| .. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 |
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| ======================================= |
| Linux NVMe feature and and quirk policy |
| ======================================= |
| |
| This file explains the policy used to decide what is supported by the |
| Linux NVMe driver and what is not. |
| |
| |
| Introduction |
| ============ |
| |
| NVM Express is an open collection of standards and information. |
| |
| The Linux NVMe host driver in drivers/nvme/host/ supports devices |
| implementing the NVM Express (NVMe) family of specifications, which |
| currently consists of a number of documents: |
| |
| - the NVMe Base specification |
| - various Command Set specifications (e.g. NVM Command Set) |
| - various Transport specifications (e.g. PCIe, Fibre Channel, RDMA, TCP) |
| - the NVMe Management Interface specification |
| |
| See https://nvmexpress.org/developers/ for the NVMe specifications. |
| |
| |
| Supported features |
| ================== |
| |
| NVMe is a large suite of specifications, and contains features that are only |
| useful or suitable for specific use-cases. It is important to note that Linux |
| does not aim to implement every feature in the specification. Every additional |
| feature implemented introduces more code, more maintenance and potentially more |
| bugs. Hence there is an inherent tradeoff between functionality and |
| maintainability of the NVMe host driver. |
| |
| Any feature implemented in the Linux NVMe host driver must support the |
| following requirements: |
| |
| 1. The feature is specified in a release version of an official NVMe |
| specification, or in a ratified Technical Proposal (TP) that is |
| available on NVMe website. Or if it is not directly related to the |
| on-wire protocol, does not contradict any of the NVMe specifications. |
| 2. Does not conflict with the Linux architecture, nor the design of the |
| NVMe host driver. |
| 3. Has a clear, indisputable value-proposition and a wide consensus across |
| the community. |
| |
| Vendor specific extensions are generally not supported in the NVMe host |
| driver. |
| |
| It is strongly recommended to work with the Linux NVMe and block layer |
| maintainers and get feedback on specification changes that are intended |
| to be used by the Linux NVMe host driver in order to avoid conflict at a |
| later stage. |
| |
| |
| Quirks |
| ====== |
| |
| Sometimes implementations of open standards fail to correctly implement parts |
| of the standards. Linux uses identifier-based quirks to work around such |
| implementation bugs. The intent of quirks is to deal with widely available |
| hardware, usually consumer, which Linux users can't use without these quirks. |
| Typically these implementations are not or only superficially tested with Linux |
| by the hardware manufacturer. |
| |
| The Linux NVMe maintainers decide ad hoc whether to quirk implementations |
| based on the impact of the problem to Linux users and how it impacts |
| maintainability of the driver. In general quirks are a last resort, if no |
| firmware updates or other workarounds are available from the vendor. |
| |
| Quirks will not be added to the Linux kernel for hardware that isn't available |
| on the mass market. Hardware that fails qualification for enterprise Linux |
| distributions, ChromeOS, Android or other consumers of the Linux kernel |
| should be fixed before it is shipped instead of relying on Linux quirks. |