| # |
| # Copyright (C) 2017 NXP Semiconductors |
| # Copyright (C) 2017 Bin Meng <bmeng.cn@gmail.com> |
| # |
| # SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0+ |
| # |
| |
| What is NVMe |
| ============ |
| |
| NVM Express (NVMe) is a register level interface that allows host software to |
| communicate with a non-volatile memory subsystem. This interface is optimized |
| for enterprise and client solid state drives, typically attached to the PCI |
| express interface. It is a scalable host controller interface designed to |
| address the needs of enterprise and client systems that utilize PCI express |
| based solid state drives (SSD). The interface provides optimized command |
| submission and completion paths. It includes support for parallel operation by |
| supporting up to 64K I/O queues with up to 64K commands per I/O queue. |
| |
| The device is comprised of some number of controllers, where each controller |
| is comprised of some number of namespaces, where each namespace is comprised |
| of some number of logical blocks. A namespace is a quantity of non-volatile |
| memory that is formatted into logical blocks. An NVMe namespace is equivalent |
| to a SCSI LUN. Each namespace is operated as an independent "device". |
| |
| How it works |
| ------------ |
| There is an NVMe uclass driver (driver name "nvme"), an NVMe host controller |
| driver (driver name "nvme") and an NVMe namespace block driver (driver name |
| "nvme-blk"). The host controller driver is supposed to probe the hardware and |
| do necessary initialization to put the controller into a ready state at which |
| it is able to scan all available namespaces attached to it. Scanning namespace |
| is triggered by the NVMe uclass driver and the actual work is done in the NVMe |
| namespace block driver. |
| |
| Status |
| ------ |
| It only support basic block read/write functions in the NVMe driver. |
| |
| Config options |
| -------------- |
| CONFIG_NVME Enable NVMe device support |
| CONFIG_CMD_NVME Enable basic NVMe commands |
| |
| Usage in U-Boot |
| --------------- |
| To use an NVMe hard disk from U-Boot shell, a 'nvme scan' command needs to |
| be executed for all NVMe hard disks attached to the NVMe controller to be |
| identified. |
| |
| To list all of the NVMe hard disks, try: |
| |
| => nvme info |
| Device 0: Vendor: 0x8086 Rev: 8DV10131 Prod: CVFT535600LS400BGN |
| Type: Hard Disk |
| Capacity: 381554.0 MB = 372.6 GB (781422768 x 512) |
| |
| and print out detailed information for controller and namespaces via: |
| |
| => nvme detail |
| |
| Raw block read/write to can be done via the 'nvme read/write' commands: |
| |
| => nvme read a0000000 0 11000 |
| |
| => tftp 80000000 /tftpboot/kernel.itb |
| => nvme write 80000000 0 11000 |
| |
| Of course, file system command can be used on the NVMe hard disk as well: |
| |
| => fatls nvme 0:1 |
| 32376967 kernel.itb |
| 22929408 100m |
| |
| 2 file(s), 0 dir(s) |
| |
| => fatload nvme 0:1 a0000000 /kernel.itb |
| => bootm a0000000 |
| |
| Testing NVMe with QEMU x86 |
| -------------------------- |
| QEMU supports NVMe emulation and we can test NVMe driver with QEMU x86 running |
| U-Boot. Please see README.x86 for how to build u-boot.rom image for QEMU x86. |
| |
| Example command line to call QEMU x86 below with emulated NVMe device: |
| $ ./qemu-system-i386 -drive file=nvme.img,if=none,id=drv0 -device nvme,drive=drv0,serial=QEMUNVME0001 -bios u-boot.rom |