@@ -15,6 +15,7 @@ PCI Endpoint Framework
pci-ntb-howto
pci-vntb-function
pci-vntb-howto
+ pci-nvme-function
function/binding/pci-test
function/binding/pci-ntb
new file mode 100644
@@ -0,0 +1,14 @@
+.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
+
+=================
+PCI NVMe Function
+=================
+
+:Author: Damien Le Moal <dlemoal@kernel.org>
+
+The PCI NVMe endpoint function implements a PCI NVMe controller using the NVMe
+subsystem target core code. The driver for this function resides with the NVMe
+subsystem as drivers/nvme/target/nvmet-pciep.c.
+
+See Documentation/nvme/nvme-pci-endpoint-target.rst for more details.
+
new file mode 100644
@@ -0,0 +1,12 @@
+.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
+
+==============
+NVMe Subsystem
+==============
+
+.. toctree::
+ :maxdepth: 2
+ :numbered:
+
+ feature-and-quirk-policy
+ nvme-pci-endpoint-target
new file mode 100644
@@ -0,0 +1,365 @@
+.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
+
+========================
+NVMe PCI Endpoint Target
+========================
+
+:Author: Damien Le Moal <dlemoal@kernel.org>
+
+The NVMe PCI endpoint target driver implements a PCIe NVMe controller using a
+NVMe fabrics target controller using the PCI transport type.
+
+Overview
+========
+
+The NVMe PCI endpoint target driver allows exposing a NVMe target controller
+over a PCIe link, thus implementing an NVMe PCIe device similar to a regular
+M.2 SSD. The target controller is created in the same manner as when using NVMe
+over fabrics: the controller represents the interface to an NVMe subsystem
+using a port. The port transfer type must be configured to be "pci". The
+subsystem can be configured to have namespaces backed by regular files or block
+devices, or can use NVMe passthrough to expose an existing physical NVMe devide
+or a NVMe fabrics host controller (e.g. a NVMe TCP host controller).
+
+The NVMe PCI endpoint target driver relies as much as possible on the NVMe
+target core code to parse and execute NVMe commands submitted by the PCI RC
+host. However, using the PCI endpoint framework API and DMA API, the driver is
+also responsible for managing all data transfers over the PCI link. This
+implies that the NVMe PCI endpoint target driver implements several NVMe data
+structure management and some command parsing.
+
+1) The driver manages retrieval of NVMe commands in submission queues using DMA
+ if supported, or MMIO otherwise. Each command retrieved is then executed
+ using a work item to maximize performance with the parallel execution of
+ multiple commands on different CPUs. The driver uses a work item to
+ constantly poll the doorbell of all submission queues to detect command
+ submissions from the PCI RC host.
+
+2) The driver transfers completion queues entries of completed commands to the
+ PCI RC hosts using MMIO copy of the entries in the host completion queue.
+ After posting completion entries in a completion queue, the driver uses the
+ PCI endpoint framework API to raise an interrupt to the host to signal the
+ commands completion.
+
+3) For any command that has a data buffer, the NVMe PCI endpoint target driver
+ parses the command PRPs or SGLs lists to create a list of PCI address
+ segments representing the mapping of the command data buffer on the host.
+ The command data buffer is transferred over the PCI link using this list of
+ PCI address segments using DMA, if supported. If DMA is not supported, MMIO
+ is used, which results in poor performance. For write commands, the command
+ data buffer is transferred from the host into a local memory buffer for
+ executing the command using the target core code. For read commands, a local
+ memory buffer is allocated to execute the command and the content of that
+ buffer is transferred to the host once the command completes.
+
+Controller Capabilities
+-----------------------
+
+The NVMe capabilities exposed to the PCI RC host through the BAR 0 registers
+are almost identical to the capabilities of the NVMe target controller
+implemented by the target core code. There are some exception.
+
+1) The NVMe PCI endpoint target driver always sets the controller capability
+ CQR bit to request "Contiguous Queues Required". This is to facilitate the
+ mapping of a queue PCI address range to the local CPU address space.
+
+2) The doorbell stride (DSTRB) is always set to be 4B
+
+3) Since the PCI endpoint framework does not provide a way to handle PCI level
+ resets, the controller capability NSSR bit (NVM Subsystem Reset Supported)
+ is always cleared.
+
+4) The boot partition support (BPS), Persistent Memory Region Supported (PMRS)
+ and Controller Memory Buffer Supported (CMBS) capabilities are never reported.
+
+Supported Features
+------------------
+
+The NVMe PCI endpoint target driver implements support for both PRPs and SGLs.
+The driver also implements IRQ vector coalescing and submission queue
+arbitration burst.
+
+The maximum number of queues and the maximum data transfer size (MDTS) are
+configurable through configfs before starting the controller. To avoid issues
+with excessive local memory usage for executing commands, MDTS defaults to 512
+KB and is limited to a maximum of 2 MB (arbitrary limit).
+
+Mimimum number of PCI Address Mapping Windows Required
+------------------------------------------------------
+
+Most PCI endpoint controllers provide a limited number of mapping windows for
+mapping a PCI address range to local CPU memory addresses. The NVMe PCI
+endpoint target controllers uses mapping windows for the following.
+
+1) One memory window for raising MSI or MSI-X interrupts
+2) One memory window for MMIO transfers
+3) One memory window for each completion queue
+
+Given the highly asynchronous nature of the NVMe PCI endpoint target driver
+operation, the memory windows as described above will generally not be used
+simultaneously, but that may happen. So a safe maximum number of completion
+queues that can be supported is equal to the total number of memory mapping
+windows of the PCI endpoint controller minus two. E.g. for an endpoint PCI
+controller with 32 outbound memory windows available, up to 30 completion
+queues can be safely operated without any risk of getting PCI address mapping
+errors due to the lack of memory windows.
+
+Maximum Number of Queue Pairs
+-----------------------------
+
+Upon binding of the NVMe PCI endpoint target driver to the PCI endpoint
+controller, BAR 0 is allocated with enough space to accommodate the admin queue
+and multiple I/O queues. The maximum of number of I/O queues pairs that can be
+supported is limited by several factors.
+
+1) The NVMe target core code limits the maximum number of I/O queues to the
+ number of online CPUs.
+2) The total number of queue pairs, including the admin queue, cannot exceed
+ the number of MSI-X or MSI vectors available.
+3) The total number of completion queues must not exceed the total number of
+ PCI mapping windows minus 2 (see above).
+
+The NVMe endpoint function driver allows configuring the maximum number of
+queue pairs through configfs.
+
+Limitations and NVMe Specification Non-Compliance
+-------------------------------------------------
+
+Similar to the NVMe target core code, the NVMe PCI endpoint target driver does
+not support multiple submission queues using the same completion queue. All
+submission queues must specify a unique completion queue.
+
+
+User Guide
+==========
+
+This section describes the hardware requirements and how to setup an NVMe PCI
+endpoint target device.
+
+Kernel Requirements
+-------------------
+
+The kernel must be compiled with the configuration options CONFIG_PCI_ENDPOINT,
+CONFIG_PCI_ENDPOINT_CONFIGFS, and CONFIG_NVME_TARGET_PCI_EP enabled.
+CONFIG_PCI, CONFIG_BLK_DEV_NVME and CONFIG_NVME_TARGET must also be enabled
+(obviously).
+
+In addition to this, at least one PCI endpoint controller driver should be
+available for the endpoint hardware used.
+
+To facilitate testing, enabling the null-blk driver (CONFIG_BLK_DEV_NULL_BLK)
+is also recommended. With this, a simple setup using a null_blk block device
+as a subsystem namespace can be used.
+
+Hardware Requirements
+---------------------
+
+To use the NVMe PCI endpoint target driver, at least one endpoint controller
+device is required.
+
+To find the list of endpoint controller devices in the system::
+
+ # ls /sys/class/pci_epc/
+ a40000000.pcie-ep
+
+If PCI_ENDPOINT_CONFIGFS is enabled::
+
+ # ls /sys/kernel/config/pci_ep/controllers
+ a40000000.pcie-ep
+
+The endpoint board must of course also be connected to a host with a PCI cable
+with RX-TX signal swapped. If the host PCI slot used does not have
+plug-and-play capabilities, the host should be powered off when the NVMe PCI
+endpoint device is configured.
+
+NVMe Endpoint Device
+--------------------
+
+Creating an NVMe endpoint device is a two step process. First, an NVMe target
+subsystem and port must be defined. Second, the NVMe PCI endpoint device must be
+setup and bound to the subsystem and port created.
+
+Creating a NVMe Subsystem and Port
+----------------------------------
+
+Details about how to configure a NVMe target subsystem and port are outside the
+scope of this document. The following only provides a simple example of a port
+and subsystem with a single namespace backed by a null_blk device.
+
+First, make sure that configfs is enabled::
+
+ # mount -t configfs none /sys/kernel/config
+
+Next, create a null_blk device (default settings give a 250 GB device without
+memory backing). The block device created will be /dev/nullb0 by default::
+
+ # modprobe null_blk
+ # ls /dev/nullb0
+ /dev/nullb0
+
+The NVMe target core driver must be loaded::
+
+ # modprobe nvmet
+ # lsmod | grep nvmet
+ nvmet 118784 0
+ nvme_core 131072 1 nvmet
+
+Now, create a subsystem and a port that we will use to create a PCI target
+controller when setting up the NVMe PCI endpoint target device. In this
+example, the port is created with a maximum of 4 I/O queue pairs::
+
+ # cd /sys/kernel/config/nvmet/subsystems
+ # mkdir nvmepf.0.nqn
+ # echo -n "Linux-nvmet-pciep" > nvmepf.0.nqn/attr_model
+ # echo "0x1b96" > nvmepf.0.nqn/attr_vendor_id
+ # echo "0x1b96" > nvmepf.0.nqn/attr_subsys_vendor_id
+ # echo 1 > nvmepf.0.nqn/attr_allow_any_host
+ # echo 4 > nvmepf.0.nqn/attr_qid_max
+
+Next, create and enable the subsystem namespace using the null_blk block device::
+
+ # mkdir nvmepf.0.nqn/namespaces/1
+ # echo -n "/dev/nullb0" > nvmepf.0.nqn/namespaces/1/device_path
+ # echo 1 > "pci_epf_nvme.0.nqn/namespaces/1/enable"
+
+Finally, create the target port and link it to the subsystem::
+
+ # cd /sys/kernel/config/nvmet/ports
+ # mkdir 1
+ # echo -n "pci" > 1/addr_trtype
+ # ln -s /sys/kernel/config/nvmet/subsystems/nvmepf.0.nqn \
+ /sys/kernel/config/nvmet/ports/1/subsystems/nvmepf.0.nqn
+
+Creating a NVMe PCI Endpoint Device
+-----------------------------------
+
+With the NVMe target subsystem and port ready for use, the NVMe PCI endpoint
+device can now be created and enabled. The NVMe PCI endpoint target driver
+should already be loaded (that is done automatically when the port is created)::
+
+ # ls /sys/kernel/config/pci_ep/functions
+ nvmet_pciep
+
+Next, create function 0::
+
+ # cd /sys/kernel/config/pci_ep/functions/nvmet_pciep
+ # mkdir nvmepf.0
+ # ls nvmepf.0/
+ baseclass_code msix_interrupts secondary
+ cache_line_size nvme subclass_code
+ deviceid primary subsys_id
+ interrupt_pin progif_code subsys_vendor_id
+ msi_interrupts revid vendorid
+
+Configure the function using any vendor ID and device ID::
+
+ # cd /sys/kernel/config/pci_ep/functions/nvmet_pciep
+ # echo 0x1b96 > nvmepf.0/vendorid
+ # echo 0xBEEF > nvmepf.0/deviceid
+ # echo 32 > nvmepf.0/msix_interrupts
+
+If the PCI endpoint controller used does not support MSIX, MSI can be
+configured instead::
+
+ # echo 32 > nvmepf.0/msi_interrupts
+
+Next, let's bind our endpoint device with the target subsystem and port that we
+created::
+
+ # echo 1 > nvmepf.0/portid
+ # echo "nvmepf.0.nqn" > nvmepf.0/subsysnqn
+
+The endpoint function can then be bound to the endpoint controller and the
+controller started::
+
+ # cd /sys/kernel/config/pci_ep
+ # ln -s functions/nvmet_pciep/nvmepf.0 controllers/a40000000.pcie-ep/
+ # echo 1 > controllers/a40000000.pcie-ep/start
+
+On the endpoint machine, kernel messages will show information as the NVMe
+target device and endpoint device are created and connected.
+
+.. code-block:: text
+
+ null_blk: disk nullb0 created
+ null_blk: module loaded
+ nvmet: adding nsid 1 to subsystem nvmepf.0.nqn
+ nvmet_pciep nvmet_pciep.0: PCI endpoint controller supports MSI-X, 32 vectors
+ nvmet: Created nvm controller 1 for subsystem nvmepf.0.nqn for NQN nqn.2014-08.org.nvmexpress:uuid:f82a09b7-9e14-4f77-903f-d0491e23611f.
+ nvmet_pciep nvmet_pciep.0: New PCI ctrl "nvmepf.0.nqn", 4 I/O queues, mdts 524288 B
+
+PCI Root-Complex Host
+---------------------
+
+Booting the PCI host will result in the initialization of the PCI link. This
+will be signaled by the NVMe PCI endpoint target driver with a kernel message::
+
+ nvmet_pciep nvmet_pciep.0: PCI link up
+
+A kernel message on the endpoint will also signal when the host NVMe driver
+enables the device controller::
+
+ nvmet_pciep nvmet_pciep.0: Enabling controller
+
+On the host side, the NVMe PCI endpoint target device will is discoverable
+as a PCI device, with the vendor ID and device ID as configured::
+
+ # lspci -n
+ 0000:01:00.0 0108: 1b96:beef
+
+An this device will be recognized as an NVMe device with a single namespace::
+
+ # lsblk
+ NAME MAJ:MIN RM SIZE RO TYPE MOUNTPOINTS
+ nvme0n1 259:0 0 250G 0 disk
+
+The NVMe endpoint block device can then be used as any other regular NVMe
+device. For instance, the nvme command line utility can be used to get more
+detailed information about the endpoint device::
+
+ # nvme id-ctrl /dev/nvme0
+ NVME Identify Controller:
+ vid : 0x1b96
+ ssvid : 0x1b96
+ sn : 94993c85650ef7bcd625
+ mn : Linux-nvmet-pciep
+ fr : 6.13.0-r
+ rab : 6
+ ieee : 000000
+ cmic : 0xb
+ mdts : 7
+ cntlid : 0x1
+ ver : 0x20100
+ ...
+
+
+Endpoint Bindings
+=================
+
+The NVMe PCI endpoint target driver uses the PCI endpoint configfs device attributes as follows.
+
+================ ===========================================================
+vendorid Anything is OK (e.g. PCI_ANY_ID)
+deviceid Anything is OK (e.g. PCI_ANY_ID)
+revid Do not care
+progif_code Must be 0x02 (NVM Express)
+baseclass_code Must be 0x1 (PCI_BASE_CLASS_STORAGE)
+subclass_code Must be 0x08 (Non-Volatile Memory controller)
+cache_line_size Do not care
+subsys_vendor_id Anything is OK (e.g. PCI_ANY_ID)
+subsys_id Anything is OK (e.g. PCI_ANY_ID)
+msi_interrupts At least equal to the number of queue pairs desired
+msix_interrupts At least equal to the number of queue pairs desired
+interrupt_pin Interrupt PIN to use if MSI and MSI-X are not supported
+================ ===========================================================
+
+The NVMe PCI endpoint target function also has some specific configurable
+fields defined in the *nvme* subdirectory of the function directory. These
+fields are as follows.
+
+================ ===========================================================
+dma_enable Enable (1) or disable (0) DMA transfers (default: 1)
+mdts_kb Maximum data transfer size in KiB (default: 512)
+portid The ID of the target port to use
+subsysnqn The NQN of the target subsystem to use
+================ ===========================================================
@@ -60,6 +60,7 @@ Storage interfaces
cdrom/index
scsi/index
target/index
+ nvme/index
Other subsystems
----------------
Add a documentation file (Documentation/nvme/nvme-pci-endpoint-target.rst) for the new NVMe PCI endpoint target driver. This provides an overview of the driver requirements, capabilities and limitations. A user guide describing how to setup a NVMe PCI endpoint device using this driver is also provided. This document is made accessible also from the PCI endpoint documentation using a link. Furthermore, since the existing nvme documentation was not accessible from the top documentation index, an index file is added to Documentation/nvme and this index listed as "NVMe Subsystem" in the "Storage interfaces" section of the subsystem API index. Signed-off-by: Damien Le Moal <dlemoal@kernel.org> --- Documentation/PCI/endpoint/index.rst | 1 + .../PCI/endpoint/pci-nvme-function.rst | 14 + Documentation/nvme/index.rst | 12 + .../nvme/nvme-pci-endpoint-target.rst | 365 ++++++++++++++++++ Documentation/subsystem-apis.rst | 1 + 5 files changed, 393 insertions(+) create mode 100644 Documentation/PCI/endpoint/pci-nvme-function.rst create mode 100644 Documentation/nvme/index.rst create mode 100644 Documentation/nvme/nvme-pci-endpoint-target.rst