This helps us remove master/slave terminology from SPDK and is aligned with similar changes made recently in DPDK. While updating nvme/identify to use the new member name, also replace g_master_core there with g_main_core. Other nvme utility usage of "master_core" will be updated in a later patch. Signed-off-by: Jim Harris <james.r.harris@intel.com> Change-Id: I0ec4e3e9b644bec21b3729809bf5c4d35b10837f Reviewed-on: https://review.spdk.io/gerrit/c/spdk/spdk/+/5351 Community-CI: Broadcom CI Community-CI: Mellanox Build Bot Tested-by: SPDK CI Jenkins <sys_sgci@intel.com> Reviewed-by: Aleksey Marchuk <alexeymar@mellanox.com> Reviewed-by: Shuhei Matsumoto <shuhei.matsumoto.xt@hitachi.com>
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vhost Target
Table of Contents
- @ref vhost_intro
- @ref vhost_prereqs
- @ref vhost_start
- @ref vhost_config
- @ref vhost_qemu_config
- @ref vhost_example
- @ref vhost_advanced_topics
- @ref vhost_bugs
Introduction
A vhost target provides a local storage service as a process running on a local machine. It is capable of exposing virtualized block devices to QEMU instances or other arbitrary processes.
The following diagram presents how QEMU-based VM communicates with SPDK Vhost-SCSI device.
The diagram, and the vhost protocol itself is described in @ref vhost_processing doc.
SPDK provides an accelerated vhost target by applying the same user space and polling techniques as other components in SPDK. Since SPDK is polling for vhost submissions, it can signal the VM to skip notifications on submission. This avoids VMEXITs on I/O submission and can significantly reduce CPU usage in the VM on heavy I/O workloads.
Prerequisites
This guide assumes the SPDK has been built according to the instructions in @ref getting_started. The SPDK vhost target is built with the default configure options.
Vhost Command Line Parameters
Additional command line flags are available for Vhost target.
Param | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
-S | string | $PWD | directory where UNIX domain sockets will be created |
Supported Guest Operating Systems
The guest OS must contain virtio-scsi or virtio-blk drivers. Most Linux and FreeBSD distributions include virtio drivers. Windows virtio drivers must be installed separately. The SPDK vhost target has been tested with recent versions of Ubuntu, Fedora, and Windows
QEMU
Userspace vhost-scsi target support was added to upstream QEMU in v2.10.0. Run the following command to confirm your QEMU supports userspace vhost-scsi.
qemu-system-x86_64 -device vhost-user-scsi-pci,help
Userspace vhost-blk target support was added to upstream QEMU in v2.12.0. Run the following command to confirm your QEMU supports userspace vhost-blk.
qemu-system-x86_64 -device vhost-user-blk-pci,help
Userspace vhost-nvme target was added as experimental feature for SPDK 18.04 release, patches for QEMU are available in SPDK's QEMU repository only.
Run the following command to confirm your QEMU supports userspace vhost-nvme.
qemu-system-x86_64 -device vhost-user-nvme,help
Starting SPDK vhost target
First, run the SPDK setup.sh script to setup some hugepages for the SPDK vhost target application. This will allocate 4096MiB (4GiB) of hugepages, enough for the SPDK vhost target and the virtual machine.
HUGEMEM=4096 scripts/setup.sh
Next, start the SPDK vhost target application. The following command will start vhost on CPU cores 0 and 1 (cpumask 0x3) with all future socket files placed in /var/tmp. Vhost will fully occupy given CPU cores for I/O polling. Particular vhost devices can be restricted to run on a subset of these CPU cores. See @ref vhost_vdev_create for details.
build/bin/vhost -S /var/tmp -m 0x3
To list all available vhost options use the following command.
build/bin/vhost -h
SPDK Configuration
Create bdev (block device)
SPDK bdevs are block devices which will be exposed to the guest OS. For vhost-scsi, bdevs are exposed as SCSI LUNs on SCSI devices attached to the vhost-scsi controller in the guest OS. For vhost-blk, bdevs are exposed directly as block devices in the guest OS and are not associated at all with SCSI.
SPDK supports several different types of storage backends, including NVMe, Linux AIO, malloc ramdisk and Ceph RBD. Refer to @ref bdev for additional information on configuring SPDK storage backends.
This guide will use a malloc bdev (ramdisk) named Malloc0. The following RPC will create a 64MB malloc bdev with 512-byte block size.
scripts/rpc.py bdev_malloc_create 64 512 -b Malloc0
Create a vhost device
Vhost-SCSI
The following RPC will create a vhost-scsi controller which can be accessed
by QEMU via /var/tmp/vhost.0. At the time of creation the controller will be
bound to a single CPU core with the smallest number of vhost controllers.
The optional --cpumask
parameter can directly specify which cores should be
taken into account - in this case always CPU 0. To achieve optimal performance
on NUMA systems, the cpumask should specify cores on the same CPU socket as its
associated VM.
scripts/rpc.py vhost_create_scsi_controller --cpumask 0x1 vhost.0
The following RPC will attach the Malloc0 bdev to the vhost.0 vhost-scsi controller. Malloc0 will appear as a single LUN on a SCSI device with target ID 0. SPDK Vhost-SCSI device currently supports only one LUN per SCSI target. Additional LUNs can be added by specifying a different target ID.
scripts/rpc.py vhost_scsi_controller_add_target vhost.0 0 Malloc0
To remove a bdev from a vhost-scsi controller use the following RPC:
scripts/rpc.py vhost_scsi_controller_remove_target vhost.0 0
Vhost-BLK
The following RPC will create a vhost-blk device exposing Malloc0 bdev. The device will be accessible to QEMU via /var/tmp/vhost.1. All the I/O polling will be pinned to the least occupied CPU core within given cpumask - in this case always CPU 0. For NUMA systems, the cpumask should specify cores on the same CPU socket as its associated VM.
scripts/rpc.py vhost_create_blk_controller --cpumask 0x1 vhost.1 Malloc0
It is also possible to create a read-only vhost-blk device by specifying an
extra -r
or --readonly
parameter.
scripts/rpc.py vhost_create_blk_controller --cpumask 0x1 -r vhost.1 Malloc0
QEMU
Now the virtual machine can be started with QEMU. The following command-line parameters must be added to connect the virtual machine to its vhost controller.
First, specify the memory backend for the virtual machine. Since QEMU must share the virtual machine's memory with the SPDK vhost target, the memory must be specified in this format with share=on.
-object memory-backend-file,id=mem,size=1G,mem-path=/dev/hugepages,share=on
-numa node,memdev=mem
Second, ensure QEMU boots from the virtual machine image and not the SPDK malloc block device by specifying bootindex=0 for the boot image.
-drive file=guest_os_image.qcow2,if=none,id=disk
-device ide-hd,drive=disk,bootindex=0
Finally, specify the SPDK vhost devices:
Vhost-SCSI
-chardev socket,id=char0,path=/var/tmp/vhost.0
-device vhost-user-scsi-pci,id=scsi0,chardev=char0
Vhost-BLK
-chardev socket,id=char1,path=/var/tmp/vhost.1
-device vhost-user-blk-pci,id=blk0,chardev=char1
Example output
This example uses an NVMe bdev alongside Mallocs. SPDK vhost application is started on CPU cores 0 and 1, QEMU on cores 2 and 3.
host:~# HUGEMEM=2048 ./scripts/setup.sh
0000:01:00.0 (8086 0953): nvme -> vfio-pci
host:~# ./build/bin/vhost -S /var/tmp -s 1024 -m 0x3 &
Starting DPDK 17.11.0 initialization...
[ DPDK EAL parameters: vhost -c 3 -m 1024 --main-lcore=1 --file-prefix=spdk_pid156014 ]
EAL: Detected 48 lcore(s)
EAL: Probing VFIO support...
EAL: VFIO support initialized
app.c: 369:spdk_app_start: *NOTICE*: Total cores available: 2
reactor.c: 668:spdk_reactors_init: *NOTICE*: Occupied cpu socket mask is 0x1
reactor.c: 424:_spdk_reactor_run: *NOTICE*: Reactor started on core 1 on socket 0
reactor.c: 424:_spdk_reactor_run: *NOTICE*: Reactor started on core 0 on socket 0
host:~# ./scripts/rpc.py bdev_nvme_attach_controller -b Nvme0 -t pcie -a 0000:01:00.0
EAL: PCI device 0000:01:00.0 on NUMA socket 0
EAL: probe driver: 8086:953 spdk_nvme
EAL: using IOMMU type 1 (Type 1)
host:~# ./scripts/rpc.py bdev_malloc_create 128 4096 Malloc0
Malloc0
host:~# ./scripts/rpc.py vhost_create_scsi_controller --cpumask 0x1 vhost.0
VHOST_CONFIG: vhost-user server: socket created, fd: 21
VHOST_CONFIG: bind to /var/tmp/vhost.0
vhost.c: 596:spdk_vhost_dev_construct: *NOTICE*: Controller vhost.0: new controller added
host:~# ./scripts/rpc.py vhost_scsi_controller_add_target vhost.0 0 Nvme0n1
vhost_scsi.c: 840:spdk_vhost_scsi_dev_add_tgt: *NOTICE*: Controller vhost.0: defined target 'Target 0' using lun 'Nvme0'
host:~# ./scripts/rpc.py vhost_scsi_controller_add_target vhost.0 1 Malloc0
vhost_scsi.c: 840:spdk_vhost_scsi_dev_add_tgt: *NOTICE*: Controller vhost.0: defined target 'Target 1' using lun 'Malloc0'
host:~# ./scripts/rpc.py bdev_malloc_create 64 512 -b Malloc1
Malloc1
host:~# ./scripts/rpc.py vhost_create_blk_controller --cpumask 0x2 vhost.1 Malloc1
vhost_blk.c: 719:spdk_vhost_blk_construct: *NOTICE*: Controller vhost.1: using bdev 'Malloc1'
host:~# taskset -c 2,3 qemu-system-x86_64 \
--enable-kvm \
-cpu host -smp 2 \
-m 1G -object memory-backend-file,id=mem0,size=1G,mem-path=/dev/hugepages,share=on -numa node,memdev=mem0 \
-drive file=guest_os_image.qcow2,if=none,id=disk \
-device ide-hd,drive=disk,bootindex=0 \
-chardev socket,id=spdk_vhost_scsi0,path=/var/tmp/vhost.0 \
-device vhost-user-scsi-pci,id=scsi0,chardev=spdk_vhost_scsi0,num_queues=4 \
-chardev socket,id=spdk_vhost_blk0,path=/var/tmp/vhost.1 \
-device vhost-user-blk-pci,chardev=spdk_vhost_blk0,num-queues=4
Please note the following two commands are run on the guest VM.
guest:~# lsblk --output "NAME,KNAME,MODEL,HCTL,SIZE,VENDOR,SUBSYSTEMS"
NAME KNAME MODEL HCTL SIZE VENDOR SUBSYSTEMS
sda sda QEMU HARDDISK 1:0:0:0 80G ATA block:scsi:pci
sda1 sda1 80G block:scsi:pci
sdb sdb NVMe disk 2:0:0:0 372,6G INTEL block:scsi:virtio:pci
sdc sdc Malloc disk 2:0:1:0 128M INTEL block:scsi:virtio:pci
vda vda 128M 0x1af4 block:virtio:pci
guest:~# poweroff
host:~# fg
<< CTRL + C >>
vhost.c:1006:session_shutdown: *NOTICE*: Exiting
We can see that sdb
and sdc
are SPDK vhost-scsi LUNs, and vda
is SPDK a
vhost-blk disk.
Advanced Topics
Multi-Queue Block Layer (blk-mq)
For best performance use the Linux kernel block multi-queue feature with vhost. To enable it on Linux, it is required to modify kernel options inside the virtual machine.
Instructions below for Ubuntu OS:
vi /etc/default/grub
- Make sure mq is enabled:
GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX="scsi_mod.use_blk_mq=1"
sudo update-grub
- Reboot virtual machine
To achieve better performance, make sure to increase number of cores
assigned to the VM and add num_queues
parameter to the QEMU device
. It should be enough
to set num_queues=4
to saturate physical device. Adding too many queues might lead to SPDK
vhost performance degradation if many vhost devices are used because each device will require
additional num_queues
to be polled.
Hot-attach/hot-detach
Hotplug/hotremove within a vhost controller is called hot-attach/detach. This is to distinguish it from SPDK bdev hotplug/hotremove. E.g. if an NVMe bdev is attached to a vhost-scsi controller, physically hotremoving the NVMe will trigger vhost-scsi hot-detach. It is also possible to hot-detach a bdev manually via RPC - for example when the bdev is about to be attached to another controller. See the details below.
Please also note that hot-attach/detach is Vhost-SCSI-specific. There are no RPCs to hot-attach/detach the bdev from a Vhost-BLK device. If Vhost-BLK device exposes an NVMe bdev that is hotremoved, all the I/O traffic on that Vhost-BLK device will be aborted - possibly flooding a VM with syslog warnings and errors.
Hot-attach
Hot-attach is done by simply attaching a bdev to a vhost controller with a QEMU VM already started. No other extra action is necessary.
scripts/rpc.py vhost_scsi_controller_add_target vhost.0 0 Malloc0
Hot-detach
Just like hot-attach, the hot-detach is done by simply removing bdev from a controller when QEMU VM is already started.
scripts/rpc.py vhost_scsi_controller_remove_target vhost.0 0
Removing an entire bdev will hot-detach it from a controller as well.
scripts/rpc.py bdev_malloc_delete Malloc0
Known bugs and limitations
Vhost-NVMe (experimental) can only be supported with latest Linux kernel
Vhost-NVMe target was designed for one new feature of NVMe 1.3 specification, Doorbell Buffer Config Admin command, which is used for emulated NVMe controller only. Linux 4.12 added this feature, so a new Guest kernel later than 4.12 is required to test this feature.
Windows virtio-blk driver before version 0.1.130-1 only works with 512-byte sectors
The Windows viostor
driver before version 0.1.130-1 is buggy and does not
correctly support vhost-blk devices with non-512-byte block size.
See the bug report for
more information.
QEMU vhost-user-blk
QEMU vhost-user-blk is supported from version 2.12.