1The EtherDrive (R) HOWTO for users of 2.6 kernels is found at ... 2 3 http://www.coraid.com/SUPPORT/EtherDrive-HBA 4 5 It has many tips and hints! 6 7The aoetools are userland programs that are designed to work with this 8driver. The aoetools are on sourceforge. 9 10 http://aoetools.sourceforge.net/ 11 12The scripts in this Documentation/aoe directory are intended to 13document the use of the driver and are not necessary if you install 14the aoetools. 15 16 17CREATING DEVICE NODES 18 19 Users of udev should find the block device nodes created 20 automatically, but to create all the necessary device nodes, use the 21 udev configuration rules provided in udev.txt (in this directory). 22 23 There is a udev-install.sh script that shows how to install these 24 rules on your system. 25 26 If you are not using udev, two scripts are provided in 27 Documentation/aoe as examples of static device node creation for 28 using the aoe driver. 29 30 rm -rf /dev/etherd 31 sh Documentation/aoe/mkdevs.sh /dev/etherd 32 33 ... or to make just one shelf's worth of block device nodes ... 34 35 sh Documentation/aoe/mkshelf.sh /dev/etherd 0 36 37 There is also an autoload script that shows how to edit 38 /etc/modprobe.conf to ensure that the aoe module is loaded when 39 necessary. 40 41USING DEVICE NODES 42 43 "cat /dev/etherd/err" blocks, waiting for error diagnostic output, 44 like any retransmitted packets. 45 46 "echo eth2 eth4 > /dev/etherd/interfaces" tells the aoe driver to 47 limit ATA over Ethernet traffic to eth2 and eth4. AoE traffic from 48 untrusted networks should be ignored as a matter of security. See 49 also the aoe_iflist driver option described below. 50 51 "echo > /dev/etherd/discover" tells the driver to find out what AoE 52 devices are available. 53 54 These character devices may disappear and be replaced by sysfs 55 counterparts. Using the commands in aoetools insulates users from 56 these implementation details. 57 58 The block devices are named like this: 59 60 e{shelf}.{slot} 61 e{shelf}.{slot}p{part} 62 63 ... so that "e0.2" is the third blade from the left (slot 2) in the 64 first shelf (shelf address zero). That's the whole disk. The first 65 partition on that disk would be "e0.2p1". 66 67USING SYSFS 68 69 Each aoe block device in /sys/block has the extra attributes of 70 state, mac, and netif. The state attribute is "up" when the device 71 is ready for I/O and "down" if detected but unusable. The 72 "down,closewait" state shows that the device is still open and 73 cannot come up again until it has been closed. 74 75 The mac attribute is the ethernet address of the remote AoE device. 76 The netif attribute is the network interface on the localhost 77 through which we are communicating with the remote AoE device. 78 79 There is a script in this directory that formats this information 80 in a convenient way. Users with aoetools can use the aoe-stat 81 command. 82 83 root@makki root# sh Documentation/aoe/status.sh 84 e10.0 eth3 up 85 e10.1 eth3 up 86 e10.2 eth3 up 87 e10.3 eth3 up 88 e10.4 eth3 up 89 e10.5 eth3 up 90 e10.6 eth3 up 91 e10.7 eth3 up 92 e10.8 eth3 up 93 e10.9 eth3 up 94 e4.0 eth1 up 95 e4.1 eth1 up 96 e4.2 eth1 up 97 e4.3 eth1 up 98 e4.4 eth1 up 99 e4.5 eth1 up 100 e4.6 eth1 up 101 e4.7 eth1 up 102 e4.8 eth1 up 103 e4.9 eth1 up 104 105 Use /sys/module/aoe/parameters/aoe_iflist (or better, the driver 106 option discussed below) instead of /dev/etherd/interfaces to limit 107 AoE traffic to the network interfaces in the given 108 whitespace-separated list. Unlike the old character device, the 109 sysfs entry can be read from as well as written to. 110 111 It's helpful to trigger discovery after setting the list of allowed 112 interfaces. The aoetools package provides an aoe-discover script 113 for this purpose. You can also directly use the 114 /dev/etherd/discover special file described above. 115 116DRIVER OPTIONS 117 118 There is a boot option for the built-in aoe driver and a 119 corresponding module parameter, aoe_iflist. Without this option, 120 all network interfaces may be used for ATA over Ethernet. Here is a 121 usage example for the module parameter. 122 123 modprobe aoe_iflist="eth1 eth3" 124