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RE: iSCSI question
Shahram,
Wen you start a new
session, you don't recover any PDUs. All the iSCSI state died with the old
session. iSCSI doesn't know the new session had any relationship to the old
session.
As Julian said,
recovery at that point is up to the SCSI layer above iSCSI. It is up to SCSI to
retry any commands that it wants to retry. When SCSI retries a command, iSCSI
doesn't know it is a retry. To the iSCSI layer it is just like any other SCSI
command it receives.
Pat
Julian,
To
start a new session you need to start new connections and you need to
support
the
PDU recovery. So how is that a subset of PDU and connection
recovery?
-Shahram
(I will explain
the detailed clarity issues in another email)
Session recovery
is in fact leaving all recovery to SCSI - it drops everything and creates a
new session. As for you comment on the
clarity of chapter 5 at this stage it makes sense to be either specific
or keep this type of comment out of this
context.
Julo
| Shahram Davari
<Shahram_Davari@pmc-sierra.com>
08/07/2002 06:09 PM
| To:
Julian Satran/Haifa/IBM@IBMIL cc:
ips@ece.cmu.edu, owner-ips@ece.cmu.edu Subject:
RE: iSCSI question
|
Julian,
Thanks. I have read that section but it
is not very clear. I also agree that
Connection recovery requires everything in command recovery. But what about session recovery? isn't it a
superset of both connection and command recovery? Yours, -Shahram
-----Original Message----- From: Julian
Satran [mailto:Julian_Satran@il.ibm.com] Sent: Wednesday, August 07,
2002 11:03 AM To: Shahram Davari Cc: ips@ece.cmu.edu;
owner-ips@ece.cmu.edu Subject: Re: iSCSI
question
Sharam,
You
may want to go over the recovery chapter. It has detailed answers to all
your questions. The superset/subset is based on functions you need
for the next level.
Session recovery drops real
recovery to SCSI. Command recovery recovers from individual command
errors without changing connection and the highest enable you to switch to
a new connection and continue commands there.
2
requires everything in 1.
Julo
| Shahram Davari
<Shahram_Davari@pmc-sierra.com> Sent by: owner-ips@ece.cmu.edu
08/07/2002 05:17 PM
|
To:
ips@ece.cmu.edu cc:
Subject:
iSCSI question
|
Hi,
I have a
question regarding the hierarchy of error recovery. Section 6.13 mentions
the hierarchy as:
2: Connection recovery 1: Digest failure
recovery 0: Session recovery
And it states that the higher levels
are a superset of the lower levels and that the level of complexity
increases from 0->1->2.
Couple of questions:
1) How is
digest failure recovery done? by retransmission of PDUs? 2) Why is the
connection recovery a superset of session recovery and more complex? 3)
It seems to me the order should be:
2: Session recovery 1:
Connection recovery 0: Digest failure recovery
I appreciate any
insight.
Thanks, -Shahram
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