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authorPaolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>2017-08-22 06:50:18 +0200
committerPaolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>2017-09-22 21:07:24 +0200
commitb855f8d175a0a26c9798cbc5962bb8c0d9538231 (patch)
tree06ef9b853e3700eb33aaccd9ffba4c0922baaf42 /docs
parent7c9e527659c67d4d7b41d9504f93d2d7ee482488 (diff)
downloadqemu-b855f8d175a0a26c9798cbc5962bb8c0d9538231.tar.gz
scsi: build qemu-pr-helper
Introduce a privileged helper to run persistent reservation commands. This lets virtual machines send persistent reservations without using CAP_SYS_RAWIO or out-of-tree patches. The helper uses Unix permissions and SCM_RIGHTS to restrict access to processes that can access its socket and prove that they have an open file descriptor for a raw SCSI device. The next patch will also correct the usage of persistent reservations with multipath devices. It would also be possible to support for Linux's IOC_PR_* ioctls in the future, to support NVMe devices. For now, however, only SCSI is supported. Signed-off-by: Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'docs')
-rw-r--r--docs/interop/pr-helper.rst83
-rw-r--r--docs/pr-manager.rst33
2 files changed, 116 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/docs/interop/pr-helper.rst b/docs/interop/pr-helper.rst
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..9f76d5bcf9
--- /dev/null
+++ b/docs/interop/pr-helper.rst
@@ -0,0 +1,83 @@
+..
+
+======================================
+Persistent reservation helper protocol
+======================================
+
+QEMU's SCSI passthrough devices, ``scsi-block`` and ``scsi-generic``,
+can delegate implementation of persistent reservations to an external
+(and typically privileged) program. Persistent Reservations allow
+restricting access to block devices to specific initiators in a shared
+storage setup.
+
+For a more detailed reference please refer the the SCSI Primary
+Commands standard, specifically the section on Reservations and the
+"PERSISTENT RESERVE IN" and "PERSISTENT RESERVE OUT" commands.
+
+This document describes the socket protocol used between QEMU's
+``pr-manager-helper`` object and the external program.
+
+.. contents::
+
+Connection and initialization
+-----------------------------
+
+All data transmitted on the socket is big-endian.
+
+After connecting to the helper program's socket, the helper starts a simple
+feature negotiation process by writing four bytes corresponding to
+the features it exposes (``supported_features``). QEMU reads it,
+then writes four bytes corresponding to the desired features of the
+helper program (``requested_features``).
+
+If a bit is 1 in ``requested_features`` and 0 in ``supported_features``,
+the corresponding feature is not supported by the helper and the connection
+is closed. On the other hand, it is acceptable for a bit to be 0 in
+``requested_features`` and 1 in ``supported_features``; in this case,
+the helper will not enable the feature.
+
+Right now no feature is defined, so the two parties always write four
+zero bytes.
+
+Command format
+--------------
+
+It is invalid to send multiple commands concurrently on the same
+socket. It is however possible to connect multiple sockets to the
+helper and send multiple commands to the helper for one or more
+file descriptors.
+
+A command consists of a request and a response. A request consists
+of a 16-byte SCSI CDB. A file descriptor must be passed to the helper
+together with the SCSI CDB using ancillary data.
+
+The CDB has the following limitations:
+
+- the command (stored in the first byte) must be one of 0x5E
+ (PERSISTENT RESERVE IN) or 0x5F (PERSISTENT RESERVE OUT).
+
+- the allocation length (stored in bytes 7-8 of the CDB for PERSISTENT
+ RESERVE IN) or parameter list length (stored in bytes 5-8 of the CDB
+ for PERSISTENT RESERVE OUT) is limited to 8 KiB.
+
+For PERSISTENT RESERVE OUT, the parameter list is sent right after the
+CDB. The length of the parameter list is taken from the CDB itself.
+
+The helper's reply has the following structure:
+
+- 4 bytes for the SCSI status
+
+- 4 bytes for the payload size (nonzero only for PERSISTENT RESERVE IN
+ and only if the SCSI status is 0x00, i.e. GOOD)
+
+- 96 bytes for the SCSI sense data
+
+- if the size is nonzero, the payload follows
+
+The sense data is always sent to keep the protocol simple, even though
+it is only valid if the SCSI status is CHECK CONDITION (0x02).
+
+The payload size is always less than or equal to the allocation length
+specified in the CDB for the PERSISTENT RESERVE IN command.
+
+If the protocol is violated, the helper closes the socket.
diff --git a/docs/pr-manager.rst b/docs/pr-manager.rst
index b6089fb57c..7107e59fb8 100644
--- a/docs/pr-manager.rst
+++ b/docs/pr-manager.rst
@@ -49,3 +49,36 @@ Alternatively, using ``-blockdev``::
-object pr-manager-helper,id=helper0,path=/var/run/qemu-pr-helper.sock
-blockdev node-name=hd,driver=raw,file.driver=host_device,file.filename=/dev/sdb,file.pr-manager=helper0
-device scsi-block,drive=hd
+
+----------------------------------
+Invoking :program:`qemu-pr-helper`
+----------------------------------
+
+QEMU provides an implementation of the persistent reservation helper,
+called :program:`qemu-pr-helper`. The helper should be started as a
+system service and supports the following option:
+
+-d, --daemon run in the background
+-q, --quiet decrease verbosity
+-f, --pidfile=path PID file when running as a daemon
+-k, --socket=path path to the socket
+-T, --trace=trace-opts tracing options
+
+By default, the socket and PID file are placed in the runtime state
+directory, for example :file:`/var/run/qemu-pr-helper.sock` and
+:file:`/var/run/qemu-pr-helper.pid`. The PID file is not created
+unless :option:`-d` is passed too.
+
+:program:`qemu-pr-helper` can also use the systemd socket activation
+protocol. In this case, the systemd socket unit should specify a
+Unix stream socket, like this::
+
+ [Socket]
+ ListenStream=/var/run/qemu-pr-helper.sock
+
+After connecting to the socket, :program:`qemu-pr-helper`` can optionally drop
+root privileges, except for those capabilities that are needed for
+its operation. To do this, add the following options:
+
+-u, --user=user user to drop privileges to
+-g, --group=group group to drop privileges to