1 ================================
2 Coherent Accelerator (CXL) Flash
3 ================================
8 The IBM Power architecture provides support for CAPI (Coherent
9 Accelerator Power Interface), which is available to certain PCIe slots
10 on Power 8 systems. CAPI can be thought of as a special tunneling
11 protocol through PCIe that allow PCIe adapters to look like special
12 purpose co-processors which can read or write an application's
13 memory and generate page faults. As a result, the host interface to
14 an adapter running in CAPI mode does not require the data buffers to
15 be mapped to the device's memory (IOMMU bypass) nor does it require
18 On Linux, Coherent Accelerator (CXL) kernel services present CAPI
19 devices as a PCI device by implementing a virtual PCI host bridge.
20 This abstraction simplifies the infrastructure and programming
21 model, allowing for drivers to look similar to other native PCI
24 CXL provides a mechanism by which user space applications can
25 directly talk to a device (network or storage) bypassing the typical
26 kernel/device driver stack. The CXL Flash Adapter Driver enables a
27 user space application direct access to Flash storage.
29 The CXL Flash Adapter Driver is a kernel module that sits in the
30 SCSI stack as a low level device driver (below the SCSI disk and
31 protocol drivers) for the IBM CXL Flash Adapter. This driver is
32 responsible for the initialization of the adapter, setting up the
33 special path for user space access, and performing error recovery. It
34 communicates directly the Flash Accelerator Functional Unit (AFU)
35 as described in Documentation/powerpc/cxl.rst.
37 The cxlflash driver supports two, mutually exclusive, modes of
38 operation at the device (LUN) level:
40 - Any flash device (LUN) can be configured to be accessed as a
41 regular disk device (i.e.: /dev/sdc). This is the default mode.
43 - Any flash device (LUN) can be configured to be accessed from
44 user space with a special block library. This mode further
45 specifies the means of accessing the device and provides for
46 either raw access to the entire LUN (referred to as direct
47 or physical LUN access) or access to a kernel/AFU-mediated
48 partition of the LUN (referred to as virtual LUN access). The
49 segmentation of a disk device into virtual LUNs is assisted
50 by special translation services provided by the Flash AFU.
55 The Coherent Accelerator Interface Architecture (CAIA) introduces a
56 concept of a master context. A master typically has special privileges
57 granted to it by the kernel or hypervisor allowing it to perform AFU
58 wide management and control. The master may or may not be involved
59 directly in each user I/O, but at the minimum is involved in the
60 initial setup before the user application is allowed to send requests
63 The CXL Flash Adapter Driver establishes a master context with the
64 AFU. It uses memory mapped I/O (MMIO) for this control and setup. The
65 Adapter Problem Space Memory Map looks like this::
67 +-------------------------------+
68 | 512 * 64 KB User MMIO |
71 +-------------------------------+
72 | 512 * 128 B per context |
73 | Provisioning and Control |
74 | Trusted Process accessible |
75 +-------------------------------+
77 | Trusted Process accessible |
78 +-------------------------------+
80 This driver configures itself into the SCSI software stack as an
81 adapter driver. The driver is the only entity that is considered a
82 Trusted Process to program the Provisioning and Control and Global
83 areas in the MMIO Space shown above. The master context driver
84 discovers all LUNs attached to the CXL Flash adapter and instantiates
85 scsi block devices (/dev/sdb, /dev/sdc etc.) for each unique LUN
88 Once these scsi block devices are instantiated, an application
89 written to a specification provided by the block library may get
90 access to the Flash from user space (without requiring a system call).
92 This master context driver also provides a series of ioctls for this
93 block library to enable this user space access. The driver supports
94 two modes for accessing the block device.
96 The first mode is called a virtual mode. In this mode a single scsi
97 block device (/dev/sdb) may be carved up into any number of distinct
98 virtual LUNs. The virtual LUNs may be resized as long as the sum of
99 the sizes of all the virtual LUNs, along with the meta-data associated
100 with it does not exceed the physical capacity.
102 The second mode is called the physical mode. In this mode a single
103 block device (/dev/sdb) may be opened directly by the block library
104 and the entire space for the LUN is available to the application.
106 Only the physical mode provides persistence of the data. i.e. The
107 data written to the block device will survive application exit and
108 restart and also reboot. The virtual LUNs do not persist (i.e. do
109 not survive after the application terminates or the system reboots).
115 Applications intending to get access to the CXL Flash from user
116 space should use the block library, as it abstracts the details of
117 interfacing directly with the cxlflash driver that are necessary for
118 performing administrative actions (i.e.: setup, tear down, resize).
119 The block library can be thought of as a 'user' of services,
120 implemented as IOCTLs, that are provided by the cxlflash driver
121 specifically for devices (LUNs) operating in user space access
122 mode. While it is not a requirement that applications understand
123 the interface between the block library and the cxlflash driver,
124 a high-level overview of each supported service (IOCTL) is provided
127 The block library can be found on GitHub:
128 http://github.com/open-power/capiflash
131 CXL Flash Driver LUN IOCTLs
132 ===========================
134 Users, such as the block library, that wish to interface with a flash
135 device (LUN) via user space access need to use the services provided
136 by the cxlflash driver. As these services are implemented as ioctls,
137 a file descriptor handle must first be obtained in order to establish
138 the communication channel between a user and the kernel. This file
139 descriptor is obtained by opening the device special file associated
140 with the scsi disk device (/dev/sdb) that was created during LUN
141 discovery. As per the location of the cxlflash driver within the
142 SCSI protocol stack, this open is actually not seen by the cxlflash
143 driver. Upon successful open, the user receives a file descriptor
144 (herein referred to as fd1) that should be used for issuing the
145 subsequent ioctls listed below.
147 The structure definitions for these IOCTLs are available in:
148 uapi/scsi/cxlflash_ioctl.h
153 This ioctl obtains, initializes, and starts a context using the CXL
154 kernel services. These services specify a context id (u16) by which
155 to uniquely identify the context and its allocated resources. The
156 services additionally provide a second file descriptor (herein
157 referred to as fd2) that is used by the block library to initiate
158 memory mapped I/O (via mmap()) to the CXL flash device and poll for
159 completion events. This file descriptor is intentionally installed by
160 this driver and not the CXL kernel services to allow for intermediary
161 notification and access in the event of a non-user-initiated close(),
162 such as a killed process. This design point is described in further
163 detail in the description for the DK_CXLFLASH_DETACH ioctl.
165 There are a few important aspects regarding the "tokens" (context id
166 and fd2) that are provided back to the user:
168 - These tokens are only valid for the process under which they
169 were created. The child of a forked process cannot continue
170 to use the context id or file descriptor created by its parent
171 (see DK_CXLFLASH_VLUN_CLONE for further details).
173 - These tokens are only valid for the lifetime of the context and
174 the process under which they were created. Once either is
175 destroyed, the tokens are to be considered stale and subsequent
176 usage will result in errors.
178 - A valid adapter file descriptor (fd2 >= 0) is only returned on
179 the initial attach for a context. Subsequent attaches to an
180 existing context (DK_CXLFLASH_ATTACH_REUSE_CONTEXT flag present)
181 do not provide the adapter file descriptor as it was previously
182 made known to the application.
184 - When a context is no longer needed, the user shall detach from
185 the context via the DK_CXLFLASH_DETACH ioctl. When this ioctl
186 returns with a valid adapter file descriptor and the return flag
187 DK_CXLFLASH_APP_CLOSE_ADAP_FD is present, the application _must_
188 close the adapter file descriptor following a successful detach.
190 - When this ioctl returns with a valid fd2 and the return flag
191 DK_CXLFLASH_APP_CLOSE_ADAP_FD is present, the application _must_
192 close fd2 in the following circumstances:
194 + Following a successful detach of the last user of the context
195 + Following a successful recovery on the context's original fd2
196 + In the child process of a fork(), following a clone ioctl,
197 on the fd2 associated with the source context
199 - At any time, a close on fd2 will invalidate the tokens. Applications
200 should exercise caution to only close fd2 when appropriate (outlined
201 in the previous bullet) to avoid premature loss of I/O.
203 DK_CXLFLASH_USER_DIRECT
204 -----------------------
205 This ioctl is responsible for transitioning the LUN to direct
206 (physical) mode access and configuring the AFU for direct access from
207 user space on a per-context basis. Additionally, the block size and
208 last logical block address (LBA) are returned to the user.
210 As mentioned previously, when operating in user space access mode,
211 LUNs may be accessed in whole or in part. Only one mode is allowed
212 at a time and if one mode is active (outstanding references exist),
213 requests to use the LUN in a different mode are denied.
215 The AFU is configured for direct access from user space by adding an
216 entry to the AFU's resource handle table. The index of the entry is
217 treated as a resource handle that is returned to the user. The user
218 is then able to use the handle to reference the LUN during I/O.
220 DK_CXLFLASH_USER_VIRTUAL
221 ------------------------
222 This ioctl is responsible for transitioning the LUN to virtual mode
223 of access and configuring the AFU for virtual access from user space
224 on a per-context basis. Additionally, the block size and last logical
225 block address (LBA) are returned to the user.
227 As mentioned previously, when operating in user space access mode,
228 LUNs may be accessed in whole or in part. Only one mode is allowed
229 at a time and if one mode is active (outstanding references exist),
230 requests to use the LUN in a different mode are denied.
232 The AFU is configured for virtual access from user space by adding
233 an entry to the AFU's resource handle table. The index of the entry
234 is treated as a resource handle that is returned to the user. The
235 user is then able to use the handle to reference the LUN during I/O.
237 By default, the virtual LUN is created with a size of 0. The user
238 would need to use the DK_CXLFLASH_VLUN_RESIZE ioctl to adjust the grow
239 the virtual LUN to a desired size. To avoid having to perform this
240 resize for the initial creation of the virtual LUN, the user has the
241 option of specifying a size as part of the DK_CXLFLASH_USER_VIRTUAL
242 ioctl, such that when success is returned to the user, the
243 resource handle that is provided is already referencing provisioned
244 storage. This is reflected by the last LBA being a non-zero value.
246 When a LUN is accessible from more than one port, this ioctl will
247 return with the DK_CXLFLASH_ALL_PORTS_ACTIVE return flag set. This
248 provides the user with a hint that I/O can be retried in the event
249 of an I/O error as the LUN can be reached over multiple paths.
251 DK_CXLFLASH_VLUN_RESIZE
252 -----------------------
253 This ioctl is responsible for resizing a previously created virtual
254 LUN and will fail if invoked upon a LUN that is not in virtual
255 mode. Upon success, an updated last LBA is returned to the user
256 indicating the new size of the virtual LUN associated with the
259 The partitioning of virtual LUNs is jointly mediated by the cxlflash
260 driver and the AFU. An allocation table is kept for each LUN that is
261 operating in the virtual mode and used to program a LUN translation
262 table that the AFU references when provided with a resource handle.
264 This ioctl can return -EAGAIN if an AFU sync operation takes too long.
265 In addition to returning a failure to user, cxlflash will also schedule
266 an asynchronous AFU reset. Should the user choose to retry the operation,
267 it is expected to succeed. If this ioctl fails with -EAGAIN, the user
268 can either retry the operation or treat it as a failure.
272 This ioctl is responsible for releasing a previously obtained
273 reference to either a physical or virtual LUN. This can be
274 thought of as the inverse of the DK_CXLFLASH_USER_DIRECT or
275 DK_CXLFLASH_USER_VIRTUAL ioctls. Upon success, the resource handle
276 is no longer valid and the entry in the resource handle table is
277 made available to be used again.
279 As part of the release process for virtual LUNs, the virtual LUN
280 is first resized to 0 to clear out and free the translation tables
281 associated with the virtual LUN reference.
285 This ioctl is responsible for unregistering a context with the
286 cxlflash driver and release outstanding resources that were
287 not explicitly released via the DK_CXLFLASH_RELEASE ioctl. Upon
288 success, all "tokens" which had been provided to the user from the
289 DK_CXLFLASH_ATTACH onward are no longer valid.
291 When the DK_CXLFLASH_APP_CLOSE_ADAP_FD flag was returned on a successful
292 attach, the application _must_ close the fd2 associated with the context
293 following the detach of the final user of the context.
295 DK_CXLFLASH_VLUN_CLONE
296 ----------------------
297 This ioctl is responsible for cloning a previously created
298 context to a more recently created context. It exists solely to
299 support maintaining user space access to storage after a process
300 forks. Upon success, the child process (which invoked the ioctl)
301 will have access to the same LUNs via the same resource handle(s)
302 as the parent, but under a different context.
304 Context sharing across processes is not supported with CXL and
305 therefore each fork must be met with establishing a new context
306 for the child process. This ioctl simplifies the state management
307 and playback required by a user in such a scenario. When a process
308 forks, child process can clone the parents context by first creating
309 a context (via DK_CXLFLASH_ATTACH) and then using this ioctl to
310 perform the clone from the parent to the child.
312 The clone itself is fairly simple. The resource handle and lun
313 translation tables are copied from the parent context to the child's
314 and then synced with the AFU.
316 When the DK_CXLFLASH_APP_CLOSE_ADAP_FD flag was returned on a successful
317 attach, the application _must_ close the fd2 associated with the source
318 context (still resident/accessible in the parent process) following the
319 clone. This is to avoid a stale entry in the file descriptor table of the
322 This ioctl can return -EAGAIN if an AFU sync operation takes too long.
323 In addition to returning a failure to user, cxlflash will also schedule
324 an asynchronous AFU reset. Should the user choose to retry the operation,
325 it is expected to succeed. If this ioctl fails with -EAGAIN, the user
326 can either retry the operation or treat it as a failure.
330 This ioctl is used to detect various changes such as the capacity of
331 the disk changing, the number of LUNs visible changing, etc. In cases
332 where the changes affect the application (such as a LUN resize), the
333 cxlflash driver will report the changed state to the application.
335 The user calls in when they want to validate that a LUN hasn't been
336 changed in response to a check condition. As the user is operating out
337 of band from the kernel, they will see these types of events without
338 the kernel's knowledge. When encountered, the user's architected
339 behavior is to call in to this ioctl, indicating what they want to
340 verify and passing along any appropriate information. For now, only
341 verifying a LUN change (ie: size different) with sense data is
344 DK_CXLFLASH_RECOVER_AFU
345 -----------------------
346 This ioctl is used to drive recovery (if such an action is warranted)
347 of a specified user context. Any state associated with the user context
348 is re-established upon successful recovery.
350 User contexts are put into an error condition when the device needs to
351 be reset or is terminating. Users are notified of this error condition
352 by seeing all 0xF's on an MMIO read. Upon encountering this, the
353 architected behavior for a user is to call into this ioctl to recover
354 their context. A user may also call into this ioctl at any time to
355 check if the device is operating normally. If a failure is returned
356 from this ioctl, the user is expected to gracefully clean up their
357 context via release/detach ioctls. Until they do, the context they
358 hold is not relinquished. The user may also optionally exit the process
359 at which time the context/resources they held will be freed as part of
362 When the DK_CXLFLASH_APP_CLOSE_ADAP_FD flag was returned on a successful
363 attach, the application _must_ unmap and close the fd2 associated with the
364 original context following this ioctl returning success and indicating that
365 the context was recovered (DK_CXLFLASH_RECOVER_AFU_CONTEXT_RESET).
367 DK_CXLFLASH_MANAGE_LUN
368 ----------------------
369 This ioctl is used to switch a LUN from a mode where it is available
370 for file-system access (legacy), to a mode where it is set aside for
371 exclusive user space access (superpipe). In case a LUN is visible
372 across multiple ports and adapters, this ioctl is used to uniquely
373 identify each LUN by its World Wide Node Name (WWNN).
376 CXL Flash Driver Host IOCTLs
377 ============================
379 Each host adapter instance that is supported by the cxlflash driver
380 has a special character device associated with it to enable a set of
381 host management function. These character devices are hosted in a
382 class dedicated for cxlflash and can be accessed via `/dev/cxlflash/*`.
384 Applications can be written to perform various functions using the
385 host ioctl APIs below.
387 The structure definitions for these IOCTLs are available in:
388 uapi/scsi/cxlflash_ioctl.h
390 HT_CXLFLASH_LUN_PROVISION
391 -------------------------
392 This ioctl is used to create and delete persistent LUNs on cxlflash
393 devices that lack an external LUN management interface. It is only
394 valid when used with AFUs that support the LUN provision capability.
396 When sufficient space is available, LUNs can be created by specifying
397 the target port to host the LUN and a desired size in 4K blocks. Upon
398 success, the LUN ID and WWID of the created LUN will be returned and
399 the SCSI bus can be scanned to detect the change in LUN topology. Note
400 that partial allocations are not supported. Should a creation fail due
401 to a space issue, the target port can be queried for its current LUN
404 To remove a LUN, the device must first be disassociated from the Linux
405 SCSI subsystem. The LUN deletion can then be initiated by specifying a
406 target port and LUN ID. Upon success, the LUN geometry associated with
407 the port will be updated to reflect new number of provisioned LUNs and
410 To query the LUN geometry of a port, the target port is specified and
411 upon success, the following information is presented:
413 - Maximum number of provisioned LUNs allowed for the port
414 - Current number of provisioned LUNs for the port
415 - Maximum total capacity of provisioned LUNs for the port (4K blocks)
416 - Current total capacity of provisioned LUNs for the port (4K blocks)
418 With this information, the number of available LUNs and capacity can be
421 HT_CXLFLASH_AFU_DEBUG
422 ---------------------
423 This ioctl is used to debug AFUs by supporting a command pass-through
424 interface. It is only valid when used with AFUs that support the AFU
427 With exception of buffer management, AFU debug commands are opaque to
428 cxlflash and treated as pass-through. For debug commands that do require
429 data transfer, the user supplies an adequately sized data buffer and must
430 specify the data transfer direction with respect to the host. There is a
431 maximum transfer size of 256K imposed. Note that partial read completions
432 are not supported - when errors are experienced with a host read data
433 transfer, the data buffer is not copied back to the user.