.xt@hitachi.com>
8.1 KiB
An Overview of SPDK Applications
SPDK is primarily a development kit that delivers libraries and header files for use in other applications. However, SPDK also contains a number of applications. These applications are primarily used to test the libraries, but many are full featured and high quality. The major applications in SPDK are:
- @ref iscsi
- @ref nvmf
- @ref vhost
- SPDK Target (a unified application combining the above three)
There are also a number of tools and examples in the examples
directory.
The SPDK targets are all based on a common framework so they have much in
common. The framework defines a concept called a subsystem
and all
functionality is implemented in various subsystems. Subsystems have a unified
initialization and teardown path.
Configuring SPDK Applications
Command Line Parameters
The SPDK application framework defines a set of base command line flags for all applications that use it. Specific applications may implement additional flags.
Param | Long Param | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
-c | --config | string | @ref cmd_arg_config_file | |
-d | --limit-coredump | flag | false | @ref cmd_arg_limit_coredump |
-e | --tpoint-group-mask | integer | 0x0 | @ref cmd_arg_limit_tpoint_group_mask |
-g | --single-file-segments | flag | @ref cmd_arg_single_file_segments | |
-h | --help | flag | show all available parameters and exit | |
-i | --shm-id | integer | @ref cmd_arg_multi_process | |
-m | --cpumask | CPU mask | 0x1 | application @ref cpu_mask |
-n | --mem-channels | integer | all channels | number of memory channels used for DPDK |
-p | --master-core | integer | first core in CPU mask | master (primary) core for DPDK |
-r | --rpc-socket | string | /var/tmp/spdk.sock | RPC listen address |
-s | --mem-size | integer | all hugepage memory | @ref cmd_arg_memory_size |
--silence-noticelog | flag | disable notice level logging to stderr |
||
-u | --no-pci | flag | @ref cmd_arg_disable_pci_access. | |
--wait-for-rpc | flag | @ref cmd_arg_deferred_initialization | ||
-B | --pci-blacklist | B:D:F | @ref cmd_arg_pci_blacklist_whitelist. | |
-W | --pci-whitelist | B:D:F | @ref cmd_arg_pci_blacklist_whitelist. | |
-R | --huge-unlink | flag | @ref cmd_arg_huge_unlink | |
--huge-dir | string | the first discovered | allocate hugepages from a specific mount | |
-L | --logflag | string | @ref cmd_arg_debug_log_flags |
Configuration file
Historically, the SPDK applications were configured using a configuration file. This is still supported, but is considered deprecated in favor of JSON RPC configuration. See @ref jsonrpc for details.
Note that --config
and --wait-for-rpc
cannot be used at the same time.
Limit coredump
By default, an SPDK application will set resource limits for core file sizes
to RLIM_INFINITY. Specifying --limit-coredump
will not set the resource limits.
Tracepoint group mask
SPDK has an experimental low overhead tracing framework. Tracepoints in this
framework are organized into tracepoint groups. By default, all tracepoint
groups are disabled. --tpoint-group-mask
can be used to enable a specific
subset of tracepoint groups in the application.
Note: Additional documentation on the tracepoint framework is in progress.
Deferred initialization
SPDK applications progress through a set of states beginning with STARTUP
and
ending with RUNTIME
.
If the --wait-for-rpc
parameter is provided SPDK will pause just before starting
subsystem initialization. This state is called STARTUP
. The JSON RPC server is
ready but only a small subsystem of commands are available to set up initialization
parameters. Those parameters can't be changed after the SPDK application enters
RUNTIME
state. When the client finishes configuring the SPDK subsystems it
needs to issue the @ref rpc_start_subsystem_init RPC command to begin the
initialization process. After rpc_start_subsystem_init
returns true
SPDK
will enter the RUNTIME
state and the list of available commands becomes much
larger.
To see which RPC methods are available in the current state, issue the
get_rpc_methods
with the parameter current
set to true
.
For more details see @ref jsonrpc documentation.
Create just one hugetlbfs file
Instead of creating one hugetlbfs file per page, this option makes SPDK create one file per hugepages per socket. This is needed for @ref virtio to be used with more than 8 hugepages. See @ref virtio_2mb.
Multi process mode
When --shm-id
is specified, the application is started in multi-process mode.
Applications using the same shm-id share their memory and
[NVMe devices](@ref nvme_multi_process). The first app to start with a given id
becomes a primary process, with the rest, called secondary processes, only
attaching to it. When the primary process exits, the secondary ones continue to
operate, but no new processes can be attached at this point. All processes within
the same shm-id group must use the same
[--single-file-segments setting](@ref cmd_arg_single_file_segments).
Memory size
Total size of the hugepage memory to reserve. If DPDK env layer is used, it will reserve memory from all available hugetlbfs mounts, starting with the one with the highest page size. This option accepts a number of bytes with a possible binary prefix, e.g. 1024, 1024M, 1G. The default unit is megabyte.
Starting with DPDK 18.05.1, it's possible to reserve hugepages at runtime, meaning that SPDK application can be started with 0 pre-reserved memory. Unlike hugepages pre-reserved at the application startup, the hugepages reserved at runtime will be released to the system as soon as they're no longer used.
Disable PCI access
If SPDK is run with PCI access disabled it won't detect any PCI devices. This includes primarily NVMe and IOAT devices. Also, the VFIO and UIO kernel modules are not required in this mode.
PCI address blacklist and whitelist
If blacklist is used, then all devices with the provided PCI address will be
ignored. If a whitelist is used, only whitelisted devices will be probed.
-B
or -W
can be used more than once, but cannot be mixed together. That is,
-B
and -W
cannot be used at the same time.
Unlink hugepage files after initialization
By default, each DPDK-based application tries to remove any orphaned hugetlbfs
files during its initialization. This option removes hugetlbfs files of the current
process as soon as they're created, but is not compatible with --shm-id
.
Debug log
Enable a specific debug log type. This option can be used more than once. A list of
all available types is provided in the --help
output, with --logflag all
enabling all of them. Debug logs are only available in debug builds of SPDK.
CPU mask
Whenever the CPU mask
is mentioned it is a string in one of the following formats:
- Case insensitive hexadecimal string with or without "0x" prefix.
- Comma separated list of CPUs or list of CPU ranges. Use '-' to define range.
Example
The following CPU masks are equal and correspond to CPUs 0, 1, 2, 8, 9, 10, 11 and 12:
0x1f07
0x1F07
1f07
[0,1,2,8-12]
[0, 1, 2, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12]