LIO Target
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In computing, Linux-IO (LIO) Target is an open-source implementation of the
SCSI target In computer data storage, a SCSI initiator is the endpoint that initiates a SCSI session, that is, sends a SCSI command. The initiator usually does not provide any Logical Unit Numbers (LUNs). On the other hand, a SCSI target is the endpoint that ...
that has become the standard one included in the
Linux kernel The Linux kernel is a free and open-source, monolithic, modular, multitasking, Unix-like operating system kernel. It was originally authored in 1991 by Linus Torvalds for his i386-based PC, and it was soon adopted as the kernel for the GNU ope ...
. Internally, LIO does not initiate sessions, but instead provides one or more
Logical Unit Number In computer storage, a logical unit number, or LUN, is a number used to identify a logical unit, which is a device addressed by the SCSI protocol or by Storage Area Network protocols that encapsulate SCSI, such as Fibre Channel or iSCSI. A LUN m ...
s (LUNs), waits for SCSI commands from a SCSI initiator, and performs required input/output data transfers. LIO supports common storage fabrics, including FCoE, Fibre Channel, IEEE 1394, iSCSI, iSCSI Extensions for RDMA (iSER), SCSI RDMA Protocol (SRP) and Universal Serial Bus, USB. It is included in most Linux distributions; native support for LIO in QEMU/Kernel-based Virtual Machine, KVM, libvirt, and OpenStack makes LIO also a storage option for cloud deployments. LIO is maintained by Datera, Inc., a Silicon Valley vendor of storage systems and software. On January 15, 2011, LIO SCSI target engine was merged into the Linux kernel mainline, in kernel version 2.6.38, which was released on March 14, 2011. Additional fabric modules have been merged into subsequent Linux releases. A competing generic SCSI target module for Linux is SCST. For the narrower purpose providing a Linux iSCSI target, the older IET ("iSCSI Enterprise Target") and STGT ("SCSI Target Framework") modules also enjoy industry support.


Background

The SCSI standard provides an extensible semantic abstraction for computer data storage devices, and as such has become a "lingua franca" for data storage systems. The SCSI T10 standards define the SCSI command, commands and protocols of the SCSI command processor (sent in ''SCSI CDBs''), and the electrical and optical interfaces for various implementations. A ''SCSI initiator'' is the endpoint that initiates a SCSI session. A ''SCSI initiator and target, SCSI target'' is the endpoint that waits for initiator commands and executes the required input/output, I/O data transfers. The SCSI target usually exports one or more Logical unit number, LUNs for initiators to operate on. The LIO Linux SCSI Target implements a generic SCSI target that provides remote access to most data storage device types over all prevalent storage fabrics and protocols. LIO neither directly accesses data nor does it directly communicate with applications. LIO provides a highly efficient, fabric-independent and fabric-transparent abstraction for the semantics of numerous data storage device types.


Architecture

LIO implements a modular and extensible architecture around a versatile and highly efficient, parallelized SCSI command processing engine. The SCSI target engine implements the semantics of a SCSI target. The LIO SCSI target engine is independent of specific fabric modules or backstore types. Thus, LIO supports mixing and matching any number of fabrics and backstores at the same time. The LIO SCSI target engine implements a comprehensive SPC-3/SPC-4 feature set with support for high-end features, including SCSI-3/SCSI-4 ''Persistent Reservations'' (PRs), SCSI-4 ''Asymmetric Logical Unit Assignment'' (ALUA), VMware ''vSphere APIs for Array Integration'' (VAAI), Data Integrity Field, T10 DIF, etc. LIO is configurable via a configfs-based kernel API, and can be managed via a command-line interface and API (''#targetcli, targetcli'').


SCSI target

The concept of a SCSI target isn't narrowly restricted to physical devices on a SCSI bus, but instead provides a generalized model for all receivers on a logical SCSI fabric. This includes SCSI sessions across interconnects with no physical SCSI bus at all. Conceptually, the SCSI target provides a generic block storage service or server (computing), server in this scenario.


Backstores

Backstores provide the SCSI target with generalized access to data storage devices by importing them via corresponding device drivers. Backstores don't need to be physical SCSI devices. The most important backstore media types are: * Block: The block driver allows using raw Linux block devices as backstores for export via LIO. This includes physical devices, such as hard disk drive, HDDs, solid-state drive, SSDs, Compact Disc, CDs/DVDs, RAM drive, RAM disks, etc., and logical devices, such as software or hardware RAID volumes or Logical Volume Manager (Linux), LVM volumes. * File: The file driver allows using files that can reside in any Linux file system or clustered file system as backstores for export via LIO. * Raw: The raw driver allows using unstructured memory as backstores for export via LIO. As a result, LIO provides a generalized model to export block storage.


Fabric modules

Fabric modules implement the frontend of the SCSI target by encapsulating and abstracting the properties of the various supported interconnect. The following fabric modules are available.


FCoE

The ''Fibre Channel over Ethernet'' (FCoE) fabric module allows the transport of Fibre Channel protocol (FCP) traffic across data center bridging, lossless Ethernet networks. The specification, supported by a large number of network and storage vendors, is part of the Technical Committee T11 FC-BB-5 standard. LIO supports all standard Ethernet NICs. The FCoE fabric module was contributed by Cisco and Intel, and released with Linux 3.0 on July 21, 2011.


Fibre Channel

Fibre Channel is a high-speed network technology primarily used for storage networking. It is standardized in the Technical Committee T11 of the InterNational Committee for Information Technology Standards (INCITS). The QLogic Fibre Channel fabric module supports 4- and 8-gigabit speeds with the following HBAs: * QLogic 2400 Series (QLx246x), 4GFC * QLogic 2500 Series (QLE256x), 8GFC (fully qual'd) The Fibre Channel fabric module and low-level driver (LLD) were released with Linux 3.5 on July 21, 2012. With Linux 3.9, the following QLogic HBAs and CNAs are also supported: * QLogic 2600 Series (QLE266x), 16GFC, SR-IOV * QLogic 8300 Series (QLE834x), 16GFS/10 GbE, PCIe Gen3 SR-IOV * QLogic 8100 Series (QLE81xx), 8GFC/10 GbE, PCIe Gen2 This makes LIO the first open source target to support 16-gigabit Fibre Channel.


IEEE 1394

The FireWire SBP-2 fabric module enables Linux to export local storage devices via IEEE 1394, so that other systems can mount them as an ordinary IEEE 1394 storage device. IEEE 1394 is a serial bus interface standard for high-speed communications and isochronous real-time data transfer. It was developed by Apple Inc., Apple as "FireWire" in the late 1980s and early 1990s, and Macintosh computers have supported "FireWire target disk mode" since 1999. The FireWire SBP-2 fabric module was released with Linux 3.5 on July 21, 2012.


iSCSI

The ''Internet Small Computer System Interface'' (iSCSI) fabric module allows the transport of SCSI traffic across standard IP networks. By carrying SCSI sessions across IP networks, iSCSI is used to facilitate data transfers over intranets and to manage storage over long distances. iSCSI can be used to transmit data over local area networks (LANs), wide area networks (WANs), or the Internet, and can enable location-independent and location-transparent data storage and retrieval. The LIO iSCSI fabric module also implements a number of advanced iSCSI features that increase performance and resiliency, such as ''Multiple Connections per Session'' (MC/S) and ''Error Recovery Levels'' 0-2 (ERL=0,1,2). LIO supports all standard Ethernet NICs. The iSCSI fabric module was released with Linux 3.1 on October 24, 2011.


iSER

Networks supporting remote direct memory access (RDMA) can use the iSCSI Extensions for RDMA (iSER) fabric module to transport iSCSI traffic. iSER permits data to be transferred directly into and out of remote SCSI computer memory buffers without intermediate data copies (''direct data placement'' or DDP) by using RDMA. RDMA is supported on InfiniBand networks, on Ethernet with data center bridging (DCB) networks via RDMA over Converged Ethernet (RoCE), and on standard Ethernet networks with iWARP enhanced TCP offload engine controllers. The iSER fabric module was developed together by Datera and Mellanox Technologies, and first released with Linux 3.10 on June 30, 2013.


SRP

The ''SCSI RDMA Protocol'' (SRP) fabric module allows the transport of SCSI traffic across RDMA (see above) networks. As of 2013, SRP was more widely used than iSER, although it is more limited, as SCSI is only a peer-to-peer protocol, whereas iSCSI is fully routable. The SRP fabric module supports the following Mellanox host channel adapters (HCAs): * Mellanox ConnectX-2 VPI PCIe Gen2 HCAs (x8 lanes), single/dual-port QDR 40 Gbit/s * Mellanox ConnectX-3 VPI PCIe Gen3 HCAs (x8 lanes), single/dual-port FDR 56 Gbit/s * Mellanox ConnectX-IB PCIe Gen3 HCAs (x16 lanes), single/dual-port FDR 56 Gbit/s The SRP fabric module was released with Linux 3.3 on March 18, 2012. In 2012, c't magazine measured almost 5000 MB/s throughput with LIO SRP Target over one Mellanox ConnectX-3 port in 56 Gbit/s FDR mode on a Sandy Bridge (microarchitecture), Sandy Bridge PCI Express 3.0 system with four Fusion-io, Fusion-IO ioDrive PCI Express flash memory cards.


USB

The ''USB Gadget'' fabric module enables Linux to export local storage devices via the Universal Serial Bus (USB), so that other systems can mount them as an ordinary storage device. USB was designed in the mid-1990s to standardize the connection of computer peripherals, and has also become common for data storage devices. The USB Gadget fabric module was released with Linux 3.5 on July 21, 2012.


targetcli

''targetcli'' is a user space single-node management ''command line interface'' (CLI) for LIO. It supports all fabric modules and is based on a modular, extensible architecture, with plug-in modules for additional fabric modules or functionality. ''targetcli'' provides a CLI that uses an underlying generic target library through a well-defined API. Thus the CLI can easily be replaced or complemented by a UI with other metaphors, such as a GUI. ''targetcli'' is implemented in Python (programming language), Python and consists of three main modules: * the underlying ''rtslib'' and API. * the ''configshell'', which encapsulates the fabric-specific attributes in corresponding 'spec' files. * the ''targetcli'' shell itself. Detailed instructions on how to set up LIO targets can be found on the LIO wiki.


Linux distributions

''targetcli'' and LIO are included in most Linux distributions per default. Here is an overview over the most popular ones, together with the initial inclusion dates:


See also

* The SCST Linux SCSI target software stack * Fibre Channel * Fibre Channel over Ethernet (FCoE) * IEEE 1394 / Firewire * InfiniBand * iSCSI * iSCSI Extensions for RDMA (iSER) * SCSI RDMA Protocol (SRP) * USB


Notes


References


External links

*
Datera
website {{Linux kernel SCSI Linux Free software