ATA over Ethernet

From Wikipedia:ATA over Ethernet:

ATA over Ethernet (AoE) is a network protocol developed by the Brantley Coile Company, designed for simple, high-performance access of SATA storage devices over Ethernet networks. It is used to build storage area networks (SANs) with low-cost, standard technologies.

Prequisites to AE

To use AOE, you need the AUR packages vbladeAUR and aoetoolsAUR.

AoE does not use IPv4/IPv6; it works directly on top of Ethernet and is limited to the local subnet. It is enough to make sure that the interface is up. (For best performance, the subnet should use jumbo frames.)

# ip link set eth0 up

Target: Export a disk

You can export block devices or image files using vblade or the vbladed daemon.

Create an empty disk image:

# dd if=/dev/zero of=vblade0 bs=1M count=256

Start vblade to export the disk over eth0:

# vblade 1 1 eth0 vblade0

Exported disks are identified by their "shelf ID" and "slot ID" (within that shelf), in this case 1.1; the combination must be unique across the SAN.

Initiator: Attach to a disk

Ensure the kernel module is loaded:

# modprobe aoe

By default, all interfaces are used, but you can specify a whitelist either as aoe module parameter, or using the aoe-interfaces command:

# aoe-interfaces eth0

The kernel module performs periodic discovery; to do it immediately (e.g. after changing interfaces), use aoe-discover. Afterwards, use aoe-stat to list "visible" disks.

# aoe-discover
# aoe-stat
     e1.1         0.001GB   eth0 up

The first column shows a device name which also can be found under /dev/etherd as a regular block device. You can partition it with fdisk, or just create a file system:

# mkfs.ext4 /dev/etherd/e1.1
# mkdir /mnt/e1.1
# mount /dev/etherd/e1.1 /mnt/e1.1
gollark: It does imply doubt about it, which some religions may beeize.
gollark: It only started a few months/weeks ago, oddly.
gollark: Specifically, ยท.
gollark: When I hold compose, my thing repeatedly types and untypes a dot character.
gollark: While people exist, anyone know why my compose key is being weird?
This article is issued from Archlinux. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.