[nycbug-talk] ZFS committed to FreeBSD base. - iSCSI

Jesse Callaway bonsaime at gmail.com
Sat Apr 7 16:51:37 EDT 2007


On 4/7/07, Miles Nordin <carton at ivy.net> wrote:
> >>>>> "jc" == Jesse Callaway <bonsaime at gmail.com> writes:
>
>     jc> I was messing around and was using the NetBSD code on OpenBSD
>     jc> for iSCSI. Totally worked. WAs very simple...
>

yeah, just the target. I remember when gigE came out people started
thinking about iSCSI seriously.

> this is the NetBSD iSCSI target, right?  not an initiator?  meaning,
> it offers iSCSI disks to other machines?  I was wondering if FreeBSD
> can mount iSCSI disks off other machines.
>
> Long-term I want a machine with ZFS and a good iSCSI initiator, so
> that I can:
>
>  1. build ZFS pools with more disks than I can fit on a single
>     motherboard
>
>  2. make vdev stripes across several chassis so I can power down a
>     whole tower case without taking the pool offline
>
>  3. cluster the work of geli/cgd/dmcrypt across several CPUs

yummy

>
> I think it's good to use iSCSI rather than geom-gate or nbd because
> from watching mailing lists, it sounds like the iSCSI guys are more
> aggressive about getting tagged queueing, SYNCHRONIZE CACHE, and other
> weird SCSI commands to work in a precisely correct way that won't
> corrupt fancy RAIDs and filesystems.
>
> I'm not sure they're there yet, though.  The iSCSI initiator in
> Solaris Nevada b44 is not good.  It panics the kernel when an iSCSI
> target that's in use disappears, and sometimes when Linux IET reboots
> I need to 'iscsiadm discovery-address remove <ip>; iscsiadm
> discovery-address add <ip>' before it'll work again.  but I think
> there is actually source code for it---kind of rare for big chunks of
> ``open''solaris.


If that's the only hangup with Linux IET, I'd run with it.

>
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