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[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: iscsi : changes involving tgt portal group tag.Has a decent target implementation and easy way of checking that the TPG is correct? Julo
Santosh and Jim, It appears a good idea to add in the portal group tag in the Login Request header for a sanity check by the receiving target portal. I generally agree with Jim's comments that the duration of persistence of a portal group tag is intricately linked to the extent of portal reconfiguration. Not every target reconfiguration may result in a portal group tag reassignment. OTOH, some reconfigurations may be so extensive as to cause even a node name change. Some comments on Santosh's message - > "If a portal group is re-configured such that all its previously > advertised network portals are no longer a part of the portal group, > then, the portal group tag (and thereby, the port name/identifier) > *MUST* be changed to indicate a new target port." I am not sure this solves the problem you're trying to get at. If none of the earlier IP addresses can get an initiator to the SCSI target port that it knew of (your scenario), it appears to me that it doesn't matter if the portal group tags are changed or not....A new discovery process should update the initiator of the changed portal addresses. I suggest the following text - After a portal group reconfiguration which changed the view of LUs for an initiator with a given set of privileges, the target MUST change the portal group tag that represents the reconfigured target portal group. > > Under these events, shouldn't all "open/active I_T_L traffic" have been > > aborted, closed or otherwise ended? So this shouldn't be an issue at all. > > On a session logout & re-login, it is not efficient/necessary to close > and re-open each LUN behind that target port, due to the fact that a > target port may have hundred's of LUNs behind it. I agree with Jim on this one - there should be *no* open/active I_T_L nexus traffic after a reconfiguration, targets can enforce this via simple iSCSI means (reject initiator advances to continue the session for DefaultTime2Wait+ DefaultTime2Retain seconds). In fact, Async logout request requires a clean closure that implicitly aborts I/Os. What you're describing is typical O/S "LUN open" and "LUN close" interactions. I agree that they wouldn't have to be repeated, but care must be taken to ensure that new I/Os (on the new session after reconfiguration) are not delivered to the incorrect LUs. It seems that the addition of TPGT in the login header and the proposed new text (above) would take care of this. Regards. -- Mallikarjun Mallikarjun Chadalapaka Networked Storage Architecture Network Storage Solutions Organization Hewlett-Packard MS 5668 Roseville CA 95747 ----- Original Message ----- From: "Santosh Rao" <santoshr@cup.hp.com> To: <ips@ece.cmu.edu> Cc: <t10@t10.org> Sent: Monday, March 04, 2002 10:40 AM Subject: Re: iscsi : changes involving tgt portal group tag. > * From the T10 Reflector (t10@t10.org), posted by: > * Santosh Rao <santoshr@cup.hp.com> > * > Jim, > > I agree that a "complete re-configuration" of a target port can result > in a new port name & port identifier. However, the tricky part is the > definition of a "complete re-configuration of an iscsi target port", due > to the concepts of portal groups involving multiple network portals. > > For example, if a portal group (aka, an iscsi target port) were to be > re-configured to include a new network portal [moved from another portal > group], then, the target port itself has not changed, since it is still > accessible through its previously used network portals. What has changed > is the individual network portal that has moved from 1 target port to > another. > > Hence, it is sufficient, in this case, to maintain persistence of the > target port name/identifier, without requiring any change in port > name/identifier. By requiring initiators to send the intended TPGT (scsi > target port name/identifier) along with the login request, this allows > the target port to detect that the network portal is being accessed to > connect to a different target port and it can reject the login. > > It may be helpful to call out the specific case when a port > name/identifier MUST change. How about something like : > > "If a portal group is re-configured such that all its previously > advertised network portals are no longer a part of the portal group, > then, the portal group tag (and thereby, the port name/identifier) > *MUST* be changed to indicate a new target port." > > This would allow access to the target port through its un-altered > network portals to continue un-disrupted. More comments inline, in > response to some of your queries. > > Thanks, > Santosh > > NOTE : In this discussion target port and target portal group are used > to imply the same entity, within a target node. > > > Jim Hafner wrote: > > > SAM-2 requires scsi port names to be persistent and world-wide-unique. > > (SAM-2 Rev 22 Section 4.7.7). Quoting from SAM-2 : > > > > "A scsi port name shall never change and may be used to persistently > > identify a scsi initiator port or target port...". > > > > <JLH> > > There are different ways that one can interpret this "persistent" rule. The > > intent was that names shouldn't change over time when *identifying the same > > object*. What that means is that if the object changes (in any > > discernable way), then the name should change. So, the object can move to > > a different piece of hardware, but it can still be named the same way. If > > the object changes, e.g., in this case, reconfigures as a different set of > > network portals with different addressing elements, then I would think that > > the name should change as well. That's all the persistence one really > > needs. > > > > I'm not sure what that implies about your recommendation. I don't see any > > problem with it, either. > > </JLH> > > I think we may be in agreement. (See reasoning above). > > > > > > The rationale for (2) is : > > -------------------------- > > Consider an initiator node establishing multiple sessions to a scsi tgt > > port, with each session established to a subset of the network portals > > within the tgt portal group. > > > > Consider an iscsi transport event involving the re-configuration of > > target portal groups on the iscsi target node. This may be preceeded by > > the iscsi sessions seeing an async message "target requests logout", > > followed by session logout, portal group re-configuration, and then, the > > initiator re-establishes sessions. > > > > Across a transport event that results in such session termination and > > re-establishment, the initiator needs to authenticate that it is still > > speaking to the same [i]scsi target port, in order to ensure that any > > open/active I-T-L nexus traffic on that session is not incorrectly > > routed to a wrong LUN after such a transport event. > > > <JLH> > > Under these events, shouldn't all "open/active I_T_L traffic" have been > > aborted, closed or otherwise ended? So this shouldn't be an issue at all. > > On a session logout & re-login, it is not efficient/necessary to close > and re-open each LUN behind that target port, due to the fact that a > target port may have hundred's of LUNs behind it. > > All outstanding I/Os need to be aborted. Once the session is > re-established [and the target port is authenticated to be the same], > further I/O traffic can be resumed without requiring the SCSI ULP to > close and re-open each LUN. Some transport specific clearing effects may > have occurred, which may require additional LUN level activity, in some > cases. > > (There are analogies to the above model in FCP & SRP, which authenticate > port name/identifier on login, allowing I/O resumption after session > termination and re-establishment.) > > > > To prevent such authentication issues, iscsi can send the iscsi target > > port identifier (portal group tag) explicitly in the login request, and > > the login can be rejected by the target on a portal group tag mis-match. > > (if the network portal does not belong to the addressed portal group > > tag). > > <JLH> > > Did you mean for the initiator to send this TPGT? > > </JLH> > > Yes. The initiator login request must include the target portal group > tag, thus identifying the target port to which a session is being > established. > > Login currently carries no addressing information, since the addressing > is implicit, based on the TCP connection in use. The problem with this > approach is that the login implicitly addresses a network portal, and > not the target port. As seen in the earlier example, the association of > network portal <-> target port can change, and such changes can be > detected, if the initiator were to explicitly identify the target port > being logged into. > > -- > ################################## > Santosh Rao > Software Design Engineer, > HP-UX iSCSI Driver Team, > Hewlett Packard, Cupertino. > email : santoshr@cup.hp.com > Phone : 408-447-3751 > ################################## > * > * For T10 Reflector information, send a message with > * 'info t10' (no quotes) in the message body to majordomo@t10.org >
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