Documentation/l1tf: Remove Yonah processors from not vulnerable list
[GitHub/moto-9609/android_kernel_motorola_exynos9610.git] / Documentation / target / tcmu-design.txt
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1Contents:
2
31) TCM Userspace Design
4 a) Background
5 b) Benefits
6 c) Design constraints
7 d) Implementation overview
8 i. Mailbox
9 ii. Command ring
10 iii. Data Area
11 e) Device discovery
12 f) Device events
13 g) Other contingencies
142) Writing a user pass-through handler
15 a) Discovering and configuring TCMU uio devices
16 b) Waiting for events on the device(s)
17 c) Managing the command ring
9c1cd1b6 183) A final note
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19
20
21TCM Userspace Design
22--------------------
23
24TCM is another name for LIO, an in-kernel iSCSI target (server).
25Existing TCM targets run in the kernel. TCMU (TCM in Userspace)
26allows userspace programs to be written which act as iSCSI targets.
27This document describes the design.
28
29The existing kernel provides modules for different SCSI transport
30protocols. TCM also modularizes the data storage. There are existing
31modules for file, block device, RAM or using another SCSI device as
32storage. These are called "backstores" or "storage engines". These
33built-in modules are implemented entirely as kernel code.
34
35Background:
36
37In addition to modularizing the transport protocol used for carrying
38SCSI commands ("fabrics"), the Linux kernel target, LIO, also modularizes
39the actual data storage as well. These are referred to as "backstores"
40or "storage engines". The target comes with backstores that allow a
41file, a block device, RAM, or another SCSI device to be used for the
42local storage needed for the exported SCSI LUN. Like the rest of LIO,
43these are implemented entirely as kernel code.
44
45These backstores cover the most common use cases, but not all. One new
46use case that other non-kernel target solutions, such as tgt, are able
47to support is using Gluster's GLFS or Ceph's RBD as a backstore. The
48target then serves as a translator, allowing initiators to store data
49in these non-traditional networked storage systems, while still only
50using standard protocols themselves.
51
52If the target is a userspace process, supporting these is easy. tgt,
53for example, needs only a small adapter module for each, because the
54modules just use the available userspace libraries for RBD and GLFS.
55
56Adding support for these backstores in LIO is considerably more
57difficult, because LIO is entirely kernel code. Instead of undertaking
58the significant work to port the GLFS or RBD APIs and protocols to the
59kernel, another approach is to create a userspace pass-through
60backstore for LIO, "TCMU".
61
62
63Benefits:
64
65In addition to allowing relatively easy support for RBD and GLFS, TCMU
66will also allow easier development of new backstores. TCMU combines
67with the LIO loopback fabric to become something similar to FUSE
68(Filesystem in Userspace), but at the SCSI layer instead of the
69filesystem layer. A SUSE, if you will.
70
71The disadvantage is there are more distinct components to configure, and
72potentially to malfunction. This is unavoidable, but hopefully not
73fatal if we're careful to keep things as simple as possible.
74
75Design constraints:
76
77- Good performance: high throughput, low latency
78- Cleanly handle if userspace:
79 1) never attaches
80 2) hangs
81 3) dies
82 4) misbehaves
83- Allow future flexibility in user & kernel implementations
84- Be reasonably memory-efficient
85- Simple to configure & run
86- Simple to write a userspace backend
87
88
89Implementation overview:
90
91The core of the TCMU interface is a memory region that is shared
92between kernel and userspace. Within this region is: a control area
93(mailbox); a lockless producer/consumer circular buffer for commands
94to be passed up, and status returned; and an in/out data buffer area.
95
96TCMU uses the pre-existing UIO subsystem. UIO allows device driver
97development in userspace, and this is conceptually very close to the
98TCMU use case, except instead of a physical device, TCMU implements a
99memory-mapped layout designed for SCSI commands. Using UIO also
100benefits TCMU by handling device introspection (e.g. a way for
101userspace to determine how large the shared region is) and signaling
102mechanisms in both directions.
103
104There are no embedded pointers in the memory region. Everything is
105expressed as an offset from the region's starting address. This allows
106the ring to still work if the user process dies and is restarted with
107the region mapped at a different virtual address.
108
109See target_core_user.h for the struct definitions.
110
111The Mailbox:
112
113The mailbox is always at the start of the shared memory region, and
114contains a version, details about the starting offset and size of the
115command ring, and head and tail pointers to be used by the kernel and
116userspace (respectively) to put commands on the ring, and indicate
117when the commands are completed.
118
119version - 1 (userspace should abort if otherwise)
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120flags:
121- TCMU_MAILBOX_FLAG_CAP_OOOC: indicates out-of-order completion is
122 supported. See "The Command Ring" for details.
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123cmdr_off - The offset of the start of the command ring from the start
124of the memory region, to account for the mailbox size.
125cmdr_size - The size of the command ring. This does *not* need to be a
126power of two.
127cmd_head - Modified by the kernel to indicate when a command has been
128placed on the ring.
129cmd_tail - Modified by userspace to indicate when it has completed
130processing of a command.
131
132The Command Ring:
133
134Commands are placed on the ring by the kernel incrementing
135mailbox.cmd_head by the size of the command, modulo cmdr_size, and
136then signaling userspace via uio_event_notify(). Once the command is
137completed, userspace updates mailbox.cmd_tail in the same way and
138signals the kernel via a 4-byte write(). When cmd_head equals
139cmd_tail, the ring is empty -- no commands are currently waiting to be
140processed by userspace.
141
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142TCMU commands are 8-byte aligned. They start with a common header
143containing "len_op", a 32-bit value that stores the length, as well as
144the opcode in the lowest unused bits. It also contains cmd_id and
145flags fields for setting by the kernel (kflags) and userspace
146(uflags).
147
148Currently only two opcodes are defined, TCMU_OP_CMD and TCMU_OP_PAD.
149
150When the opcode is CMD, the entry in the command ring is a struct
151tcmu_cmd_entry. Userspace finds the SCSI CDB (Command Data Block) via
152tcmu_cmd_entry.req.cdb_off. This is an offset from the start of the
153overall shared memory region, not the entry. The data in/out buffers
154are accessible via tht req.iov[] array. iov_cnt contains the number of
155entries in iov[] needed to describe either the Data-In or Data-Out
156buffers. For bidirectional commands, iov_cnt specifies how many iovec
e4648b01 157entries cover the Data-Out area, and iov_bidi_cnt specifies how many
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158iovec entries immediately after that in iov[] cover the Data-In
159area. Just like other fields, iov.iov_base is an offset from the start
160of the region.
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161
162When completing a command, userspace sets rsp.scsi_status, and
163rsp.sense_buffer if necessary. Userspace then increments
164mailbox.cmd_tail by entry.hdr.length (mod cmdr_size) and signals the
165kernel via the UIO method, a 4-byte write to the file descriptor.
166
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167If TCMU_MAILBOX_FLAG_CAP_OOOC is set for mailbox->flags, kernel is
168capable of handling out-of-order completions. In this case, userspace can
169handle command in different order other than original. Since kernel would
170still process the commands in the same order it appeared in the command
171ring, userspace need to update the cmd->id when completing the
172command(a.k.a steal the original command's entry).
173
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174When the opcode is PAD, userspace only updates cmd_tail as above --
175it's a no-op. (The kernel inserts PAD entries to ensure each CMD entry
176is contiguous within the command ring.)
177
178More opcodes may be added in the future. If userspace encounters an
179opcode it does not handle, it must set UNKNOWN_OP bit (bit 0) in
180hdr.uflags, update cmd_tail, and proceed with processing additional
181commands, if any.
182
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183The Data Area:
184
185This is shared-memory space after the command ring. The organization
186of this area is not defined in the TCMU interface, and userspace
187should access only the parts referenced by pending iovs.
188
189
190Device Discovery:
191
192Other devices may be using UIO besides TCMU. Unrelated user processes
193may also be handling different sets of TCMU devices. TCMU userspace
194processes must find their devices by scanning sysfs
195class/uio/uio*/name. For TCMU devices, these names will be of the
196format:
197
198tcm-user/<hba_num>/<device_name>/<subtype>/<path>
199
200where "tcm-user" is common for all TCMU-backed UIO devices. <hba_num>
201and <device_name> allow userspace to find the device's path in the
202kernel target's configfs tree. Assuming the usual mount point, it is
203found at:
204
205/sys/kernel/config/target/core/user_<hba_num>/<device_name>
206
207This location contains attributes such as "hw_block_size", that
208userspace needs to know for correct operation.
209
210<subtype> will be a userspace-process-unique string to identify the
211TCMU device as expecting to be backed by a certain handler, and <path>
212will be an additional handler-specific string for the user process to
213configure the device, if needed. The name cannot contain ':', due to
214LIO limitations.
215
216For all devices so discovered, the user handler opens /dev/uioX and
217calls mmap():
218
219mmap(NULL, size, PROT_READ|PROT_WRITE, MAP_SHARED, fd, 0)
220
221where size must be equal to the value read from
222/sys/class/uio/uioX/maps/map0/size.
223
224
225Device Events:
226
227If a new device is added or removed, a notification will be broadcast
228over netlink, using a generic netlink family name of "TCM-USER" and a
229multicast group named "config". This will include the UIO name as
230described in the previous section, as well as the UIO minor
231number. This should allow userspace to identify both the UIO device and
232the LIO device, so that after determining the device is supported
233(based on subtype) it can take the appropriate action.
234
235
236Other contingencies:
237
238Userspace handler process never attaches:
239
240- TCMU will post commands, and then abort them after a timeout period
241 (30 seconds.)
242
243Userspace handler process is killed:
244
245- It is still possible to restart and re-connect to TCMU
246 devices. Command ring is preserved. However, after the timeout period,
247 the kernel will abort pending tasks.
248
249Userspace handler process hangs:
250
251- The kernel will abort pending tasks after a timeout period.
252
253Userspace handler process is malicious:
254
255- The process can trivially break the handling of devices it controls,
256 but should not be able to access kernel memory outside its shared
257 memory areas.
258
259
260Writing a user pass-through handler (with example code)
261-------------------------------------------------------
262
263A user process handing a TCMU device must support the following:
264
265a) Discovering and configuring TCMU uio devices
266b) Waiting for events on the device(s)
267c) Managing the command ring: Parsing operations and commands,
268 performing work as needed, setting response fields (scsi_status and
269 possibly sense_buffer), updating cmd_tail, and notifying the kernel
270 that work has been finished
271
272First, consider instead writing a plugin for tcmu-runner. tcmu-runner
273implements all of this, and provides a higher-level API for plugin
274authors.
275
276TCMU is designed so that multiple unrelated processes can manage TCMU
277devices separately. All handlers should make sure to only open their
278devices, based opon a known subtype string.
279
280a) Discovering and configuring TCMU UIO devices:
281
282(error checking omitted for brevity)
283
284int fd, dev_fd;
285char buf[256];
286unsigned long long map_len;
287void *map;
288
289fd = open("/sys/class/uio/uio0/name", O_RDONLY);
290ret = read(fd, buf, sizeof(buf));
291close(fd);
292buf[ret-1] = '\0'; /* null-terminate and chop off the \n */
293
294/* we only want uio devices whose name is a format we expect */
295if (strncmp(buf, "tcm-user", 8))
296 exit(-1);
297
298/* Further checking for subtype also needed here */
299
300fd = open(/sys/class/uio/%s/maps/map0/size, O_RDONLY);
301ret = read(fd, buf, sizeof(buf));
302close(fd);
303str_buf[ret-1] = '\0'; /* null-terminate and chop off the \n */
304
305map_len = strtoull(buf, NULL, 0);
306
307dev_fd = open("/dev/uio0", O_RDWR);
308map = mmap(NULL, map_len, PROT_READ|PROT_WRITE, MAP_SHARED, dev_fd, 0);
309
310
311b) Waiting for events on the device(s)
312
313while (1) {
314 char buf[4];
315
316 int ret = read(dev_fd, buf, 4); /* will block */
317
318 handle_device_events(dev_fd, map);
319}
320
321
322c) Managing the command ring
323
324#include <linux/target_core_user.h>
325
326int handle_device_events(int fd, void *map)
327{
328 struct tcmu_mailbox *mb = map;
329 struct tcmu_cmd_entry *ent = (void *) mb + mb->cmdr_off + mb->cmd_tail;
330 int did_some_work = 0;
331
332 /* Process events from cmd ring until we catch up with cmd_head */
333 while (ent != (void *)mb + mb->cmdr_off + mb->cmd_head) {
334
cf87edc6 335 if (tcmu_hdr_get_op(ent->hdr.len_op) == TCMU_OP_CMD) {
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336 uint8_t *cdb = (void *)mb + ent->req.cdb_off;
337 bool success = true;
338
339 /* Handle command here. */
340 printf("SCSI opcode: 0x%x\n", cdb[0]);
341
342 /* Set response fields */
343 if (success)
344 ent->rsp.scsi_status = SCSI_NO_SENSE;
345 else {
346 /* Also fill in rsp->sense_buffer here */
347 ent->rsp.scsi_status = SCSI_CHECK_CONDITION;
348 }
349 }
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350 else if (tcmu_hdr_get_op(ent->hdr.len_op) != TCMU_OP_PAD) {
351 /* Tell the kernel we didn't handle unknown opcodes */
352 ent->hdr.uflags |= TCMU_UFLAG_UNKNOWN_OP;
353 }
ce876851 354 else {
cf87edc6 355 /* Do nothing for PAD entries except update cmd_tail */
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356 }
357
358 /* update cmd_tail */
359 mb->cmd_tail = (mb->cmd_tail + tcmu_hdr_get_len(&ent->hdr)) % mb->cmdr_size;
360 ent = (void *) mb + mb->cmdr_off + mb->cmd_tail;
361 did_some_work = 1;
362 }
363
364 /* Notify the kernel that work has been finished */
365 if (did_some_work) {
366 uint32_t buf = 0;
367
368 write(fd, &buf, 4);
369 }
370
371 return 0;
372}
373
374
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375A final note
376------------
377
378Please be careful to return codes as defined by the SCSI
379specifications. These are different than some values defined in the
380scsi/scsi.h include file. For example, CHECK CONDITION's status code
381is 2, not 1.