On Fri, 2008-12-12 at 22:26 +0300, Vladislav Bolkhovitin wrote:Nicholas A. Bellinger wrote:On Wed, 2008-12-10 at 22:01 +0300, Vladislav Bolkhovitin wrote:The fact that nobody so far cared to do all those complicated and time consuming rather academic tests doesn't mean that iSCSI-SCST won't pass them. IET/iSCSI-SCST have been used for a long time in very different setups, including xBSD and Solaris initiators on non-x86 architectures, without any problems.This patch contains iSCSI-SCST target driver. This driver is a heavily modified forked with all respects IET (http://iscsitarget.sourceforge.net). Modifications were aimed to make a clearer, more reviewable and maintainable code as well as to fix many problems and make many improvements. See http://scst.sourceforge.net/target_iscsi.html for more details.Just as with the Open/iSCSI Initiator, IMHO I believe the split
It has split user/kernel space architecture, where all management, sessions creation, parameters negotiation, etc. made in user space and data are transferred in the kernel space. Such architecture for iSCSI processing was many times acknowledged as the right one. Particularly, in-kernel iSCSI initiator (open-iscsi) has such architecture.
architecture design is difficult both to improve, debug and maintain,
and provides *ZERO* additional benefit in the context of traditional
iSCSI target mode for doing login and connection/session setup in
userspace.
Also, I appericate that you spent alot of time porting over IET code to
your engine, but during our previous discussion you did not seem
terribly interested in validation against core-iscsi-dv
(http://linux-iscsi.org/index.php/Core-iscsi-dv) to test RFC-3720
interopt and stability. Because the Core-iSCSI Initiator supports every
possible parameter combination up to ErrorRecoveryLevel=0 defined in
RFC-3720, the Core-iSCSI-Dv tests can run badblocks (or any too) to
check data integrity for *EVERY* possible traditional iSCSI key
combination and functionality for your iSCSI-SCST work, and any type of
serious iSCSI-SCST production deployments.
Heh, nice try.
Considering that core-iscsi-dv is used for validating the production
systems used for Linux-iSCSI.org services, I would hardly consider self
hosted usage of LIO-Target (eg: actually using code we write for public
project services) an "academic" endevour. Last time I checked you where
iSCSI-SCST was not running self-hosted production for your own project,
so I hardly think you are in a place to judge which RFC-3720 domain
validation tests are of worth or not.
Anyways, you having to guess about if your iSCSI target code will pass a
RFC-3720 compliance hardly makes it mainline material.