stafd.conf¶
nvme-stas 3.0
Name
stafd.conf — stafd(8) configuration file
Synopsis
/etc/stas/stafd.conf
Description
When stafd(8) starts up, it reads its configuration from
stafd.conf.
Configuration File Format
stafd.conf is a plain text file divided into sections, with
configuration entries in the style ``key``=``value``.
Spaces immediately before or after the “=” are ignored. Empty
lines are ignored as well as lines starting with “#”, which
may be used for commenting.
Options
[Global] section
The following options are available in the “[Global]”
section:
tron=Trace ON. Takes a boolean argument. If ``true``, enables full code tracing. The trace will be displayed in the system log such as systemd’s journal. Defaults to ``false``.
hdr-digest=Enable Protocol Data Unit (PDU) Header Digest. Takes a boolean argument. NVMe/TCP facilitates an optional PDU Header digest. Digests are calculated using the CRC32C algorithm. If ``true``, Header Digests are inserted in PDUs and checked for errors. Defaults to ``false``.
data-digest=Enable Protocol Data Unit (PDU) Data Digest. Takes a boolean argument. NVMe/TCP facilitates an optional PDU Data digest. Digests are calculated using the CRC32C algorithm. If ``true``, Data Digests are inserted in PDUs and checked for errors. Defaults to ``false``.
kato=Keep Alive Timeout (KATO) in seconds. Takes an unsigned integer. This field specifies the timeout value for the Keep Alive feature in seconds. Defaults to 30 seconds for Discovery Controller connections and 120 seconds for I/O Controller connections.
ip-family=Takes a string argument. With this you can specify whether IPv4, IPv6, or both are supported when connecting to a Controller. Connections will not be attempted to IP addresses (whether discovered or manually configured with
controller=) disabled by this option. If an invalid value is entered, then the default (see below) will apply.Choices are ``ipv4``, ``ipv6``, or ``ipv4+ipv6``.
Defaults to ``ipv4+ipv6``.
queue-size=Takes a value in the range 16…1024.
Overrides the default number of elements in the I/O queues created by the driver. This option will be ignored for discovery, but will be passed on to the subsequent connect call.
Note: This parameter is identical to that provided by nvme-cli.
Defaults to ``128``.
reconnect-delay=Takes a value in the range 1 to N seconds.
Overrides the default delay before reconnect is attempted after a connect loss.
Note: This parameter is identical to that provided by nvme-cli.
Defaults to ``10``. Retry to connect every 10 seconds.
ctrl-loss-tmo=Takes a value in the range -1, 0, …, N seconds. -1 means retry forever. 0 means do not retry.
Overrides the default controller loss timeout period (in seconds).
Note: This parameter is identical to that provided by nvme-cli.
Defaults to ``600`` seconds (10 minutes).
disable-sqflow=Takes a boolean argument. Disables SQ flow control to omit head doorbell update for submission queues when sending nvme completions.
Note: This parameter is identical to that provided by nvme-cli.
Defaults to ``false``.
ignore-iface=Takes a boolean argument. This option controls how connections with Discovery Controllers (DC) are made.
DCs are automatically discovered using DNS-SD/mDNS. mDNS provides the DC’s IP address and the interface on which the DC was discovered.
There is no guarantee that there will be a route to reach that DC. However, we can use the socket option SO_BINDTODEVICE to force the connection to be made on a specific interface instead of letting the routing tables decide where to make the connection.
This option determines whether
stafdwill use SO_BINDTODEVICE to force connections on an interface or just rely on the routing tables. The default is to use SO_BINDTODEVICE, in other words,stafddoes not ignore the interface by default.Defaults to ``false``.
pleo=Port Local Entries Only. Takes a string argument ``enabled`` or ``disabled``. This option is sent in the LSP field (Log SPecific) of the Get Discovery Log Page (DLP) command. It is used by
stafdto tell Discovery Controllers (DC) whether the response to a Get DLP command should contain all the NVM subsystems or only those reachable by the host on the interface where the Get DLP command was issued by the host.This parameter was introduced in TP8010. When
pleo=``enabled``, then the DC shall return records for only NVM subsystem ports that are presented through the same NVM subsystem port that received the Get Log Page command. Whenpleo=``disabled``, then the DC may return all the NVM subsystem ports that it holds, even those that can only be reached on NVM subsystem ports that did not receive the Get Log Page command. In other words, the host may not even be able to reach those subsystems.Defaults to ``enabled``.
[Service Discovery] section
The following options are available in the
“[Service Discovery]” section:
zeroconf=Enable zeroconf provisioning using DNS-SD/mDNS. Takes a string argument ``enabled`` or ``disabled``.
When ``enabled``, the default,
stafdmakes a request with the Avahi daemon to locate Discovery Controllers using DNS-SD/mDNS.Discovery Controllers that support zeroconf advertise themselves over mDNS with the service type “
_nvme-disc._tcp”.Defaults to ``true``.
[Discovery controller connection management] section
The following options are available in the
“[Discovery controller connection management]” section:
persistent-connections=
Takes a boolean argument. Whether connections to Discovery
Controllers (DC) are persistent. When true, connections
initiated by stafd will persists even when stafd is stopped.
When ``false``, stafd will disconnect from all DCs it is
connected to on exit.
Defaults to ``false``.
zeroconf-connections-persistence=
Takes a unit-less value in seconds, or a time span value such
as “72hours” or “5days”. A value of 0 means no persistence. In
other words, configuration acquired through zeroconf (mDNS
service discovery) will be removed immediately when mDNS no
longer reports the presence of a Discovery Controller (DC) and
connectivity to that DC is lost. A value of -1 means that
configuration acquired through zeroconf will persist forever.
This is used for the case where a DC that was discovered through mDNS service discovery no longer advertises itself through mDNS and can no longer be connected to. For example, the DC had some catastrophic failure (e.g. power surge) and needs to be replaced. In that case, the connection to that DC can never be restored and a replacement DC will be needed. The replacement DC will likely have a different NQN (or IP address). In that scenario, the host won’t be able to determine that the old DC is not coming back. It won’t know either that a newly discovered DC is really the replacement for the old one. For that reason, the host needs a way to “age” zeroconf-acquired configuration and remove it automatically after a certain amount of time. This is what this parameter is for.
Defaults to ``72hours``.
[Controllers] section
The following options are available in the “[Controllers]”
section:
controller=
Controllers are specified with the controller option. This
option may be specified more than once to specify more than one
controller. The format is one line per Controller composed of a
series of fields separated by semi-colons as follows:
controller=transport=[trtype];traddr=[traddr];trsvcid=[trsvcid];host-traddr=[traddr],host-iface=[iface];nqn=[nqn]
Fields
transport=This is a mandatory field that specifies the network fabric being used for a NVMe-over-Fabrics network. Current ``trtype`` values understood are:
Table 1. Transport type
trtype
Definition
rdma
The network fabric is an rdma network (RoCE, iWARP, Infiniband, basic rdma, etc)
fc
The network fabric is a Fibre Channel network.
tcp
The network fabric is a TCP/IP network.
loop
Connect to a NVMe over Fabrics target on the local host
traddr=This is a mandatory field that specifies the network address of the Controller. For transports using IP addressing (e.g. rdma) this should be an IP-based address (ex. IPv4, IPv6). It could also be a resolvable host name (e.g. localhost).
trsvcid=This is an optional field that specifies the transport service id. For transports using IP addressing (e.g. rdma, tcp) this field is the port number.
Depending on the transport type, this field will default to either 8009 or 4420 as follows.
UDP port 4420 and TCP port 4420 have been assigned by IANA for use by NVMe over Fabrics. NVMe/RoCEv2 controllers use UDP port 4420 by default. NVMe/iWARP controllers use TCP port 4420 by default.
TCP port 4420 has been assigned for use by NVMe over Fabrics and TCP port 8009 has been assigned by IANA for use by NVMe over Fabrics discovery. TCP port 8009 is the default TCP port for NVMe/TCP discovery controllers. There is no default TCP port for NVMe/TCP I/O controllers, the Transport Service Identifier (TRSVCID) field in the Discovery Log Entry indicates the TCP port to use.
The TCP ports that may be used for NVMe/TCP I/O controllers include TCP port 4420, and the Dynamic and/or Private TCP ports (i.e., ports in the TCP port number range from 49152 to 65535). NVMe/TCP I/O controllers should not use TCP port 8009. TCP port 4420 shall not be used for both NVMe/iWARP and NVMe/TCP at the same IP address on the same network.
nqn=This field specifies the Controller’s NVMe Qualified Name.
This field is mandatory for I/O Controllers, but is optional for Discovery Controllers (DC). For the latter, the NQN will default to the well-known DC NQN: “
nqn.2014-08.org.nvmexpress.discovery” if left undefined.host-traddr=This is an optional field that specifies the network address used on the host to connect to the Controller. For TCP, this sets the source address on the socket.
host-iface=This is an optional field that specifies the network interface used on the host to connect to the Controller (e.g. IP eth1, enp2s0, enx78e7d1ea46da). This forces the connection to be made on a specific interface instead of letting the system decide.
dhchap-secret=NVMe In-band authentication host secret (i.e. key); needs to be in ASCII format as specified in NVMe 2.0 section 8.13.5.8 Secret representation. If this option is not specified, the default is read from /etc/stas/sys.conf (see the ‘key’ parameter under the [Host] section). In-band authentication is attempted when this is present.
dhchap-ctrl-secret=This is an optional field that specifies the NVMe In-band authentication controller secret (i.e. key) for bi-directional authentication; needs to be in ASCII format as specified in NVMe 2.0 section 8.13.5.8 ‘Secret representation’. Bi-directional authentication will be attempted when present.
hdr-digest=See definition in [Global] section. This is an optional field used to override the value specified in the [Global] section.
data-digest=See definition in [Global] section. This is an optional field used to override the value specified in the [Global] section.
nr-io-queues=See definition in [Global] section. This is an optional field used to override the value specified in the [Global] section.
nr-write-queues=See definition in [Global] section. This is an optional field used to override the value specified in the [Global] section.
nr-poll-queues=See definition in [Global] section. This is an optional field used to override the value specified in the [Global] section.
queue-size=See definition in [Global] section. This is an optional field used to override the value specified in the [Global] section.
kato=See definition in [Global] section. This is an optional field used to override the value specified in the [Global] section.
reconnect-delay=See definition in [Global] section. This is an optional field used to override the value specified in the [Global] section.
ctrl-loss-tmo=See definition in [Global] section. This is an optional field used to override the value specified in the [Global] section.
disable-sqflow=See definition in [Global] section. This is an optional field used to override the value specified in the [Global] section.
Examples:
controller = transport=tcp;traddr=localhost;trsvcid=8009
controller = transport=tcp;traddr=2001:db8::370:7334;host-iface=enp0s8
controller = transport=fc;traddr=nn-0x204600a098cbcac6:pn-0x204700a098cbcac6
exclude=
Controllers that should be excluded can be specified with the
exclude= option. Using mDNS to automatically discover and
connect to controllers, can result in unintentional connections
being made. This keyword allows configuring the controllers
that should not be connected to.
The syntax is the same as for “controller”, except that only
``transport``, ``traddr``, ``trsvcid``, ``nqn``, and
``host-iface`` apply. Multiple exclude= keywords may
appear in the config file to specify more than 1 excluded
controller.
Note 1: A minimal match approach is used to eliminate unwanted controllers. That is, you do not need to specify all the parameters to identify a controller. Just specifying the ``host-iface``, for example, can be used to exclude all controllers on an interface.
Note 2: exclude= takes precedence over controller. A
controller specified by the controller keyword, can be
eliminated by the exclude= keyword.
Examples:
exclude = transport=tcp;traddr=fe80::2c6e:dee7:857:26bb # Eliminate a specific address
exclude = host-iface=enp0s8 # Eliminate everything on this interface
See Also