On 03/11/2016 01:45 AM, Nicholas A. Bellinger wrote:
On Thu, 2016-03-10 at 23:30 -0800, Christoph Hellwig wrote:
On Thu, Mar 10, 2016 at 04:24:25PM -0600, Chris Friesen wrote:
Hi,
I'm looking for information on whether the iSCSI target in the kernel offers
any way to do QoS between traffic driven by different initiators.
I'm trying to make sure that one initiator can't do a denial-of-service
attack against others.
Does the kernel target have this sort of thing built-in, or do I need to
look at network traffic-shaping to achieve this?
It doesn't right now, but it shouldn't be hard to integrate it with
blk cgroups.
For iscsi-target application QoS, the per session command sequence
number window depth (CmdSN) exists to enforce per InitiatorName limits
via TPG default_cmdsn_depth + se_node_acl->queue_depth configfs
attributes.
Note these values can be changed on the fly for iscsi-target using
explicit se_node_acl->acl_group, but currently require a se_session
reinstatement event for updated ExpCmdSN + MaxCmdSN to take effect.
On a slightly different note, is there any way to throttle or limit the overall
bandwidth consumed by the iSCSI target in the kernel? I'd like to ensure that
the iSCSI traffic doesn't completely swamp the host accesses to the same block
device.
I suppose I could do networking-based traffic shaping, but are there any
controls in the block IO subsystem?
Chris
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