-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 26
iSNS server and client for Linux
License
cleech/open-isns
Folders and files
Name | Name | Last commit message | Last commit date | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Repository files navigation
Welcome to Open-iSNS ==================== This is a partial implementation of iSNS, according to RFC4171. The implementation is still somewhat incomplete, but I'm releasing it for your reading pleasure. The distribution comprises isnsd This is the iSNS server, supporting persistent storage of registrations in a file based database. isnsadm A command line utility for querying the iSNS database, and for registering/deregistering nodes and portals isnsdd An iSNS Discovery Daemon, which is still very much work in progress. The daemon is supposed to handle all the bit banging and server communications required to register a node, its portals, and to maintain the registration. It is also supposed to use the iSNS State Change Notification framework to learn of new targets or initiators coming online, and inform local services (such as the iSCSI initiator daemon) about these changes. Thanks! ------- Many thanks to Albert Pauw for his fearless testing of snapshots, and his copious feedback! What works, after a fashion: ---------------------------- - For now, I've been focusing on getting the iSCSI part to work. There is some very basic support for FC objects, but this will be hardly useful yet. - Registration, deregistration, query, getnext You can use isnsadm to register iSCSI nodes, and portals. isnsadm also illustrates how this is supposed to be used from the client perspective. - Discovery domains are supported mostly. The administrator can create discovery domains using isnsadm, and place storage nodes in domains. Queries by clients are scoped by their discovery domains membership, so that they will be unable to see nodes not part of a shared DD. Open-iSNS currently does not allow clients to place themselves in a DD. Optionally, storage nodes that are not in any discovery domain will be placed in a "default DD" (see the DefaultDiscoveryDomain in isnsd.conf). - ESI, supported both by the server and the discovery daemon - SCN, supported by the server and the discovery daemon What is still missing --------------------- - Better documentation (esp. a HOWTO on getting started with iSNS) - DD Sets - Various bits and pieces of the protocol - FC support Building Open-iSNS ------------------ The Open-iSNS build is now based on autoconf. The distributed tarball should include a configure script and a config.h.in file generated from configure.ac. If these are missing, you can generate them by running autoconf autoheader For most people, it should be sufficient to run configure without any arguments, or at most with the option --prefix. If run without --prefix, program files, manpages etc will be installed below /usr/local. To have everything installed /usr/bin, /usr/share/man etc, run it as ./configure --prefix=/usr Dependencies: - If you want to build Open-iSNS with support for authentication, you need the OpenSSL libraries and header files installed. The configure script should pick up the presence of these libraries, and enable security support automatically. To disable this explicitly in your build, pass the --without-security option to configure. - If you want to build Open-iSNS with SLP support, you need the OpenSLP library and header file installed. The configure script should pick up the presence of this library, and enable SLP support automatically. To disable this explicitly in your build, pass the --without-slp option to configure. When configure is run, it checks for a the presence of a number of headers and libraries in your system (the results of most of these checks are currently ignored :-). Then, it creates a Makefile and a config.h include file. With these in place, you can build the binaries and libraries: make make install Then, run "make clean" to clean up your binaries, or run "make distclean" to get back to a clean pre-configuration state. Testing ------- See the README in the tests subdirectory for information on running the isnsd selftests. Getting started --------------- On the iSNS server, you need to generate a server key and install it. The simplest way is probably to use the isnssetup script included in the source package. For each client you wish to use, you should then iSNS Security ------------- This implementation of iSNS supports authentication, as descibed in RFC 4171. In order to use it, you have to create DSA keys for the server and all clients. iSNS uses conceptually the same security mechanism as SLP, and identifies principals by a "Security Parameter Index", which is essentially a string identifying a key. Open-iSNS fully supports DSA based security, and offers a flexible policy mechanism that ties an SPI to a network entity and the storage node names it is allowed to use. For an introduction to the security model used by Open-iSNS, refer to the isns_config(5) manual page. An overview on setting up the iSNS server for authentication is given in the EXAMPLES section of the isnsadm(8) manual page. Downloading Open-iSNS --------------------- Open-iSNS is available for download from: https://github.com/gonzoleeman/open-isns/archive/$(VERSION).tar.gz or, in souce form, from: git@github.com:gonzoleeman/open-isns.git You have to grab the latest tarball and compile it; fancy things such as RPMs are not available yet. ------------------------------------------------------------------ COPYRIGHT NOTICE Copyright (C) 2007 Olaf Kirch. This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2.1 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU Lesser General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public License along with this library; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA. ------------------------------------------------------------------ Author: Olaf Kirch <okir@suse.com> Current maintainer: Lee Duncan <lduncan@suse.com> 2015 ------------------------------------------------------------------ Things to do: * fully implement/require device discovery sets * implement ability to pass in flags to systemd service file for isnsd * improve automated testing (using PyUnit?) * ensure all tests pass (!!) * document testing procedure
About
iSNS server and client for Linux
Resources
License
Security policy
Stars
Watchers
Forks
Packages 0
No packages published