Changes in this release:
* Added two new manual pages, atf-c++-api and atf-sh-api, describing the
C++ and POSIX shell interfaces used to write test programs.
* Added a pkg-config file, useful to get the flags to build against the
C++ library or to easily detect the presence of ATF.
* Added a way for test cases to require a specific architecture and/or
machine type through the new 'require.arch' and 'require.machine'
meta-data properties, respectively.
* Added the 'timeout' property to test cases, useful to set an upper-bound
limit for the test's run time and thus prevent global test program stalls
due to the test case's misbehavior.
* Added the atf-exec(1) internal utility, used to execute a command after
changing the process group it belongs to.
* Added the atf-killpg(1) internal utility, used to kill process groups.
* Multiple portability fixes. Of special interest, full support for SunOS
(Solaris Express Developer Edition 2007/09) using the Sun Studio 12 C++
compiler.
* Fixed a serious bug that prevented atf-run(1) from working at all under
Fedora 8 x86_64. Due to the nature of the bug, other platforms were
likely affected too.
the interoperation between the NetBSD iSCSI target and the Linux
open-iscsi initiator.
Add details about inter-operation with the NetBSD iSCSI initiator.
Add dates to all entries.
Add last updated date to the COMPATIBILITY file.
of the physical size of the regular file. This is useful for presenting
ISO images to initiators, as in the following:
In /etc/iscsi/targets:
# present an ISO image
extent2 /usr/sets/20071214/release/iso/i386cd.iso 0 size
target2 ro extent2 any
% priv /etc/rc.d/iscsi_target restart
Stopping iscsi_target.
Starting iscsi_target.
Reading configuration from `/etc/iscsi/targets'
target0:rw:any
extent0:/tmp/iscsi-target0:0:104857600
target1:rw:any
extent1:/tmp/iscsi-target1:0:52428800
target2:ro:any
extent2:/usr/sets/20071214/release/iso/i386cd.iso:0:354906112
DISK: 1 logical unit (204800 blocks, 512 bytes/block), type iscsi fs
DISK: LUN 0: 100 MB disk storage for "target0"
DISK: 1 logical unit (102400 blocks, 512 bytes/block), type iscsi fs
DISK: LUN 0: 50 MB disk storage for "target1"
DISK: 1 logical unit (693176 blocks, 512 bytes/block), type iscsi fs
DISK: LUN 0: 338 MB readonly disk storage for "target2"
TARGET: TargetName is iqn.1994-04.org.netbsd.iscsi-target
%
Please note that the NetBSD initiator can mount (via vnd) an iSCSI target
presented in this manner. The Microsoft iSCSI initiator sees the read-only
target as a normal SCSI disk, and fails (not surprisingly) to initialize
the disk. It's now possible to make ISO images available via iSCSI, and
NetBSD will DTRT.
In read-only targets, don't attempt to seek to the last block and rewrite
it, it may not work.
Don't assign 8 MB of unused space for use in each iSCSI disk - just use
1MB, which will be enough for the scatter gather iovecs.
Get rid of some dead code.
originally from Poul-Henning Kamp, as found in pkgsrc/pkgtools/digest.
This should address some of the MD5 problems that are being seen on
some hosts at login time.
Re-run autoconf, autoheader and configure.
Name) in the targets configuration file.
Now an entry of the form:
target0=iqn.binky rw extent0 any
will mean that target0 gets presented with the iqn of "iqn.binky".
This can be useful for shorter aliases for IQNs. With thanks to Peter
Eisch for the idea.
Note that the target's base IQN can still be set with the -t parameter
to iscsi-target.
particular, initialize the target name properly in g_target, and add
functions for setting the target name and retrieving a list of
available targets.
Thanks to agc for catching this.
When determining what to put in to param->negotiated, it is *NOT*
sufficient to just pick one of offer_tx or offer_rx -- we may need to
use answer_rx or answer_tx as the negotiated parameter. Failure to
pay attention to which case we are handling means we will occasionally
get "old parameter values" stuffed into responses, resulting in
obscure behavior (such as getting luns mixed up after a normal
connection is made) that is very difficult to replicate.
macro which was never changed. This is the QAD fix, longer term we will
move to use native md5 routines if available.
Should go some way to fixing authentication problems when using an
initiator and target of different endianness.
Revert Max LBA calculation when returning the Maximum LBA from the target
to the iinitiator, following an email conversation with Jonathan Kollasch,
who points out a number of things:
+ the NetBSD scsipi driver reads the value returned by the drive and adds
one to it, so that standard SCSI drives return the 0-based Max LBA in a
READ CAPACITY command.
+ it is up to the initiator to add 1 to the Max LBA to find out the size
of the LUN (Jonathan verified this by using the UNH iSCSI initiator on
to a NetBSD target)
+ an analogous change to the NetBSD initiator (revision 1.4 of
iscsifs.c) is needed.