The NVMe specifications mandate support for the host identifier set_features for controllers that also supports reservations. Satisfy this requirement by implementing handling of the NVME_FEAT_HOST_ID feature for the nvme_set_features command. This implementation is for now effective only for PCI target controllers. For other controller types, the set features command is failed with a NVME_SC_CMD_SEQ_ERROR status as before. As noted in the code, 128 bits host identifiers are supported since the NVMe base specifications version 2.1 indicate in section 5.1.25.1.28.1 that "The controller may support a 64-bit Host Identifier...". The RHII (Reservations and Host Identifier Interaction) bit of the controller attribute (ctratt) field of the identify controller data is also set to indicate that a host ID of "0" is supported but that the host ID must be a non-zero value to use reservations. Signed-off-by: Damien Le Moal <dlemoal@xxxxxxxxxx> Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@xxxxxx> Tested-by: Rick Wertenbroek <rick.wertenbroek@xxxxxxxxx> Tested-by: Manivannan Sadhasivam <manivannan.sadhasivam@xxxxxxxxxx> --- drivers/nvme/target/admin-cmd.c | 35 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++---- include/linux/nvme.h | 1 + 2 files changed, 32 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-) diff --git a/drivers/nvme/target/admin-cmd.c b/drivers/nvme/target/admin-cmd.c index 0c5127a1d191..efef3acba9fb 100644 --- a/drivers/nvme/target/admin-cmd.c +++ b/drivers/nvme/target/admin-cmd.c @@ -659,7 +659,7 @@ static void nvmet_execute_identify_ctrl(struct nvmet_req *req) struct nvmet_ctrl *ctrl = req->sq->ctrl; struct nvmet_subsys *subsys = ctrl->subsys; struct nvme_id_ctrl *id; - u32 cmd_capsule_size; + u32 cmd_capsule_size, ctratt; u16 status = 0; if (!subsys->subsys_discovered) { @@ -707,8 +707,10 @@ static void nvmet_execute_identify_ctrl(struct nvmet_req *req) /* XXX: figure out what to do about RTD3R/RTD3 */ id->oaes = cpu_to_le32(NVMET_AEN_CFG_OPTIONAL); - id->ctratt = cpu_to_le32(NVME_CTRL_ATTR_HID_128_BIT | - NVME_CTRL_ATTR_TBKAS); + ctratt = NVME_CTRL_ATTR_HID_128_BIT | NVME_CTRL_ATTR_TBKAS; + if (nvmet_is_pci_ctrl(ctrl)) + ctratt |= NVME_CTRL_ATTR_RHII; + id->ctratt = cpu_to_le32(ctratt); id->oacs = 0; @@ -1255,6 +1257,31 @@ u16 nvmet_set_feat_async_event(struct nvmet_req *req, u32 mask) return 0; } +static u16 nvmet_set_feat_host_id(struct nvmet_req *req) +{ + struct nvmet_ctrl *ctrl = req->sq->ctrl; + + if (!nvmet_is_pci_ctrl(ctrl)) + return NVME_SC_CMD_SEQ_ERROR | NVME_STATUS_DNR; + + /* + * The NVMe base specifications v2.1 recommends supporting 128-bits host + * IDs (section 5.1.25.1.28.1). However, that same section also says + * that "The controller may support a 64-bit Host Identifier and/or an + * extended 128-bit Host Identifier". So simplify this support and do + * not support 64-bits host IDs to avoid needing to check that all + * controllers associated with the same subsystem all use the same host + * ID size. + */ + if (!(req->cmd->common.cdw11 & cpu_to_le32(1 << 0))) { + req->error_loc = offsetof(struct nvme_common_command, cdw11); + return NVME_SC_INVALID_FIELD | NVME_STATUS_DNR; + } + + return nvmet_copy_from_sgl(req, 0, &req->sq->ctrl->hostid, + sizeof(req->sq->ctrl->hostid)); +} + void nvmet_execute_set_features(struct nvmet_req *req) { struct nvmet_subsys *subsys = nvmet_req_subsys(req); @@ -1285,7 +1312,7 @@ void nvmet_execute_set_features(struct nvmet_req *req) status = nvmet_set_feat_async_event(req, NVMET_AEN_CFG_ALL); break; case NVME_FEAT_HOST_ID: - status = NVME_SC_CMD_SEQ_ERROR | NVME_STATUS_DNR; + status = nvmet_set_feat_host_id(req); break; case NVME_FEAT_WRITE_PROTECT: status = nvmet_set_feat_write_protect(req); diff --git a/include/linux/nvme.h b/include/linux/nvme.h index 42fc00dc494e..fe3b60818fdc 100644 --- a/include/linux/nvme.h +++ b/include/linux/nvme.h @@ -276,6 +276,7 @@ enum nvme_ctrl_attr { NVME_CTRL_ATTR_HID_128_BIT = (1 << 0), NVME_CTRL_ATTR_TBKAS = (1 << 6), NVME_CTRL_ATTR_ELBAS = (1 << 15), + NVME_CTRL_ATTR_RHII = (1 << 18), }; struct nvme_id_ctrl { -- 2.47.1