Provided by: rapiddisk_9.1.0-3ubuntu1~24.04.1_amd64 bug

NAME

       rapiddisk - An administration tool to manage the RapidDisk RAM disk devices and RapidDisk-Cache mappings.

SYNOPSIS

       rapiddisk [ -h | -v ] function [ parameters ]

DESCRIPTION

       rapiddisk is a RapidDisk module management tool to manage RapidDisk RAM disk devices. Dynamically create,
       remove,  resize  RAM  volumes  and  if  desired, map or unmap them as a cache volume to any block device.
       Access those drives locally or export those volumes across an NVMe Target network.

   Options
       -h     Invoke the help menu.

       -v     Display the version number.

   Functions
       -a     Attach RAM disk device (size in MBytes).

       -b     Backend block device absolute path (for cache mapping).

       -c     Input capacity for size or resize of RAM disk device (in MBytes).

       -d     Detach RAM disk device.

       -e     Export a RapidDisk block device as an NVMe Target.

       -f     Erase all data to a specified RapidDisk device (dangerous).

       -g     Do not print header.

       -H     The host to export / unexport the NVMe Target to / from.

       -i     Define the network interface to enable for NVMe Target exporting. Port must not already exist  and
              interface must not be already enabled.

       -j     Enable JSON formatted output.

       -L     Lock a RapidDisk block device (set to read-only).

       -l     List all attached RAM disk devices.

       -m     Map an RapidDisk device as a caching node to another block device.

       -N     List only enabled NVMe Target ports.

       -n     List RapidDisk enabled NVMe Target exports.

       -P     The port to export / unexport the NVMe Target to / from.

       -p     Define cache policy: write-through (wt), write-around (wa) or writeback (wb) (dangerous) (default:
              write-through).   Writeback  caching  is  supplied  by  the dm-writecache kernel module and is not
              intended for production use as it may result in data loss on hardware/power failure.

       -q     List all system memory and block device resources.

       -R     Revalidate size of NVMe export using existing RapidDisk device.

       -r     Dynamically grow the size of an existing RapidDisk device.

       -s     Obtain RapidDisk-Cache Mappings statistics.

       -t     Define the NVMe Target port's transfer protocol (i.e. tcp, rdma or loop).

       -U     Unlock a RapidDisk block device (set to read-write).

       -u     Unmap a RapidDisk device from another block device.

       -X     Remove the NVMe Target port (must be unused).

       -x     Unexport a RapidDisk block device from an NVMe Target. To remove export  to  host  or  port,  only
              define  the  host and / or port. Not defining a host or port will result in the block device being
              removed from the NVMe Target subsystem.

   Parameters (if applicable)
       [size] Specify desired size of attaching RAM disk device in MBytes.

       [mode] Write Through (wt) or Write Around (wa) for cache.

EXAMPLE USAGE

       rapiddisk -l

       rapiddisk -l -j

       rapiddisk -a 64

       rapiddisk -d rd2

       rapiddisk -r rd2 -c 128

       rapiddisk -m rd1 -b /dev/sdb

       rapiddisk -m rd1 -b /dev/sdb -p wt

       rapiddisk -m rd3 -b /dev/mapper/rc-wa_sdb -p wb

       rapiddisk -u rc-wt_sdb

       rapiddisk -s rc-wt_sdb

       rapiddisk -f rd2

       rapiddisk -L rd2

       rapiddisk -U rd3

       rapiddisk -i eth0 -P 1 -t tcp

       rapiddisk -i NULL -P 1 -t loop

       rapiddisk -X -P 1

       rapiddisk -e -b rd3 -P 1 -H nqn.host1

       rapiddisk -R -b rd0

       rapiddisk -x -b rd3 -P 1 -H nqn.host1

MANAGING RAPIDDISK AS AN NVME TARGET

       There are a few things that need to be known when using the NVMe Target features of the RapidDisk suite.

       1.     In order to map any RapidDisk device and export it in the NVMe Target framework, the nvmet and the
              nvmet-tcp or nvmet-rdma kernel modules must be inserted.

       2.     At least one Ethernet interface will need to  be  configured  as  a  target  port  to  export  the
              RapidDisk volume from.

              ex) rapiddisk -i eth -P 1 -t tcp

       3.     When  exporting  a  volume, a RapidDisk volume and a target port must be defined. If a host NQN is
              not defined, the administration utility will provide access to any host NQN. Note - a  target  can
              be exported across more than one target port.

              ex) rapiddisk -e -b rd3 -P 1

              If  a  host  NQN  is  defined,  access is restricted to only those host NQNs. Note - the following
              command example can be repeated multiple times to add  additional  host  NQNs  for  the  specified
              target export.

              ex) rapiddisk -e -b rd3 -P 1 -H nqn.host1

       4.     Unexporting RapidDisk volumes looks a bit different than exporting. If a host NQN is defined for a
              specified target, only that NQN will be removed from accessing the exported target.

              ex) rapiddisk -x -b rd3 -H nqn.host1

              Removing  all  allowed  host NQNs will revert access to any and all host NQNs requesting access to
              the target.

              If a target port is defined, the exported target will not be exported from the  interface  if  one
              condition is met: the target has no defined allowed host NQNs.

              ex) rapiddisk -x -b rd3 -P 1 -H nqn.host1

              ex) rapiddisk -x -b rd3 -P 1

              And  if  there  are  no  defined allowed host NQNs and the target is not being exported across any
              target ports, the entire target is removed from the subsystem.

EXIT STATUS

       rapiddisk returns a zero exit status if no error occurs during operation. A non-zero value is returned on
       error.

AUTHORS

       Original version: Petros Koutoupis (petros@petroskoutoupis.com)

SEE ALSO

       View the RapidDisk project page: http://www.rapiddisk.org

Linux                                              Oct 16 2010                                      RAPIDDISK(1)