| .. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 |
| |
| =========================================== |
| Userspace block device driver (ublk driver) |
| =========================================== |
| |
| Overview |
| ======== |
| |
| ublk is a generic framework for implementing block device logic from userspace. |
| The motivation behind it is that moving virtual block drivers into userspace, |
| such as loop, nbd and similar can be very helpful. It can help to implement |
| new virtual block device such as ublk-qcow2 (there are several attempts of |
| implementing qcow2 driver in kernel). |
| |
| Userspace block devices are attractive because: |
| |
| - They can be written many programming languages. |
| - They can use libraries that are not available in the kernel. |
| - They can be debugged with tools familiar to application developers. |
| - Crashes do not kernel panic the machine. |
| - Bugs are likely to have a lower security impact than bugs in kernel |
| code. |
| - They can be installed and updated independently of the kernel. |
| - They can be used to simulate block device easily with user specified |
| parameters/setting for test/debug purpose |
| |
| ublk block device (``/dev/ublkb*``) is added by ublk driver. Any IO request |
| on the device will be forwarded to ublk userspace program. For convenience, |
| in this document, ``ublk server`` refers to generic ublk userspace |
| program. ``ublksrv`` [#userspace]_ is one of such implementation. It |
| provides ``libublksrv`` [#userspace_lib]_ library for developing specific |
| user block device conveniently, while also generic type block device is |
| included, such as loop and null. Richard W.M. Jones wrote userspace nbd device |
| ``nbdublk`` [#userspace_nbdublk]_ based on ``libublksrv`` [#userspace_lib]_. |
| |
| After the IO is handled by userspace, the result is committed back to the |
| driver, thus completing the request cycle. This way, any specific IO handling |
| logic is totally done by userspace, such as loop's IO handling, NBD's IO |
| communication, or qcow2's IO mapping. |
| |
| ``/dev/ublkb*`` is driven by blk-mq request-based driver. Each request is |
| assigned by one queue wide unique tag. ublk server assigns unique tag to each |
| IO too, which is 1:1 mapped with IO of ``/dev/ublkb*``. |
| |
| Both the IO request forward and IO handling result committing are done via |
| ``io_uring`` passthrough command; that is why ublk is also one io_uring based |
| block driver. It has been observed that using io_uring passthrough command can |
| give better IOPS than block IO; which is why ublk is one of high performance |
| implementation of userspace block device: not only IO request communication is |
| done by io_uring, but also the preferred IO handling in ublk server is io_uring |
| based approach too. |
| |
| ublk provides control interface to set/get ublk block device parameters. |
| The interface is extendable and kabi compatible: basically any ublk request |
| queue's parameter or ublk generic feature parameters can be set/get via the |
| interface. Thus, ublk is generic userspace block device framework. |
| For example, it is easy to setup a ublk device with specified block |
| parameters from userspace. |
| |
| Using ublk |
| ========== |
| |
| ublk requires userspace ublk server to handle real block device logic. |
| |
| Below is example of using ``ublksrv`` to provide ublk-based loop device. |
| |
| - add a device:: |
| |
| ublk add -t loop -f ublk-loop.img |
| |
| - format with xfs, then use it:: |
| |
| mkfs.xfs /dev/ublkb0 |
| mount /dev/ublkb0 /mnt |
| # do anything. all IOs are handled by io_uring |
| ... |
| umount /mnt |
| |
| - list the devices with their info:: |
| |
| ublk list |
| |
| - delete the device:: |
| |
| ublk del -a |
| ublk del -n $ublk_dev_id |
| |
| See usage details in README of ``ublksrv`` [#userspace_readme]_. |
| |
| Design |
| ====== |
| |
| Control plane |
| ------------- |
| |
| ublk driver provides global misc device node (``/dev/ublk-control``) for |
| managing and controlling ublk devices with help of several control commands: |
| |
| - ``UBLK_CMD_ADD_DEV`` |
| |
| Add a ublk char device (``/dev/ublkc*``) which is talked with ublk server |
| WRT IO command communication. Basic device info is sent together with this |
| command. It sets UAPI structure of ``ublksrv_ctrl_dev_info``, |
| such as ``nr_hw_queues``, ``queue_depth``, and max IO request buffer size, |
| for which the info is negotiated with the driver and sent back to the server. |
| When this command is completed, the basic device info is immutable. |
| |
| - ``UBLK_CMD_SET_PARAMS`` / ``UBLK_CMD_GET_PARAMS`` |
| |
| Set or get parameters of the device, which can be either generic feature |
| related, or request queue limit related, but can't be IO logic specific, |
| because the driver does not handle any IO logic. This command has to be |
| sent before sending ``UBLK_CMD_START_DEV``. |
| |
| - ``UBLK_CMD_START_DEV`` |
| |
| After the server prepares userspace resources (such as creating per-queue |
| pthread & io_uring for handling ublk IO), this command is sent to the |
| driver for allocating & exposing ``/dev/ublkb*``. Parameters set via |
| ``UBLK_CMD_SET_PARAMS`` are applied for creating the device. |
| |
| - ``UBLK_CMD_STOP_DEV`` |
| |
| Halt IO on ``/dev/ublkb*`` and remove the device. When this command returns, |
| ublk server will release resources (such as destroying per-queue pthread & |
| io_uring). |
| |
| - ``UBLK_CMD_DEL_DEV`` |
| |
| Remove ``/dev/ublkc*``. When this command returns, the allocated ublk device |
| number can be reused. |
| |
| - ``UBLK_CMD_GET_QUEUE_AFFINITY`` |
| |
| When ``/dev/ublkc`` is added, the driver creates block layer tagset, so |
| that each queue's affinity info is available. The server sends |
| ``UBLK_CMD_GET_QUEUE_AFFINITY`` to retrieve queue affinity info. It can |
| set up the per-queue context efficiently, such as bind affine CPUs with IO |
| pthread and try to allocate buffers in IO thread context. |
| |
| - ``UBLK_CMD_GET_DEV_INFO`` |
| |
| For retrieving device info via ``ublksrv_ctrl_dev_info``. It is the server's |
| responsibility to save IO target specific info in userspace. |
| |
| Data plane |
| ---------- |
| |
| ublk server needs to create per-queue IO pthread & io_uring for handling IO |
| commands via io_uring passthrough. The per-queue IO pthread |
| focuses on IO handling and shouldn't handle any control & management |
| tasks. |
| |
| The's IO is assigned by a unique tag, which is 1:1 mapping with IO |
| request of ``/dev/ublkb*``. |
| |
| UAPI structure of ``ublksrv_io_desc`` is defined for describing each IO from |
| the driver. A fixed mmaped area (array) on ``/dev/ublkc*`` is provided for |
| exporting IO info to the server; such as IO offset, length, OP/flags and |
| buffer address. Each ``ublksrv_io_desc`` instance can be indexed via queue id |
| and IO tag directly. |
| |
| The following IO commands are communicated via io_uring passthrough command, |
| and each command is only for forwarding the IO and committing the result |
| with specified IO tag in the command data: |
| |
| - ``UBLK_IO_FETCH_REQ`` |
| |
| Sent from the server IO pthread for fetching future incoming IO requests |
| destined to ``/dev/ublkb*``. This command is sent only once from the server |
| IO pthread for ublk driver to setup IO forward environment. |
| |
| - ``UBLK_IO_COMMIT_AND_FETCH_REQ`` |
| |
| When an IO request is destined to ``/dev/ublkb*``, the driver stores |
| the IO's ``ublksrv_io_desc`` to the specified mapped area; then the |
| previous received IO command of this IO tag (either ``UBLK_IO_FETCH_REQ`` |
| or ``UBLK_IO_COMMIT_AND_FETCH_REQ)`` is completed, so the server gets |
| the IO notification via io_uring. |
| |
| After the server handles the IO, its result is committed back to the |
| driver by sending ``UBLK_IO_COMMIT_AND_FETCH_REQ`` back. Once ublkdrv |
| received this command, it parses the result and complete the request to |
| ``/dev/ublkb*``. In the meantime setup environment for fetching future |
| requests with the same IO tag. That is, ``UBLK_IO_COMMIT_AND_FETCH_REQ`` |
| is reused for both fetching request and committing back IO result. |
| |
| - ``UBLK_IO_NEED_GET_DATA`` |
| |
| With ``UBLK_F_NEED_GET_DATA`` enabled, the WRITE request will be firstly |
| issued to ublk server without data copy. Then, IO backend of ublk server |
| receives the request and it can allocate data buffer and embed its addr |
| inside this new io command. After the kernel driver gets the command, |
| data copy is done from request pages to this backend's buffer. Finally, |
| backend receives the request again with data to be written and it can |
| truly handle the request. |
| |
| ``UBLK_IO_NEED_GET_DATA`` adds one additional round-trip and one |
| io_uring_enter() syscall. Any user thinks that it may lower performance |
| should not enable UBLK_F_NEED_GET_DATA. ublk server pre-allocates IO |
| buffer for each IO by default. Any new project should try to use this |
| buffer to communicate with ublk driver. However, existing project may |
| break or not able to consume the new buffer interface; that's why this |
| command is added for backwards compatibility so that existing projects |
| can still consume existing buffers. |
| |
| - data copy between ublk server IO buffer and ublk block IO request |
| |
| The driver needs to copy the block IO request pages into the server buffer |
| (pages) first for WRITE before notifying the server of the coming IO, so |
| that the server can handle WRITE request. |
| |
| When the server handles READ request and sends |
| ``UBLK_IO_COMMIT_AND_FETCH_REQ`` to the server, ublkdrv needs to copy |
| the server buffer (pages) read to the IO request pages. |
| |
| Future development |
| ================== |
| |
| Container-aware ublk deivice |
| ---------------------------- |
| |
| ublk driver doesn't handle any IO logic. Its function is well defined |
| for now and very limited userspace interfaces are needed, which is also |
| well defined too. It is possible to make ublk devices container-aware block |
| devices in future as Stefan Hajnoczi suggested [#stefan]_, by removing |
| ADMIN privilege. |
| |
| Zero copy |
| --------- |
| |
| Zero copy is a generic requirement for nbd, fuse or similar drivers. A |
| problem [#xiaoguang]_ Xiaoguang mentioned is that pages mapped to userspace |
| can't be remapped any more in kernel with existing mm interfaces. This can |
| occurs when destining direct IO to ``/dev/ublkb*``. Also, he reported that |
| big requests (IO size >= 256 KB) may benefit a lot from zero copy. |
| |
| |
| References |
| ========== |
| |
| .. [#userspace] https://github.com/ming1/ubdsrv |
| |
| .. [#userspace_lib] https://github.com/ming1/ubdsrv/tree/master/lib |
| |
| .. [#userspace_nbdublk] https://gitlab.com/rwmjones/libnbd/-/tree/nbdublk |
| |
| .. [#userspace_readme] https://github.com/ming1/ubdsrv/blob/master/README |
| |
| .. [#stefan] https://lore.kernel.org/linux-block/YoOr6jBfgVm8GvWg@stefanha-x1.localdomain/ |
| |
| .. [#xiaoguang] https://lore.kernel.org/linux-block/YoOr6jBfgVm8GvWg@stefanha-x1.localdomain/ |