* Re: NAA breakage [not found] ` <4E6A0618.3040102@zoner.cz> @ 2011-09-09 21:38 ` Nicholas A. Bellinger 2011-09-10 15:00 ` Martin Svec 0 siblings, 1 reply; 6+ messages in thread From: Nicholas A. Bellinger @ 2011-09-09 21:38 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Martin Svec; +Cc: target-devel, linux-scsi On Fri, 2011-09-09 at 14:27 +0200, Martin Svec wrote: > Hello folks, > > I'd like to reopen this discussion because there was no conclusion in > last three weeks and I still believe that the present implementation > of NAA IDs is wrong, regardless of the Andy's Shevchenko patch. Let me > explain why: > Hi Martin, Thanks for your follow-up here Martin. Getting this resolved for v3.1 is still on my todo list, and the patch I would like to push will be ready for review in the next days. My thoughts on your comments are below. > (1) According to SCSI SPC-3 (7.6.10), 0x80 VPD unit serial number is a > vendor-assigned variable-length string of ASCII data with characters > 20h through 7Eh. > Correct > (2) target_emulate_evpd_83() wrongly assumes that the unit serial > number is a hex-encoded string with at least 25 characters and > generates NAA ID using hex2bin() from its first 25 chars. > Correct, the fix that I think makes the most sense here is to ensure that the unit serial number always contains only hex digits (by stripping out the non hex charactes) when set via configfs in vpd_unit_serial. > (3) SCSI SPC-3 (7.6.3.6.4) states that NAA IEEE Registered Extended > identifier is a 16-byte fixed-length binary sequence that is > _uniquely_ assigned by the organization associated with the IEEE > company_id (LIO uses OpenFabrics IEEE ID 00 14 05). That is, NAA ID > must be a guaranteed _stable_ worldwide-unique identifier and e.g. > VMware strongly relies on this. > > From (1) and (2) it follows me that LIO does not guarantee the > uniqueness and in fact it very easily produces duplicate NAA IDs. For > example, unit serial numbers with a common 25-character prefix will > necessarily lead to the same NAA ID. It's the job of userspace to generate a UUID for the unit_serial number, and to ensure (as much as possible) the UUID is unique. Taking the first 25 characters of this value has not created a problem so far. Can you give an example of how it's 'very easily' able to produce duplicate NAA IDs..? > With Andy's Shevchenko patch, the > same also holds for serial numbers that contain only non-hex > characters in first 25 bytes, resulting in NAA IDs full of 0xff. And > there are other cases where hex2bin() conversion applied to serial > numbers leads to duplicates. > > So the way NAA ID is generated from the serial number seems to be > broken and does not guarantee NAA ID uniqueness even if the serial > numbers are unique and SPC-3 compliant. > > However, I think that the solution is easy: > > (a) Provide a ConfigFS entry for NAA ID to allow userspace to maintain > the uniqueness on its own. > I am against exposing the NAA ID as a configfs attribute. I still think basing this upon the EVPD 0x80 unit serial still makes the most sense, and to make userspace ensure (as much as possible) that the UUID -> unit serial is unique. > (b) If no ConfigFS NAA ID is specified, target_emulate_evpd_83() > should make the best effort to generate unique NAA ID from the unit > serial number. An obvious solution is to compute a hash (e.g. SHA1) > from the unit serial number and use its 13 most significant bytes to > fill vendor-specific NAA ID bytes. > Generating a hash based upon unit serial for the vendor-specific NAA ID bytes might be useful, but I am still not convinced there is a real problem of duplicate NAA IDs using UUID based unit seriales for the vendor specific area.. > Yes, the drawback is that such a change breaks NAA IDs of existing > setups. It's a question if it is better to maintain backward > compatibility, or fix it while LIO is in mainline for a short time yet. > I think the drawback is worth the extra pain here.. As mentioned, I am still leaning toward a simple fix to force hex characters for all vpd_unit_serial values set via configfs. --nab ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* Re: NAA breakage 2011-09-09 21:38 ` NAA breakage Nicholas A. Bellinger @ 2011-09-10 15:00 ` Martin Svec 2011-09-10 20:37 ` Nicholas A. Bellinger 0 siblings, 1 reply; 6+ messages in thread From: Martin Svec @ 2011-09-10 15:00 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Nicholas A. Bellinger; +Cc: target-devel, linux-scsi Hi Nicholas, thanks for your response, see my comments below. Dne 9.9.2011 23:38, Nicholas A. Bellinger napsal(a): > On Fri, 2011-09-09 at 14:27 +0200, Martin Svec wrote: >> Hello folks, >> >> I'd like to reopen this discussion because there was no conclusion in >> last three weeks and I still believe that the present implementation >> of NAA IDs is wrong, regardless of the Andy's Shevchenko patch. Let me >> explain why: >> > Hi Martin, > > Thanks for your follow-up here Martin. Getting this resolved for v3.1 > is still on my todo list, and the patch I would like to push will be > ready for review in the next days. My thoughts on your comments are > below. > >> (1) According to SCSI SPC-3 (7.6.10), 0x80 VPD unit serial number is a >> vendor-assigned variable-length string of ASCII data with characters >> 20h through 7Eh. >> > Correct > >> (2) target_emulate_evpd_83() wrongly assumes that the unit serial >> number is a hex-encoded string with at least 25 characters and >> generates NAA ID using hex2bin() from its first 25 chars. >> > Correct, the fix that I think makes the most sense here is to ensure > that the unit serial number always contains only hex digits (by > stripping out the non hex charactes) when set via configfs in > vpd_unit_serial. Martin: But then you place additional undocumented restrictions on the unit serial number format, don't you? >> (3) SCSI SPC-3 (7.6.3.6.4) states that NAA IEEE Registered Extended >> identifier is a 16-byte fixed-length binary sequence that is >> _uniquely_ assigned by the organization associated with the IEEE >> company_id (LIO uses OpenFabrics IEEE ID 00 14 05). That is, NAA ID >> must be a guaranteed _stable_ worldwide-unique identifier and e.g. >> VMware strongly relies on this. >> >> From (1) and (2) it follows me that LIO does not guarantee the >> uniqueness and in fact it very easily produces duplicate NAA IDs. For >> example, unit serial numbers with a common 25-character prefix will >> necessarily lead to the same NAA ID. > It's the job of userspace to generate a UUID for the unit_serial number, > and to ensure (as much as possible) the UUID is unique. Taking the > first 25 characters of this value has not created a problem so far. Can > you give an example of how it's 'very easily' able to produce duplicate > NAA IDs..? Martin: Again, SPC-3 says nothing about hex-character UUID as a unit serial number. That's the key point I try to emphasize -- you assume that it has a particular format but everbody who follows only the SPC-3 specification and doesn't know these LIO-specific restrictions risks duplicate NAA IDs. Below is an example of two unique SPC-3 compliant serial numbers that result in the same NAA ID (tested with mainline kernel 3.1.0-rc1+): $ sg_inq -p 0x83 /dev/sdc VPD INQUIRY: Device Identification page Designation descriptor number 1, descriptor length: 20 designator_type: NAA, code_set: Binary associated with the addressed logical unit NAA 6, IEEE Company_id: 0x140f Vendor Specific Identifier: 0xfefbfef9f Vendor Specific Identifier Extension: 0xefefcfbfefef9fef [0x600140ffefbfef9fefefcfbfefef9fef] Designation descriptor number 2, descriptor length: 78 designator_type: T10 vendor identification, code_set: ASCII associated with the addressed logical unit vendor id: LIO-ORG vendor specific: IBLOCK:OurCompanyProductionSAN.StorageServer12.Customer524.Drive1 $ sg_inq -p 0x83 /dev/sdd VPD INQUIRY: Device Identification page Designation descriptor number 1, descriptor length: 20 designator_type: NAA, code_set: Binary associated with the addressed logical unit NAA 6, IEEE Company_id: 0x140f Vendor Specific Identifier: 0xfefbfef9f Vendor Specific Identifier Extension: 0xefefcfbfefef9fef [0x600140ffefbfef9fefefcfbfefef9fef] Designation descriptor number 2, descriptor length: 78 designator_type: T10 vendor identification, code_set: ASCII associated with the addressed logical unit vendor id: LIO-ORG vendor specific: IBLOCK:OurCompanyProductionSAN.StorageServer12.Customer524.Drive2 Clearly, the serial numbers differ only in the last character (drive number), far beyond the 25 characters used for NAA. For somebody that starts with (i)SCSI and wants a unique and readable identification of its LUNs, these serial numbers IMHO perfectly make sense, are SPC-3 compliant, but VMware vSphere will be totally confused of their NAAs generated by LIO. And for equally sized LUNs, I guess that there is even a chance for data corruption because VMware will probably assume that the two LUNs are two _paths_ to the _same_ LUN (I'll try to test it). Note that the above example is a real-world example that I hit in January when I started to play with iSCSI and LIO. After first multipathing issues and without any knowledge of LIO/SPC3/NAA, it was easier for me to change my scripts to generate serial numbers based on hashes, rather than read standards and LIO sources to find out if it was my bug or not. Another examples of colliding serial numbers are all strings that contain no hex characters or contain a mixture of hex and non-hex characters with identical hex characters ocurring on the same offsets. >> With Andy's Shevchenko patch, the >> same also holds for serial numbers that contain only non-hex >> characters in first 25 bytes, resulting in NAA IDs full of 0xff. And >> there are other cases where hex2bin() conversion applied to serial >> numbers leads to duplicates. >> >> So the way NAA ID is generated from the serial number seems to be >> broken and does not guarantee NAA ID uniqueness even if the serial >> numbers are unique and SPC-3 compliant. >> >> However, I think that the solution is easy: >> >> (a) Provide a ConfigFS entry for NAA ID to allow userspace to maintain >> the uniqueness on its own. >> > I am against exposing the NAA ID as a configfs attribute. I still think > basing this upon the EVPD 0x80 unit serial still makes the most sense, > and to make userspace ensure (as much as possible) that the UUID -> unit > serial is unique. > >> (b) If no ConfigFS NAA ID is specified, target_emulate_evpd_83() >> should make the best effort to generate unique NAA ID from the unit >> serial number. An obvious solution is to compute a hash (e.g. SHA1) >> from the unit serial number and use its 13 most significant bytes to >> fill vendor-specific NAA ID bytes. >> > Generating a hash based upon unit serial for the vendor-specific NAA ID > bytes might be useful, but I am still not convinced there is a real > problem of duplicate NAA IDs using UUID based unit seriales for the > vendor specific area.. > >> Yes, the drawback is that such a change breaks NAA IDs of existing >> setups. It's a question if it is better to maintain backward >> compatibility, or fix it while LIO is in mainline for a short time yet. >> > I think the drawback is worth the extra pain here.. As mentioned, I am > still leaning toward a simple fix to force hex characters for all > vpd_unit_serial values set via configfs. > > --nab > Martin: Yes, that's a possible solution -- enforce vpd_unit_serial to be a hex-character string at least 25 characters long, and document that the first 25 characters must be unique within a given SAN. It's more restrictive than SPC-3 says but at least it doesn't allow to set vpd_unit_serial to something that leads to duplicate NAA IDs. I still think that my proposal is better because it provides the same guarantees without additional restrictions to SPC-3 standard but I can live with it :-) All that I want is to save future LIO users from surprises caused by the NAA ID generation based on undocumented vpd_unit_serial assumptions. Finally, please remember that VMware strongly relies on _unique_ and _stable_ NAA IDs. So your decision should be definitive, unless you provide a configfs interface for NAA IDs. It would be really bad to generate different NAA IDs in different versions of mainline kernel. Martin ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* Re: NAA breakage 2011-09-10 15:00 ` Martin Svec @ 2011-09-10 20:37 ` Nicholas A. Bellinger 2011-09-11 11:52 ` Martin Svec 0 siblings, 1 reply; 6+ messages in thread From: Nicholas A. Bellinger @ 2011-09-10 20:37 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Martin Svec; +Cc: target-devel, linux-scsi On Sat, 2011-09-10 at 17:00 +0200, Martin Svec wrote: > Hi Nicholas, > > thanks for your response, see my comments below. > > Dne 9.9.2011 23:38, Nicholas A. Bellinger napsal(a): > > On Fri, 2011-09-09 at 14:27 +0200, Martin Svec wrote: <SNIP> > > > >> (2) target_emulate_evpd_83() wrongly assumes that the unit serial > >> number is a hex-encoded string with at least 25 characters and > >> generates NAA ID using hex2bin() from its first 25 chars. > >> > > Correct, the fix that I think makes the most sense here is to ensure > > that the unit serial number always contains only hex digits (by > > stripping out the non hex charactes) when set via configfs in > > vpd_unit_serial. > > Martin: But then you place additional undocumented restrictions on the > unit serial number format, don't you? > No, it does not. It's vendor specific and perfectly within what's allowable as defined by SPC-3. > >> (3) SCSI SPC-3 (7.6.3.6.4) states that NAA IEEE Registered Extended > >> identifier is a 16-byte fixed-length binary sequence that is > >> _uniquely_ assigned by the organization associated with the IEEE > >> company_id (LIO uses OpenFabrics IEEE ID 00 14 05). That is, NAA ID > >> must be a guaranteed _stable_ worldwide-unique identifier and e.g. > >> VMware strongly relies on this. > >> > >> From (1) and (2) it follows me that LIO does not guarantee the > >> uniqueness and in fact it very easily produces duplicate NAA IDs. For > >> example, unit serial numbers with a common 25-character prefix will > >> necessarily lead to the same NAA ID. > > > It's the job of userspace to generate a UUID for the unit_serial number, > > and to ensure (as much as possible) the UUID is unique. Taking the > > first 25 characters of this value has not created a problem so far. Can > > you give an example of how it's 'very easily' able to produce duplicate > > NAA IDs..? > > Martin: Again, SPC-3 says nothing about hex-character UUID as a unit > serial number. That's the key point I try to emphasize -- you assume > that it has a particular format but everbody who follows only the > SPC-3 specification and doesn't know these LIO-specific restrictions > risks duplicate NAA IDs. Not exactly. When it doubt, people need to follow the offical userspace code. I am happy to support people who insist on their own interface to configfs, but for something like this your code needs to follow what our existing userspace library does to ensure uniqueness. > Below is an example of two unique SPC-3 > compliant serial numbers that result in the same NAA ID (tested with > mainline kernel 3.1.0-rc1+): > > $ sg_inq -p 0x83 /dev/sdc > VPD INQUIRY: Device Identification page > Designation descriptor number 1, descriptor length: 20 > designator_type: NAA, code_set: Binary > associated with the addressed logical unit > NAA 6, IEEE Company_id: 0x140f > Vendor Specific Identifier: 0xfefbfef9f > Vendor Specific Identifier Extension: 0xefefcfbfefef9fef > [0x600140ffefbfef9fefefcfbfefef9fef] > Designation descriptor number 2, descriptor length: 78 > designator_type: T10 vendor identification, code_set: ASCII > associated with the addressed logical unit > vendor id: LIO-ORG > vendor specific: > IBLOCK:OurCompanyProductionSAN.StorageServer12.Customer524.Drive1 > > $ sg_inq -p 0x83 /dev/sdd > VPD INQUIRY: Device Identification page > Designation descriptor number 1, descriptor length: 20 > designator_type: NAA, code_set: Binary > associated with the addressed logical unit > NAA 6, IEEE Company_id: 0x140f > Vendor Specific Identifier: 0xfefbfef9f > Vendor Specific Identifier Extension: 0xefefcfbfefef9fef > [0x600140ffefbfef9fefefcfbfefef9fef] > Designation descriptor number 2, descriptor length: 78 > designator_type: T10 vendor identification, code_set: ASCII > associated with the addressed logical unit > vendor id: LIO-ORG > vendor specific: > IBLOCK:OurCompanyProductionSAN.StorageServer12.Customer524.Drive2 > > FYI, descriptor number 2 above this is the 0x83 T10 vendor ID, and not the 0x80 unit serial number. > Clearly, the serial numbers differ only in the last character (drive > number), far beyond the 25 characters used for NAA. For somebody that > starts with (i)SCSI and wants a unique and readable identification of > its LUNs, these serial numbers IMHO perfectly make sense, are SPC-3 > compliant, but VMware vSphere will be totally confused of their NAAs > generated by LIO. This is broken userspace code that is using the unit serial number for informational purposes. Please don't do this. All of the lio-utils and rtslib userspace generate a uuid for the unit serial number, and do not have an issue with the scenario you are describing. This is what your userspace should be doing as well. > >> However, I think that the solution is easy: > >> > >> (a) Provide a ConfigFS entry for NAA ID to allow userspace to maintain > >> the uniqueness on its own. > >> > > I am against exposing the NAA ID as a configfs attribute. I still think > > basing this upon the EVPD 0x80 unit serial still makes the most sense, > > and to make userspace ensure (as much as possible) that the UUID -> unit > > serial is unique. > > > >> (b) If no ConfigFS NAA ID is specified, target_emulate_evpd_83() > >> should make the best effort to generate unique NAA ID from the unit > >> serial number. An obvious solution is to compute a hash (e.g. SHA1) > >> from the unit serial number and use its 13 most significant bytes to > >> fill vendor-specific NAA ID bytes. > >> > > Generating a hash based upon unit serial for the vendor-specific NAA ID > > bytes might be useful, but I am still not convinced there is a real > > problem of duplicate NAA IDs using UUID based unit seriales for the > > vendor specific area.. > > > >> Yes, the drawback is that such a change breaks NAA IDs of existing > >> setups. It's a question if it is better to maintain backward > >> compatibility, or fix it while LIO is in mainline for a short time yet. > >> > > I think the drawback is worth the extra pain here.. As mentioned, I am > > still leaning toward a simple fix to force hex characters for all > > vpd_unit_serial values set via configfs. > > > > Martin: Yes, that's a possible solution -- enforce vpd_unit_serial to > be a hex-character string at least 25 characters long, and document > that the first 25 characters must be unique within a given SAN. It's > more restrictive than SPC-3 says but at least it doesn't allow to set > vpd_unit_serial to something that leads to duplicate NAA IDs. > > I still think that my proposal is better because it provides the same > guarantees without additional restrictions to SPC-3 standard but I can > live with it :-) All that I want is to save future LIO users from > surprises caused by the NAA ID generation based on undocumented > vpd_unit_serial assumptions. > No, changing kernel code to address the breakage of your own userspace is not an option here. Please fix your userspace code to follow what rtslib has always done to ensure the uniqueness of vpd_unit_serial via a well known method (eg: uuid). http://www.risingtidesystems.com/git/?p=rtslib.git;a=blob;f=rtslib/tcm.py;h=4da49b0f4a4aea9a1eebed23d457181085a2d03d;hb=HEAD#l307 Thanks, --nab ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* Re: NAA breakage 2011-09-10 20:37 ` Nicholas A. Bellinger @ 2011-09-11 11:52 ` Martin Svec 2011-09-11 14:00 ` Chris Boot 0 siblings, 1 reply; 6+ messages in thread From: Martin Svec @ 2011-09-11 11:52 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Nicholas A. Bellinger; +Cc: target-devel, linux-scsi Hi Nicholas, thanks a lot for your comments. Clearly there was a misunderstanding of who is the vendor that defines what is "vendor-specific" in case of LIO. Of course, it is easy for me to fix my userspace code to generate serial numbers without these issues. But I suggest to enforce vpd_unit_serial restrictions in configfs code because rtslib/lio-utils is just a referential userspace implementation, not a kernel ABI. Thanks for all your work on LIO, have a nice day. Martin Dne 10.9.2011 22:37, Nicholas A. Bellinger napsal(a): > On Sat, 2011-09-10 at 17:00 +0200, Martin Svec wrote: >> Hi Nicholas, >> >> thanks for your response, see my comments below. >> >> Dne 9.9.2011 23:38, Nicholas A. Bellinger napsal(a): >>> On Fri, 2011-09-09 at 14:27 +0200, Martin Svec wrote: > <SNIP> > >>>> (2) target_emulate_evpd_83() wrongly assumes that the unit serial >>>> number is a hex-encoded string with at least 25 characters and >>>> generates NAA ID using hex2bin() from its first 25 chars. >>>> >>> Correct, the fix that I think makes the most sense here is to ensure >>> that the unit serial number always contains only hex digits (by >>> stripping out the non hex charactes) when set via configfs in >>> vpd_unit_serial. >> Martin: But then you place additional undocumented restrictions on the >> unit serial number format, don't you? >> > No, it does not. It's vendor specific and perfectly within what's > allowable as defined by SPC-3. > >>>> (3) SCSI SPC-3 (7.6.3.6.4) states that NAA IEEE Registered Extended >>>> identifier is a 16-byte fixed-length binary sequence that is >>>> _uniquely_ assigned by the organization associated with the IEEE >>>> company_id (LIO uses OpenFabrics IEEE ID 00 14 05). That is, NAA ID >>>> must be a guaranteed _stable_ worldwide-unique identifier and e.g. >>>> VMware strongly relies on this. >>>> >>>> From (1) and (2) it follows me that LIO does not guarantee the >>>> uniqueness and in fact it very easily produces duplicate NAA IDs. For >>>> example, unit serial numbers with a common 25-character prefix will >>>> necessarily lead to the same NAA ID. >>> It's the job of userspace to generate a UUID for the unit_serial number, >>> and to ensure (as much as possible) the UUID is unique. Taking the >>> first 25 characters of this value has not created a problem so far. Can >>> you give an example of how it's 'very easily' able to produce duplicate >>> NAA IDs..? >> Martin: Again, SPC-3 says nothing about hex-character UUID as a unit >> serial number. That's the key point I try to emphasize -- you assume >> that it has a particular format but everbody who follows only the >> SPC-3 specification and doesn't know these LIO-specific restrictions >> risks duplicate NAA IDs. > Not exactly. When it doubt, people need to follow the offical userspace > code. I am happy to support people who insist on their own interface to > configfs, but for something like this your code needs to follow what our > existing userspace library does to ensure uniqueness. > >> Below is an example of two unique SPC-3 >> compliant serial numbers that result in the same NAA ID (tested with >> mainline kernel 3.1.0-rc1+): >> >> $ sg_inq -p 0x83 /dev/sdc >> VPD INQUIRY: Device Identification page >> Designation descriptor number 1, descriptor length: 20 >> designator_type: NAA, code_set: Binary >> associated with the addressed logical unit >> NAA 6, IEEE Company_id: 0x140f >> Vendor Specific Identifier: 0xfefbfef9f >> Vendor Specific Identifier Extension: 0xefefcfbfefef9fef >> [0x600140ffefbfef9fefefcfbfefef9fef] >> Designation descriptor number 2, descriptor length: 78 >> designator_type: T10 vendor identification, code_set: ASCII >> associated with the addressed logical unit >> vendor id: LIO-ORG >> vendor specific: >> IBLOCK:OurCompanyProductionSAN.StorageServer12.Customer524.Drive1 >> >> $ sg_inq -p 0x83 /dev/sdd >> VPD INQUIRY: Device Identification page >> Designation descriptor number 1, descriptor length: 20 >> designator_type: NAA, code_set: Binary >> associated with the addressed logical unit >> NAA 6, IEEE Company_id: 0x140f >> Vendor Specific Identifier: 0xfefbfef9f >> Vendor Specific Identifier Extension: 0xefefcfbfefef9fef >> [0x600140ffefbfef9fefefcfbfefef9fef] >> Designation descriptor number 2, descriptor length: 78 >> designator_type: T10 vendor identification, code_set: ASCII >> associated with the addressed logical unit >> vendor id: LIO-ORG >> vendor specific: >> IBLOCK:OurCompanyProductionSAN.StorageServer12.Customer524.Drive2 >> >> > FYI, descriptor number 2 above this is the 0x83 T10 vendor ID, and not > the 0x80 unit serial number. > >> Clearly, the serial numbers differ only in the last character (drive >> number), far beyond the 25 characters used for NAA. For somebody that >> starts with (i)SCSI and wants a unique and readable identification of >> its LUNs, these serial numbers IMHO perfectly make sense, are SPC-3 >> compliant, but VMware vSphere will be totally confused of their NAAs >> generated by LIO. > This is broken userspace code that is using the unit serial number for > informational purposes. Please don't do this. > > All of the lio-utils and rtslib userspace generate a uuid for the unit > serial number, and do not have an issue with the scenario you are > describing. This is what your userspace should be doing as well. > >>>> However, I think that the solution is easy: >>>> >>>> (a) Provide a ConfigFS entry for NAA ID to allow userspace to maintain >>>> the uniqueness on its own. >>>> >>> I am against exposing the NAA ID as a configfs attribute. I still think >>> basing this upon the EVPD 0x80 unit serial still makes the most sense, >>> and to make userspace ensure (as much as possible) that the UUID -> unit >>> serial is unique. >>> >>>> (b) If no ConfigFS NAA ID is specified, target_emulate_evpd_83() >>>> should make the best effort to generate unique NAA ID from the unit >>>> serial number. An obvious solution is to compute a hash (e.g. SHA1) >>>> from the unit serial number and use its 13 most significant bytes to >>>> fill vendor-specific NAA ID bytes. >>>> >>> Generating a hash based upon unit serial for the vendor-specific NAA ID >>> bytes might be useful, but I am still not convinced there is a real >>> problem of duplicate NAA IDs using UUID based unit seriales for the >>> vendor specific area.. >>> >>>> Yes, the drawback is that such a change breaks NAA IDs of existing >>>> setups. It's a question if it is better to maintain backward >>>> compatibility, or fix it while LIO is in mainline for a short time yet. >>>> >>> I think the drawback is worth the extra pain here.. As mentioned, I am >>> still leaning toward a simple fix to force hex characters for all >>> vpd_unit_serial values set via configfs. >>> >> Martin: Yes, that's a possible solution -- enforce vpd_unit_serial to >> be a hex-character string at least 25 characters long, and document >> that the first 25 characters must be unique within a given SAN. It's >> more restrictive than SPC-3 says but at least it doesn't allow to set >> vpd_unit_serial to something that leads to duplicate NAA IDs. >> >> I still think that my proposal is better because it provides the same >> guarantees without additional restrictions to SPC-3 standard but I can >> live with it :-) All that I want is to save future LIO users from >> surprises caused by the NAA ID generation based on undocumented >> vpd_unit_serial assumptions. >> > No, changing kernel code to address the breakage of your own userspace > is not an option here. > > Please fix your userspace code to follow what rtslib has always done to > ensure the uniqueness of vpd_unit_serial via a well known method (eg: > uuid). > > http://www.risingtidesystems.com/git/?p=rtslib.git;a=blob;f=rtslib/tcm.py;h=4da49b0f4a4aea9a1eebed23d457181085a2d03d;hb=HEAD#l307 > > Thanks, > > --nab > ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* Re: NAA breakage 2011-09-11 11:52 ` Martin Svec @ 2011-09-11 14:00 ` Chris Boot 2011-09-12 7:35 ` Nicholas A. Bellinger 0 siblings, 1 reply; 6+ messages in thread From: Chris Boot @ 2011-09-11 14:00 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Martin Svec; +Cc: Nicholas A. Bellinger, target-devel, linux-scsi On 11/09/2011 12:52, Martin Svec wrote: > thanks a lot for your comments. Clearly there was a misunderstanding > of who is the vendor that defines what is "vendor-specific" in case of > LIO. Of course, it is easy for me to fix my userspace code to generate > serial numbers without these issues. But I suggest to enforce > vpd_unit_serial restrictions in configfs code because rtslib/lio-utils > is just a referential userspace implementation, not a kernel ABI. I feel it's time to add my 2 cents to this discussion. A vendor-specific identifier in my mind could very well be what Martin uses it for, in my opinion - at least according to SPC-3. If the LIO stack cannot handle such use of identifiers the configfs code should refuse to accept such an identifier. If for example the LIO code only creates a valid NAA/WWN from a hex string of a certain length, it should only accept a hex string of that length. It should not be a requirement to exactly follow what rtslib does in every case. Of course the way I see it the vendor specific identifier doesn't necessarily have anything to do with the NAA/WWN, so it would be nice if one could set both a WWN as a hex string of the correct length and format, and a vendor-specific string in a mostly freeform manner as long as it abides by SPC-3. The WWN shouldn't necessarily be generated from the vendor identifier. Chris ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* Re: NAA breakage 2011-09-11 14:00 ` Chris Boot @ 2011-09-12 7:35 ` Nicholas A. Bellinger 0 siblings, 0 replies; 6+ messages in thread From: Nicholas A. Bellinger @ 2011-09-12 7:35 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Chris Boot; +Cc: Martin Svec, target-devel, linux-scsi On Sun, 2011-09-11 at 15:00 +0100, Chris Boot wrote: > On 11/09/2011 12:52, Martin Svec wrote: > > thanks a lot for your comments. Clearly there was a misunderstanding > > of who is the vendor that defines what is "vendor-specific" in case of > > LIO. Of course, it is easy for me to fix my userspace code to generate > > serial numbers without these issues. But I suggest to enforce > > vpd_unit_serial restrictions in configfs code because rtslib/lio-utils > > is just a referential userspace implementation, not a kernel ABI. > > I feel it's time to add my 2 cents to this discussion. A vendor-specific > identifier in my mind could very well be what Martin uses it for, in my > opinion - at least according to SPC-3. To clarify a point wrt to the per device EVPD 0x80 vpd_unit_serial configfs attribute. SPC-4 recommends using vpd_unit_serial as part of the vendor specific identifier for T10 vendor ID based DESIGNATOR in EVPD 0x83. This is described in 7.8.5.4 as: "The organization associated with the T10 vendor identification is responsible for ensuring that the VENDOR SPECIFIC DESIGNATOR field is unique in a way that makes the entire DESIGNATOR field unique. A recommended method of constructing a unique DESIGNATOR field is to concatenate the PRODUCT IDENTIFICATION field from the standard INQUIRY data and the PRODUCT SERIAL NUMBER field from the Unit Serial Number VPD page." This is what target does for EVPD 0x83 using the T10 vendor designator variable length method, and as well for modern NAA IEEE Registered Extended designator using a fixed byte length. > If the LIO stack cannot handle > such use of identifiers the configfs code should refuse to accept such > an identifier. If for example the LIO code only creates a valid NAA/WWN > from a hex string of a certain length, it should only accept a hex > string of that length. It should not be a requirement to exactly follow > what rtslib does in every case. > > Of course the way I see it the vendor specific identifier doesn't > necessarily have anything to do with the NAA/WWN, so it would be nice if > one could set both a WWN as a hex string of the correct length and > format, and a vendor-specific string in a mostly freeform manner as long > as it abides by SPC-3. The WWN shouldn't necessarily be generated from > the vendor identifier. > As target emulation for 0x83 designators are both based on vpd_unit_serial attribute to provide uniqueness, the current code allows up 254 bytes supporting variable length designators exceeding what is defined for individual NAA IEEE Registered fixed lengths and striping off the remaining bytes. The intention here is for the two EVPD 0x83 to contain similar enough values based on vpd_unit_serial so they can be recognized as the same LUN from both designators. So the question is how should the kernel be formatting input from a configfs attribute who's value is used to produce freeform ASCII uniqueness for one case, and hex2bin safe formatted uniqueness for another..? So sing vpd_unit_serial for the vendor specific identifier area to ensure uniqueness for the two EVPD 0x83 cases still makes sense to me, but failing on non hex specific vpd_unit_serial input is likely too restrictive for all cases. Stripping of the hex characters from the NAA IEEE registered vendor specific identifier area is an option for userspace already using a properly formatted uuid, but this obviously still requires filesytems who are aware of NAAs designators to update their on-disk metadata when the '-' is stripped from the uuid -> vpd_unit_serial input. --nab ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2011-09-12 7:35 UTC | newest]
Thread overview: 6+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed
-- links below jump to the message on this page --
[not found] <4E494F9F.4000909@zoner.cz>
[not found] ` <1313522082.2853.10.camel@haakon2.linux-iscsi.org>
[not found] ` <4E4BAB1D.6070104@zoner.cz>
[not found] ` <1313618333.9928.61.camel@haakon2.linux-iscsi.org>
[not found] ` <4E528F05.9090208@zoner.cz>
[not found] ` <4E6A0618.3040102@zoner.cz>
2011-09-09 21:38 ` NAA breakage Nicholas A. Bellinger
2011-09-10 15:00 ` Martin Svec
2011-09-10 20:37 ` Nicholas A. Bellinger
2011-09-11 11:52 ` Martin Svec
2011-09-11 14:00 ` Chris Boot
2011-09-12 7:35 ` Nicholas A. Bellinger
This is a public inbox, see mirroring instructions for how to clone and mirror all data and code used for this inbox