1# Block Device User Guide {#bdev} 2 3## Target Audience {#bdev_ug_targetaudience} 4 5This user guide is intended for software developers who have knowledge of block storage, storage drivers, issuing JSON-RPC 6commands and storage services such as RAID, compression, crypto, and others. 7 8## Introduction {#bdev_ug_introduction} 9 10The SPDK block device layer, often simply called *bdev*, is a C library 11intended to be equivalent to the operating system block storage layer that 12often sits immediately above the device drivers in a traditional kernel 13storage stack. Specifically, this library provides the following 14functionality: 15 16* A pluggable module API for implementing block devices that interface with different types of block storage devices. 17* Driver modules for NVMe, malloc (ramdisk), Linux AIO, virtio-scsi, Ceph RBD, Pmem and Vhost-SCSI Initiator and more. 18* An application API for enumerating and claiming SPDK block devices and then performing operations (read, write, unmap, etc.) on those devices. 19* Facilities to stack block devices to create complex I/O pipelines, including logical volume management (lvol) and partition support (GPT). 20* Configuration of block devices via JSON-RPC. 21* Request queueing, timeout, and reset handling. 22* Multiple, lockless queues for sending I/O to block devices. 23 24Bdev module creates abstraction layer that provides common API for all devices. 25User can use available bdev modules or create own module with any type of 26device underneath (please refer to @ref bdev_module for details). SPDK 27provides also vbdev modules which creates block devices on existing bdev. For 28example @ref bdev_ug_logical_volumes or @ref bdev_ug_gpt 29 30## Prerequisites {#bdev_ug_prerequisites} 31 32This guide assumes that you can already build the standard SPDK distribution 33on your platform. The block device layer is a C library with a single public 34header file named bdev.h. All SPDK configuration described in following 35chapters is done by using JSON-RPC commands. SPDK provides a python-based 36command line tool for sending RPC commands located at `scripts/rpc.py`. User 37can list available commands by running this script with `-h` or `--help` flag. 38Additionally user can retrieve currently supported set of RPC commands 39directly from SPDK application by running `scripts/rpc.py rpc_get_methods`. 40Detailed help for each command can be displayed by adding `-h` flag as a 41command parameter. 42 43## Configuring Block Device Modules {#bdev_ug_general_rpcs} 44 45Block devices can be configured using JSON RPCs. A complete list of available RPC commands 46with detailed information can be found on the @ref jsonrpc_components_bdev page. 47 48## Common Block Device Configuration Examples 49 50## Ceph RBD {#bdev_config_rbd} 51 52The SPDK RBD bdev driver provides SPDK block layer access to Ceph RADOS block 53devices (RBD). Ceph RBD devices are accessed via librbd and librados libraries 54to access the RADOS block device exported by Ceph. To create Ceph bdev RPC 55command `bdev_rbd_create` should be used. 56 57Example command 58 59`rpc.py bdev_rbd_create rbd foo 512` 60 61This command will create a bdev that represents the 'foo' image from a pool called 'rbd'. 62 63To remove a block device representation use the bdev_rbd_delete command. 64 65`rpc.py bdev_rbd_delete Rbd0` 66 67To resize a bdev use the bdev_rbd_resize command. 68 69`rpc.py bdev_rbd_resize Rbd0 4096` 70 71This command will resize the Rbd0 bdev to 4096 MiB. 72 73## Compression Virtual Bdev Module {#bdev_config_compress} 74 75The compression bdev module can be configured to provide compression/decompression 76services for an underlying thinly provisioned logical volume. Although the underlying 77module can be anything (i.e. NVME bdev) the overall compression benefits will not be realized 78unless the data stored on disk is placed appropriately. The compression vbdev module 79relies on an internal SPDK library called `reduce` to accomplish this, see @ref reduce 80for detailed information. 81 82The vbdev module relies on the DPDK CompressDev Framework to provide all compression 83functionality. The framework provides support for many different software only 84compression modules as well as hardware assisted support for Intel QAT. At this 85time the vbdev module supports the DPDK drivers for ISAL, QAT and mlx5_pci. 86 87mlx5_pci driver works with BlueField 2 SmartNIC and requires additional configuration of DPDK 88environment to enable compression function. It can be done via SPDK event library by configuring 89`env_context` member of `spdk_app_opts` structure or by passing corresponding CLI arguments in the 90following form: `--allow=BDF,class=compress`, e.g. `--allow=0000:01:00.0,class=compress`. 91 92Persistent memory is used to store metadata associated with the layout of the data on the 93backing device. SPDK relies on [PMDK](http://pmem.io/pmdk/) to interface persistent memory so any hardware 94supported by PMDK should work. If the directory for PMEM supplied upon vbdev creation does 95not point to persistent memory (i.e. a regular filesystem) performance will be severely 96impacted. The vbdev module and reduce libraries were designed to use persistent memory for 97any production use. 98 99Example command 100 101`rpc.py bdev_compress_create -p /pmem_files -b myLvol` 102 103In this example, a compression vbdev is created using persistent memory that is mapped to 104the directory `pmem_files` on top of the existing thinly provisioned logical volume `myLvol`. 105The resulting compression bdev will be named `COMP_LVS/myLvol` where LVS is the name of the 106logical volume store that `myLvol` resides on. 107 108The logical volume is referred to as the backing device and once the compression vbdev is 109created it cannot be separated from the persistent memory file that will be created in 110the specified directory. If the persistent memory file is not available, the compression 111vbdev will also not be available. 112 113By default the vbdev module will choose the QAT driver if the hardware and drivers are 114available and loaded. If not, it will revert to the software-only ISAL driver. By using 115the following command, the driver may be specified however this is not persistent so it 116must be done either upon creation or before the underlying logical volume is loaded to 117be honored. In the example below, `0` is telling the vbdev module to use QAT if available 118otherwise use ISAL, this is the default and if sufficient the command is not required. Passing 119a value of 1 tells the driver to use QAT and if not available then the creation or loading 120the vbdev should fail to create or load. A value of '2' as shown below tells the module 121to use ISAL and if for some reason it is not available, the vbdev should fail to create or load. 122 123`rpc.py compress_set_pmd -p 2` 124 125To remove a compression vbdev, use the following command which will also delete the PMEM 126file. If the logical volume is deleted the PMEM file will not be removed and the 127compression vbdev will not be available. 128 129`rpc.py bdev_compress_delete COMP_LVS/myLvol` 130 131To list compression volumes that are only available for deletion because their PMEM file 132was missing use the following. The name parameter is optional and if not included will list 133all volumes, if used it will return the name or an error that the device does not exist. 134 135`rpc.py bdev_compress_get_orphans --name COMP_Nvme0n1` 136 137## Crypto Virtual Bdev Module {#bdev_config_crypto} 138 139The crypto virtual bdev module can be configured to provide at rest data encryption 140for any underlying bdev. The module relies on the DPDK CryptoDev Framework to provide 141all cryptographic functionality. The framework provides support for many different software 142only cryptographic modules as well hardware assisted support for the Intel QAT board and 143NVIDIA crypto enabled NICs. 144The framework also provides support for cipher, hash, authentication and AEAD functions. 145At this time the SPDK virtual bdev module supports cipher only as follows: 146 147- AESN-NI Multi Buffer Crypto Poll Mode Driver: RTE_CRYPTO_CIPHER_AES128_CBC 148- Intel(R) QuickAssist (QAT) Crypto Poll Mode Driver: RTE_CRYPTO_CIPHER_AES128_CBC, 149 RTE_CRYPTO_CIPHER_AES128_XTS 150 (Note: QAT is functional however is marked as experimental until the hardware has 151 been fully integrated with the SPDK CI system.) 152- MLX5 Crypto Poll Mode Driver: RTE_CRYPTO_CIPHER_AES256_XTS, RTE_CRYPTO_CIPHER_AES512_XTS 153 154In order to support using the bdev block offset (LBA) as the initialization vector (IV), 155the crypto module break up all I/O into crypto operations of a size equal to the block 156size of the underlying bdev. For example, a 4K I/O to a bdev with a 512B block size, 157would result in 8 cryptographic operations. 158 159For reads, the buffer provided to the crypto module will be used as the destination buffer 160for unencrypted data. For writes, however, a temporary scratch buffer is used as the 161destination buffer for encryption which is then passed on to the underlying bdev as the 162write buffer. This is done to avoid encrypting the data in the original source buffer which 163may cause problems in some use cases. 164 165Example command 166 167`rpc.py bdev_crypto_create NVMe1n1 CryNvmeA crypto_aesni_mb 01234567891234560123456789123456` 168 169This command will create a crypto vbdev called 'CryNvmeA' on top of the NVMe bdev 170'NVMe1n1' and will use the DPDK software driver 'crypto_aesni_mb' and the key 171'01234567891234560123456789123456'. 172 173Please make sure the keys are provided in hexlified format. This means string passed to 174rpc.py must be twice as long than the key length in binary form. 175 176Example command 177 178rpc.py bdev_crypto_create -c AES_XTS -k2 7859243a027411e581e0c40a35c8228f NVMe1n1 CryNvmeA \ 179mlx5_pci d16a2f3a9e9f5b32daefacd7f5984f4578add84425be4a0baa489b9de8884b09 180 181This command will create a crypto vbdev called 'CryNvmeA' on top of the NVMe bdev 182'NVMe1n1' and will use the DPDK software driver 'mlx5_pci', the AES key 183'd16a2f3a9e9f5b32daefacd7f5984f4578add84425be4a0baa489b9de8884b09' and the XTS key 184'7859243a027411e581e0c40a35c8228f'. In other words, the compound AES_XTS key to be used is 185'd16a2f3a9e9f5b32daefacd7f5984f4578add84425be4a0baa489b9de8884b097859243a027411e581e0c40a35c8228f' 186 187To remove the vbdev use the bdev_crypto_delete command. 188 189`rpc.py bdev_crypto_delete CryNvmeA` 190 191The MLX5 driver works with crypto enabled Nvidia NICs and requires special configuration of 192DPDK environment to enable crypto function. It can be done via SPDK event library by configuring 193`env_context` member of `spdk_app_opts` structure or by passing corresponding CLI arguments in 194the following form: `--allow=BDF,class=crypto,wcs_file=/full/path/to/wrapped/credentials`, e.g. 195`--allow=0000:01:00.0,class=crypto,wcs_file=/path/credentials.txt`. 196 197## Delay Bdev Module {#bdev_config_delay} 198 199The delay vbdev module is intended to apply a predetermined additional latency on top of a lower 200level bdev. This enables the simulation of the latency characteristics of a device during the functional 201or scalability testing of an SPDK application. For example, to simulate the effect of drive latency when 202processing I/Os, one could configure a NULL bdev with a delay bdev on top of it. 203 204The delay bdev module is not intended to provide a high fidelity replication of a specific NVMe drive's latency, 205instead it's main purpose is to provide a "big picture" understanding of how a generic latency affects a given 206application. 207 208A delay bdev is created using the `bdev_delay_create` RPC. This rpc takes 6 arguments, one for the name 209of the delay bdev and one for the name of the base bdev. The remaining four arguments represent the following 210latency values: average read latency, average write latency, p99 read latency, and p99 write latency. 211Within the context of the delay bdev p99 latency means that one percent of the I/O will be delayed by at 212least by the value of the p99 latency before being completed to the upper level protocol. All of the latency values 213are measured in microseconds. 214 215Example command: 216 217`rpc.py bdev_delay_create -b Null0 -d delay0 -r 10 --nine-nine-read-latency 50 -w 30 --nine-nine-write-latency 90` 218 219This command will create a delay bdev with average read and write latencies of 10 and 30 microseconds and p99 read 220and write latencies of 50 and 90 microseconds respectively. 221 222A delay bdev can be deleted using the `bdev_delay_delete` RPC 223 224Example command: 225 226`rpc.py bdev_delay_delete delay0` 227 228## GPT (GUID Partition Table) {#bdev_config_gpt} 229 230The GPT virtual bdev driver is enabled by default and does not require any configuration. 231It will automatically detect @ref bdev_ug_gpt on any attached bdev and will create 232possibly multiple virtual bdevs. 233 234### SPDK GPT partition table {#bdev_ug_gpt} 235 236The SPDK partition type GUID is `7c5222bd-8f5d-4087-9c00-bf9843c7b58c`. Existing SPDK bdevs 237can be exposed as Linux block devices via NBD and then can be partitioned with 238standard partitioning tools. After partitioning, the bdevs will need to be deleted and 239attached again for the GPT bdev module to see any changes. NBD kernel module must be 240loaded first. To create NBD bdev user should use `nbd_start_disk` RPC command. 241 242Example command 243 244`rpc.py nbd_start_disk Malloc0 /dev/nbd0` 245 246This will expose an SPDK bdev `Malloc0` under the `/dev/nbd0` block device. 247 248To remove NBD device user should use `nbd_stop_disk` RPC command. 249 250Example command 251 252`rpc.py nbd_stop_disk /dev/nbd0` 253 254To display full or specified nbd device list user should use `nbd_get_disks` RPC command. 255 256Example command 257 258`rpc.py nbd_stop_disk -n /dev/nbd0` 259 260### Creating a GPT partition table using NBD {#bdev_ug_gpt_create_part} 261 262~~~bash 263# Expose bdev Nvme0n1 as kernel block device /dev/nbd0 by JSON-RPC 264rpc.py nbd_start_disk Nvme0n1 /dev/nbd0 265 266# Create GPT partition table. 267parted -s /dev/nbd0 mklabel gpt 268 269# Add a partition consuming 50% of the available space. 270parted -s /dev/nbd0 mkpart MyPartition '0%' '50%' 271 272# Change the partition type to the SPDK GUID. 273# sgdisk is part of the gdisk package. 274sgdisk -t 1:7c5222bd-8f5d-4087-9c00-bf9843c7b58c /dev/nbd0 275 276# Stop the NBD device (stop exporting /dev/nbd0). 277rpc.py nbd_stop_disk /dev/nbd0 278 279# Now Nvme0n1 is configured with a GPT partition table, and 280# the first partition will be automatically exposed as 281# Nvme0n1p1 in SPDK applications. 282~~~ 283 284## iSCSI bdev {#bdev_config_iscsi} 285 286The SPDK iSCSI bdev driver depends on libiscsi and hence is not enabled by default. 287In order to use it, build SPDK with an extra `--with-iscsi-initiator` configure option. 288 289The following command creates an `iSCSI0` bdev from a single LUN exposed at given iSCSI URL 290with `iqn.2016-06.io.spdk:init` as the reported initiator IQN. 291 292`rpc.py bdev_iscsi_create -b iSCSI0 -i iqn.2016-06.io.spdk:init --url iscsi://127.0.0.1/iqn.2016-06.io.spdk:disk1/0` 293 294The URL is in the following format: 295`iscsi://[<username>[%<password>]@]<host>[:<port>]/<target-iqn>/<lun>` 296 297## Linux AIO bdev {#bdev_config_aio} 298 299The SPDK AIO bdev driver provides SPDK block layer access to Linux kernel block 300devices or a file on a Linux filesystem via Linux AIO. Note that O_DIRECT is 301used and thus bypasses the Linux page cache. This mode is probably as close to 302a typical kernel based target as a user space target can get without using a 303user-space driver. To create AIO bdev RPC command `bdev_aio_create` should be 304used. 305 306Example commands 307 308`rpc.py bdev_aio_create /dev/sda aio0` 309 310This command will create `aio0` device from /dev/sda. 311 312`rpc.py bdev_aio_create /tmp/file file 4096` 313 314This command will create `file` device with block size 4096 from /tmp/file. 315 316To delete an aio bdev use the bdev_aio_delete command. 317 318`rpc.py bdev_aio_delete aio0` 319 320## OCF Virtual bdev {#bdev_config_cas} 321 322OCF virtual bdev module is based on [Open CAS Framework](https://github.com/Open-CAS/ocf) - a 323high performance block storage caching meta-library. 324To enable the module, configure SPDK using `--with-ocf` flag. 325OCF bdev can be used to enable caching for any underlying bdev. 326 327Below is an example command for creating OCF bdev: 328 329`rpc.py bdev_ocf_create Cache1 wt Malloc0 Nvme0n1` 330 331This command will create new OCF bdev `Cache1` having bdev `Malloc0` as caching-device 332and `Nvme0n1` as core-device and initial cache mode `Write-Through`. 333`Malloc0` will be used as cache for `Nvme0n1`, so data written to `Cache1` will be present 334on `Nvme0n1` eventually. 335By default, OCF will be configured with cache line size equal 4KiB 336and non-volatile metadata will be disabled. 337 338To remove `Cache1`: 339 340`rpc.py bdev_ocf_delete Cache1` 341 342During removal OCF-cache will be stopped and all cached data will be written to the core device. 343 344Note that OCF has a per-device RAM requirement. More details can be found in the 345[OCF documentation](https://open-cas.github.io/guide_system_requirements.html). 346 347## Malloc bdev {#bdev_config_malloc} 348 349Malloc bdevs are ramdisks. Because of its nature they are volatile. They are created from hugepage memory given to SPDK 350application. 351 352Example command for creating malloc bdev: 353 354`rpc.py bdev_malloc_create -b Malloc0 64 512` 355 356Example command for removing malloc bdev: 357 358`rpc.py bdev_malloc_delete Malloc0` 359 360## Null {#bdev_config_null} 361 362The SPDK null bdev driver is a dummy block I/O target that discards all writes and returns undefined 363data for reads. It is useful for benchmarking the rest of the bdev I/O stack with minimal block 364device overhead and for testing configurations that can't easily be created with the Malloc bdev. 365To create Null bdev RPC command `bdev_null_create` should be used. 366 367Example command 368 369`rpc.py bdev_null_create Null0 8589934592 4096` 370 371This command will create an 8 petabyte `Null0` device with block size 4096. 372 373To delete a null bdev use the bdev_null_delete command. 374 375`rpc.py bdev_null_delete Null0` 376 377## NVMe bdev {#bdev_config_nvme} 378 379There are two ways to create block device based on NVMe device in SPDK. First 380way is to connect local PCIe drive and second one is to connect NVMe-oF device. 381In both cases user should use `bdev_nvme_attach_controller` RPC command to achieve that. 382 383Example commands 384 385`rpc.py bdev_nvme_attach_controller -b NVMe1 -t PCIe -a 0000:01:00.0` 386 387This command will create NVMe bdev of physical device in the system. 388 389`rpc.py bdev_nvme_attach_controller -b Nvme0 -t RDMA -a 192.168.100.1 -f IPv4 -s 4420 -n nqn.2016-06.io.spdk:cnode1` 390 391This command will create NVMe bdev of NVMe-oF resource. 392 393To remove an NVMe controller use the bdev_nvme_detach_controller command. 394 395`rpc.py bdev_nvme_detach_controller Nvme0` 396 397This command will remove NVMe bdev named Nvme0. 398 399### NVMe bdev character device {#bdev_config_nvme_cuse} 400 401This feature is considered as experimental. You must configure with --with-nvme-cuse 402option to enable this RPC. 403 404Example commands 405 406`rpc.py bdev_nvme_cuse_register -n Nvme3 407 408This command will register a character device under /dev/spdk associated with Nvme3 409controller. If there are namespaces created on Nvme3 controller, a namespace 410character device is also created for each namespace. 411 412For example, the first controller registered will have a character device path of 413/dev/spdk/nvmeX, where X is replaced with a unique integer to differentiate it from 414other controllers. Note that this 'nvmeX' name here has no correlation to the name 415associated with the controller in SPDK. Namespace character devices will have a path 416of /dev/spdk/nvmeXnY, where Y is the namespace ID. 417 418Cuse devices are removed from system, when NVMe controller is detached or unregistered 419with command: 420 421`rpc.py bdev_nvme_cuse_unregister -n Nvme0` 422 423## Logical volumes {#bdev_ug_logical_volumes} 424 425The Logical Volumes library is a flexible storage space management system. It allows 426creating and managing virtual block devices with variable size on top of other bdevs. 427The SPDK Logical Volume library is built on top of @ref blob. For detailed description 428please refer to @ref lvol. 429 430### Logical volume store {#bdev_ug_lvol_store} 431 432Before creating any logical volumes (lvols), an lvol store has to be created first on 433selected block device. Lvol store is lvols vessel responsible for managing underlying 434bdev space assignment to lvol bdevs and storing metadata. To create lvol store user 435should use using `bdev_lvol_create_lvstore` RPC command. 436 437Example command 438 439`rpc.py bdev_lvol_create_lvstore Malloc2 lvs -c 4096` 440 441This will create lvol store named `lvs` with cluster size 4096, build on top of 442`Malloc2` bdev. In response user will be provided with uuid which is unique lvol store 443identifier. 444 445User can get list of available lvol stores using `bdev_lvol_get_lvstores` RPC command (no 446parameters available). 447 448Example response 449~~~ 450{ 451 "uuid": "330a6ab2-f468-11e7-983e-001e67edf35d", 452 "base_bdev": "Malloc2", 453 "free_clusters": 8190, 454 "cluster_size": 8192, 455 "total_data_clusters": 8190, 456 "block_size": 4096, 457 "name": "lvs" 458} 459~~~ 460 461To delete lvol store user should use `bdev_lvol_delete_lvstore` RPC command. 462 463Example commands 464 465`rpc.py bdev_lvol_delete_lvstore -u 330a6ab2-f468-11e7-983e-001e67edf35d` 466 467`rpc.py bdev_lvol_delete_lvstore -l lvs` 468 469### Lvols {#bdev_ug_lvols} 470 471To create lvols on existing lvol store user should use `bdev_lvol_create` RPC command. 472Each created lvol will be represented by new bdev. 473 474Example commands 475 476`rpc.py bdev_lvol_create lvol1 25 -l lvs` 477 478`rpc.py bdev_lvol_create lvol2 25 -u 330a6ab2-f468-11e7-983e-001e67edf35d` 479 480## Passthru {#bdev_config_passthru} 481 482The SPDK Passthru virtual block device module serves as an example of how to write a 483virtual block device module. It implements the required functionality of a vbdev module 484and demonstrates some other basic features such as the use of per I/O context. 485 486Example commands 487 488`rpc.py bdev_passthru_create -b aio -p pt` 489 490`rpc.py bdev_passthru_delete pt` 491 492## Pmem {#bdev_config_pmem} 493 494The SPDK pmem bdev driver uses pmemblk pool as the target for block I/O operations. For 495details on Pmem memory please refer to PMDK documentation on http://pmem.io website. 496First, user needs to configure SPDK to include PMDK support: 497 498`configure --with-pmdk` 499 500To create pmemblk pool for use with SPDK user should use `bdev_pmem_create_pool` RPC command. 501 502Example command 503 504`rpc.py bdev_pmem_create_pool /path/to/pmem_pool 25 4096` 505 506To get information on created pmem pool file user can use `bdev_pmem_get_pool_info` RPC command. 507 508Example command 509 510`rpc.py bdev_pmem_get_pool_info /path/to/pmem_pool` 511 512To remove pmem pool file user can use `bdev_pmem_delete_pool` RPC command. 513 514Example command 515 516`rpc.py bdev_pmem_delete_pool /path/to/pmem_pool` 517 518To create bdev based on pmemblk pool file user should use `bdev_pmem_create` RPC 519command. 520 521Example command 522 523`rpc.py bdev_pmem_create /path/to/pmem_pool -n pmem` 524 525To remove a block device representation use the bdev_pmem_delete command. 526 527`rpc.py bdev_pmem_delete pmem` 528 529## RAID {#bdev_ug_raid} 530 531RAID virtual bdev module provides functionality to combine any SPDK bdevs into 532one RAID bdev. Currently SPDK supports only RAID 0. RAID functionality does not 533store on-disk metadata on the member disks, so user must recreate the RAID 534volume when restarting application. User may specify member disks to create RAID 535volume event if they do not exists yet - as the member disks are registered at 536a later time, the RAID module will claim them and will surface the RAID volume 537after all of the member disks are available. It is allowed to use disks of 538different sizes - the smallest disk size will be the amount of space used on 539each member disk. 540 541Example commands 542 543`rpc.py bdev_raid_create -n Raid0 -z 64 -r 0 -b "lvol0 lvol1 lvol2 lvol3"` 544 545`rpc.py bdev_raid_get_bdevs` 546 547`rpc.py bdev_raid_delete Raid0` 548 549## Split {#bdev_ug_split} 550 551The split block device module takes an underlying block device and splits it into 552several smaller equal-sized virtual block devices. This serves as an example to create 553more vbdevs on a given base bdev for user testing. 554 555Example commands 556 557To create four split bdevs with base bdev_b0 use the `bdev_split_create` command. 558Each split bdev will be one fourth the size of the base bdev. 559 560`rpc.py bdev_split_create bdev_b0 4` 561 562The `split_size_mb`(-s) parameter restricts the size of each split bdev. 563The total size of all split bdevs must not exceed the base bdev size. 564 565`rpc.py bdev_split_create bdev_b0 4 -s 128` 566 567To remove the split bdevs, use the `bdev_split_delete` command with the base bdev name. 568 569`rpc.py bdev_split_delete bdev_b0` 570 571## Uring {#bdev_ug_uring} 572 573The uring bdev module issues I/O to kernel block devices using the io_uring Linux kernel API. This module requires liburing. 574For more information on io_uring refer to kernel [IO_uring] (https://kernel.dk/io_uring.pdf) 575 576The user needs to configure SPDK to include io_uring support: 577 578`configure --with-uring` 579 580To create a uring bdev with given filename, bdev name and block size use the `bdev_uring_create` RPC. 581 582`rpc.py bdev_uring_create /path/to/device bdev_u0 512` 583 584To remove a uring bdev use the `bdev_uring_delete` RPC. 585 586`rpc.py bdev_uring_delete bdev_u0` 587 588## Virtio Block {#bdev_config_virtio_blk} 589 590The Virtio-Block driver allows creating SPDK bdevs from Virtio-Block devices. 591 592The following command creates a Virtio-Block device named `VirtioBlk0` from a vhost-user 593socket `/tmp/vhost.0` exposed directly by SPDK @ref vhost. Optional `vq-count` and 594`vq-size` params specify number of request queues and queue depth to be used. 595 596`rpc.py bdev_virtio_attach_controller --dev-type blk --trtype user --traddr /tmp/vhost.0 --vq-count 2 --vq-size 512 VirtioBlk0` 597 598The driver can be also used inside QEMU-based VMs. The following command creates a Virtio 599Block device named `VirtioBlk0` from a Virtio PCI device at address `0000:00:01.0`. 600The entire configuration will be read automatically from PCI Configuration Space. It will 601reflect all parameters passed to QEMU's vhost-user-scsi-pci device. 602 603`rpc.py bdev_virtio_attach_controller --dev-type blk --trtype pci --traddr 0000:01:00.0 VirtioBlk1` 604 605Virtio-Block devices can be removed with the following command 606 607`rpc.py bdev_virtio_detach_controller VirtioBlk0` 608 609## Virtio SCSI {#bdev_config_virtio_scsi} 610 611The Virtio-SCSI driver allows creating SPDK block devices from Virtio-SCSI LUNs. 612 613Virtio-SCSI bdevs are created the same way as Virtio-Block ones. 614 615`rpc.py bdev_virtio_attach_controller --dev-type scsi --trtype user --traddr /tmp/vhost.0 --vq-count 2 --vq-size 512 VirtioScsi0` 616 617`rpc.py bdev_virtio_attach_controller --dev-type scsi --trtype pci --traddr 0000:01:00.0 VirtioScsi0` 618 619Each Virtio-SCSI device may export up to 64 block devices named VirtioScsi0t0 ~ VirtioScsi0t63, 620one LUN (LUN0) per SCSI device. The above 2 commands will output names of all exposed bdevs. 621 622Virtio-SCSI devices can be removed with the following command 623 624`rpc.py bdev_virtio_detach_controller VirtioScsi0` 625 626Removing a Virtio-SCSI device will destroy all its bdevs. 627