xref: /openbmc/qemu/docs/devel/zoned-storage.rst (revision 0cc14182)
1=============
2zoned-storage
3=============
4
5Zoned Block Devices (ZBDs) divide the LBA space into block regions called zones
6that are larger than the LBA size. They can only allow sequential writes, which
7can reduce write amplification in SSDs, and potentially lead to higher
8throughput and increased capacity. More details about ZBDs can be found at:
9
10https://zonedstorage.io/docs/introduction/zoned-storage
11
121. Block layer APIs for zoned storage
13-------------------------------------
14QEMU block layer supports three zoned storage models:
15- BLK_Z_HM: The host-managed zoned model only allows sequential writes access
16to zones. It supports ZBD-specific I/O commands that can be used by a host to
17manage the zones of a device.
18- BLK_Z_HA: The host-aware zoned model allows random write operations in
19zones, making it backward compatible with regular block devices.
20- BLK_Z_NONE: The non-zoned model has no zones support. It includes both
21regular and drive-managed ZBD devices. ZBD-specific I/O commands are not
22supported.
23
24The block device information resides inside BlockDriverState. QEMU uses
25BlockLimits struct(BlockDriverState::bl) that is continuously accessed by the
26block layer while processing I/O requests. A BlockBackend has a root pointer to
27a BlockDriverState graph(for example, raw format on top of file-posix). The
28zoned storage information can be propagated from the leaf BlockDriverState all
29the way up to the BlockBackend. If the zoned storage model in file-posix is
30set to BLK_Z_HM, then block drivers will declare support for zoned host device.
31
32The block layer APIs support commands needed for zoned storage devices,
33including report zones, four zone operations, and zone append.
34
352. Emulating zoned storage controllers
36--------------------------------------
37When the BlockBackend's BlockLimits model reports a zoned storage device, users
38like the virtio-blk emulation or the qemu-io-cmds.c utility can use block layer
39APIs for zoned storage emulation or testing.
40
41For example, to test zone_report on a null_blk device using qemu-io is::
42
43  $ path/to/qemu-io --image-opts -n driver=host_device,filename=/dev/nullb0 -c "zrp offset nr_zones"
44
45To expose the host's zoned block device through virtio-blk, the command line
46can be (includes the -device parameter)::
47
48  -blockdev node-name=drive0,driver=host_device,filename=/dev/nullb0,cache.direct=on \
49  -device virtio-blk-pci,drive=drive0
50
51Or only use the -drive parameter::
52
53  -driver driver=host_device,file=/dev/nullb0,if=virtio,cache.direct=on
54
55Additionally, QEMU has several ways of supporting zoned storage, including:
56(1) Using virtio-scsi: --device scsi-block allows for the passing through of
57SCSI ZBC devices, enabling the attachment of ZBC or ZAC HDDs to QEMU.
58(2) PCI device pass-through: While NVMe ZNS emulation is available for testing
59purposes, it cannot yet pass through a zoned device from the host. To pass on
60the NVMe ZNS device to the guest, use VFIO PCI pass the entire NVMe PCI adapter
61through to the guest. Likewise, an HDD HBA can be passed on to QEMU all HDDs
62attached to the HBA.
63