Add 0x2701/0x2702 to the list of valid ASCQ values we accept for devices
that are write protected.
Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <ronniesahlberg@gmail.com>
From the SPC-4 paragraph about WRITE SAME(10): "The WRITE SAME (10)
command requests that the device server transfer a single logical
block from the Data-Out Buffer [ ... ]". Hence always pass a data
buffer when sending a WRITE SAME(10) command.
Set the NDOB bit in the WRITE SAME(16) command if no data out buffer
is present.
Signed-off-by: Bart Van Assche <bvanassche@acm.org>
RFC 3720 is not clear about whether a target should return SUCCESS
or CHECK CONDITION if SPDTL > EDTL. Hence accept both. See also
Fred Knight, Re: [Ips] Data Out residual overflow/underflow handling,
IETF mailing list archive, 21 September 2012
(http://www.ietf.org/mail-archive/web/ips/current/msg02756.html).
Signed-off-by: Bart Van Assche <bvanassche@acm.org>
Since writing headers and payload in a single iov has never been
implementend and after thinking about it several times seems to
be very hairy I would like to revert this change since
the original implementation is in O(1) while the changed one
is in O(n). This results in a complexity of O(n^2) instead of
O(n) for the whole send operation.
This reverts commit 06eab264f6.
Rename the macros for managing the linked lists from SLIST_* to ISCSI_LIST_*
to avoid a clash on *BSD which already have other macros SLIST_*
Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <ronniesahlberg@gmail.com>
Some targets return multiple TargetAddress for individual targets.
Create a linked list of addresses for each target instead of
failing the discovery process when this happens.
clang defaults to c99 so remove inline statements
(http://clang.llvm.org/compatibility.html#inline ) on functions shared
across different translation units.
clang's linker doesn't like major numbers over 255 so change how SOREL
is generated in Makefile.am.
The iSCSI protocol adds padding to a data packet if the data size is not
a multiple of four. The iovector provided by QEMU does not include such
padding, and libiscsi then complains that there was a protocol error.
This patch fixes this by reading the padding in a separate "recv"
system call. These packets anyway do not happen in the data path,
where the packet size is a multiple of 512.
This fixes QEMU's scsi-generic backend, which triggered the problem when
the target sent a 66-byte INQUIRY response.
Signed-off-by: Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>
This patch finally introduces a small allocation pool
which recycles all the small portions of memory that
are used for headers and pdu structures. This was
the initial idea behind wrapping all memory functions
in libiscsi.
The results of booting are test system up to the login
prompt are quite impressive:
BEFORE:
libiscsi:5 memory is clean at iscsi_destroy_context() after 10712 mallocs, 18 realloc(s) and 10712 free(s)
AFTER:
libiscsi:5 memory is clean at iscsi_destroy_context() after 41 mallocs, 18 realloc(s), 41 free(s) and 10584 reused small allocations
Signed-off-by: Peter Lieven <pl@kamp.de>
Assume target names are URL encoded with '%' as the special character.
Any sequence of '%' followed by two bytes in the target name will be replaced
with the byte that the second two bytes represent in hexadecimal.
Example
iqn.ronnie.test%3A1234
will be translated to iqn.ronnie.test:1234
The code that verifies the pr_type response must compare only the
lower four bits of byte 21 of the response ("TYPE") and must ignore
the upper four bits ("SCOPE").
Signed-off-by: Bart Van Assche <bvanassche@acm.org>