Difference between revisions of "Fedora Arm Secondary Architecture/Storage performance"
Chris Tyler (talk | contribs) (→Initiator config) |
Chris Tyler (talk | contribs) (→Initiator config) |
||
Line 19: | Line 19: | ||
# Unmount the filesystem, stop the array, log out of the iSCSI disk (iscsiadm -m node -u). | # Unmount the filesystem, stop the array, log out of the iSCSI disk (iscsiadm -m node -u). | ||
# Verify that the filesystem can be locally read on the machine hosting the target. | # Verify that the filesystem can be locally read on the machine hosting the target. | ||
+ | |||
+ | == PATA/USB Config == | ||
+ | |||
+ | * PATA drive connected via USB | ||
+ | * Device is /dev/sda1 if no other storage is connected | ||
== Target Config == | == Target Config == |
Revision as of 17:14, 24 March 2010
iSCSI
Initiator config
Host is OpenRD
- Install the iscsi-initiator-utils package.
- Placed "InitiatorName=iqn.2000-10.ca.on.senecac.hongkong" in /etc/iscsi/initiatorname.iscsi
- Start the iscsi and iscsid services.
- Discover the remote targets: iscsiadm -m discovery -t sendtargets -p hongkong:3260
- List the targets: iscsiadm -m node -- the remote target(s) should be shown.
- Login to the targets: iscsiadm -m node -l
- You will now have an additional scsi disk device. Use this as one element of a RAID-1 array, using local storage (an LV or a looped-back file) as the other element.
- Mount the new RAID-1 array and create a filesystem on it. Place some files there.
- Unmount the filesystem, stop the array, log out of the iSCSI disk (iscsiadm -m node -u).
- Verify that the filesystem can be locally read on the machine hosting the target.
PATA/USB Config
- PATA drive connected via USB
- Device is /dev/sda1 if no other storage is connected
Target Config
- Host is HongKong
- IQN is "InitiatorName=iqn.2000-10.ca.on.senecac.hongkong"
- Target is "target0" which is connected to the LV HongKong/arm1iscsi, size 2GB