Re: Integration of SCST in the mainstream Linux kernel

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On Thu, 7 Feb 2008, Vladislav Bolkhovitin wrote:

Bart Van Assche wrote:
- It has been discussed which iSCSI target implementation should be in
the mainstream Linux kernel. There is no agreement on this subject
yet. The short-term options are as follows:
1) Do not integrate any new iSCSI target implementation in the
mainstream Linux kernel.
2) Add one of the existing in-kernel iSCSI target implementations to
the kernel, e.g. SCST or PyX/LIO.
3) Create a new in-kernel iSCSI target implementation that combines
the advantages of the existing iSCSI kernel target implementations
(iETD, STGT, SCST and PyX/LIO).

As an iSCSI user, I prefer option (3). The big question is whether the
various storage target authors agree with this ?
I tend to agree with some important notes:

1. IET should be excluded from this list, iSCSI-SCST is IET updated for SCST framework with a lot of bugfixes and improvements.
2. I think, everybody will agree that Linux iSCSI target should work over 
some standard SCSI target framework. Hence the choice gets narrower: SCST vs 
STGT. I don't think there's a way for a dedicated iSCSI target (i.e. PyX/LIO) 
in the mainline, because of a lot of code duplication. Nicholas could decide 
to move to either existing framework (although, frankly, I don't think 
there's a possibility for in-kernel iSCSI target and user space SCSI target 
framework) and if he decide to go with SCST, I'll be glad to offer my help 
and support and wouldn't care if LIO-SCST eventually replaced iSCSI-SCST. The 
better one should win.
why should linux as an iSCSI target be limited to passthrough to a SCSI 
device.
the most common use of this sort of thing that I would see is to load up a 
bunch of 1TB SATA drives in a commodity PC, run software RAID, and then 
export the resulting volume to other servers via iSCSI. not a 'real' SCSI 
device in sight.
As far as how good a standard iSCSI is, at this point I don't think it 
really matters. There are too many devices and manufacturers out there 
that implement iSCSI as their storage protocol (from both sides, offering 
storage to other systems, and using external storage). Sometimes the best 
technology doesn't win, but Linux should be interoperable with as much as 
possible and be ready to support the winners and the loosers in technology 
options, for as long as anyone chooses to use the old equipment (after 
all, we support things like Arcnet networking, which lost to Ethernet many 
years ago)
David Lang
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