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Change-Id: I7297afe362bfdac04dd6585cc97ffdceb9f0096e
Signed-off-by: Daniel Verkamp <daniel.verkamp@intel.com>
2016-01-06 10:30:12 -07:00
doc ioat: add user-mode Intel I/OAT driver 2015-12-09 10:14:15 -07:00
examples nvme/perf: don't crash if no namespaces are usable 2016-01-05 08:05:43 -07:00
include/spdk SPDK: Add Intel vendor-specific log pages and data structures. 2016-01-04 15:22:17 -07:00
lib ioat: add a union of all descriptor types 2015-12-30 09:28:47 -07:00
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scripts autotest: use generic DPDK path on Linux 2016-01-05 13:31:07 -07:00
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autotest.sh ioat: add user-mode Intel I/OAT driver 2015-12-09 10:14:15 -07:00
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README.md README: update to DPDK 2.2.0 2016-01-05 13:18:21 -07:00
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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-2.2.0.tar.gz
3) tar xfz dpdk-2.2.0.tar.gz
4) cd dpdk-2.2.0

Linux:

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

FreeBSD:

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

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-2.2.0/x86_64-native-linuxapp-gcc

FreeBSD:

gmake DPDK_DIR=./dpdk-2.2.0/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