| TARG(4) | Device Drivers Manual | TARG(4) |
targ — SCSI target
emulator driver
To compile this driver into the kernel, place the following line in your kernel configuration file:
device targThe targ driver provides an interface for
usermode programs to emulate SCSI target devices. A sample program that
emulates a disk drive (similar to da(4)) can be found in
/usr/share/examples/scsi_target.
The targ driver supplies the control
device /dev/targ. After opening the device, the file
descriptor must be bound to a specific bus/target/LUN and enabled to process
CCBs using the TARGIOCENABLE ioctl. The process then
uses write(2) to send CCBs to the SIM and
poll(2) or kqueue(2) to see if responses
are ready. Pointers to completed CCBs are returned via
read(2). Any data transfers requested by the user CCBs are
done via zero-copy IO.
The following ioctl(2) calls are defined in the
header file
<cam/scsi/scsi_targetio.h>.
TARGIOCENABLEstruct ioc_enable_lun {
path_id_t path_id;
target_id_t target_id;
lun_id_t lun_id;
int grp6_len;
int grp7_len;
};
The selected path (bus), target, and LUN must not already be
in use or EADDRINUSE is returned. If
grp6_len or grp7_len are
non-zero, reception of vendor-specific commands is enabled.
TARGIOCDISABLETARGIOCENABLE can then be
called to activate a different LUN. Multiple disable calls have no effect.
The close(2) system call automatically disables target
mode if enabled.TARGIOCDEBUGCAM_PERIPH
debugging if the argument is non-zero, otherwise disables it.<cam/scsi/scsi_targetio.h>/usr/share/examples/scsi_target, ahc(4), isp(4), scsi(4)
FreeBSD Target Information, http://www.root.org/~nate/freebsd/.
The targ driver first appeared in
FreeBSD 3.0 and was written by
Justin T. Gibbs. It was rewritten for
FreeBSD 5.0 by Nate Lawson
<nate@root.org>.
Currently, only the ahc(4) and isp(4) drivers fully support target mode.
The ahc(4) driver does not support tagged queuing in target mode.
| December 13, 2011 | Debian |