
Chapter X. iSCSI PDU Offload Target
Chelsio Unified Wire for Linux
162
using Chelsio iscsi initiator
driver.
iscsi_target_vendor_id
a string of
maximum of
8 characters
“CHISCSI”
No
The target vendor ID part of the
device identification sent by an
iSCSI target in response of
SCSI Inquiry command.
iscsi_login_complete_tim
e
0 to 3600
300
No
Time allowed (in seconds) for
the initiator to complete the
login phase. Otherwise, the
connection will be closed
NOTE: value zero means this
check is NOT performed.
iSCSI Entity Settings
Description
iSCSI Entity Parameters pass iSCSI protocol control information to the Chelsio iSCSI module.
This information is unique for each entity block. The parameters follow the IETF iSCSI standard
RFC 3720 in both definition and syntax. The descriptions below are mostly from this RFC.
Table of iSCSI Entity Settings
Key
Valid
Values
Default
Value
Multiple
Values
Description
MaxConnections
1 to 65535
1
No
Initiator and target negotiate the
maximum number of connections
requested/acceptable.
InitialR2T
“Yes”
“No”
“Yes”
No
To turn on or off the default use of R2T
for unidirectional and the output part of
bidirectional commands.
ImmediateData
“Yes”
“No”
“Yes”
No
To turn on or off the immediate data.
FirstBurstLength
512 to
16777215
(2
24
- 1)
65536
No
The maximum negotiated SCSI data
in bytes of unsolicited data that an
iSCSI initiator may send to a target
during the execution of a single SCSI
command.
MaxBurstLength
512 to
16777215
(2
24
- 1)
262144
No
The maximum negotiated SCSI data
in bytes, of a Data-In or a solicited
Data-Out iSCSI sequence between
the initiator and target.
DefaultTime2Wait
0 to 3600
2
No
The minimum time, in seconds, to wait
before attempting an explicit / implicit
logout or connection reset between
initiator and target.
DefaultTime2Retain
0 to 3600
20
No
The maximum time, in seconds, after
an initial wait.
MaxOutstandingR2T
1 to 65535
1
No
The maximum number of outstanding
R2Ts per task.
Summary of Contents for Terminator 6
Page 1: ...Chelsio Unified Wire for Linux i...
Page 15: ...Chapter I Chelsio Unified Wire Chelsio Unified Wire for Linux 15 I Chelsio Unified Wire...
Page 51: ...Chapter II Network NIC TOE Chelsio Unified Wire for Linux 51 II Network NIC TOE...
Page 82: ...Chapter IV iWARP RDMA Chelsio Unified Wire for Linux 82 IV iWARP RDMA...
Page 99: ...Chapter V iSER Chelsio Unified Wire for Linux 99 V iSER...
Page 107: ...Chapter VI WD UDP Chelsio Unified Wire for Linux 107 VI WD UDP...
Page 119: ...Chapter VII WD TOE Chelsio Unified Wire for Linux 119 VII WD TOE...
Page 125: ...Chapter VIII NVMe oF Chelsio Unified Wire for Linux 125 VIII NVMe oF...
Page 198: ...Chapter XII Crypto Offload Chelsio Unified Wire for Linux 198 XII Crypto Offload...
Page 230: ...Chapter XIV FCoE Full Offload Initiator Chelsio Unified Wire for Linux 230...
Page 235: ...Chapter XV Offload Bonding Chelsio Unified Wire for Linux 235 XV Offload Bonding...
Page 258: ...Chapter XVIII Offload IPv6 Chelsio Unified Wire for Linux 258 XVIII Offload IPv6...
Page 311: ...Chapter XXII Ring Backbone Chelsio Unified Wire for Linux 311 XXII Ring Backbone...
Page 317: ...Chapter XXIII Traffic Management Chelsio Unified Wire for Linux 317 XXIII Traffic Management...
Page 329: ...Chapter XXIV DPDK Driver Chelsio Unified Wire for Linux 329 XXIV DPDK Driver...
Page 347: ...Chapter XXV Unified Boot Chelsio Unified Wire for Linux 347 XXV Unified Boot...
Page 357: ...Chapter XXV Unified Boot Chelsio Unified Wire for Linux 357 iv Boot to EFI Shell...
Page 427: ...Chapter XXVI Appendix A Chelsio Unified Wire for Linux 427 XXVI Appendix A...