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ONTAP SAN Host Utilities

Configure Rocky Linux 9.6 for NVMe-oF with ONTAP storage

Contributors netapp-pcarriga

NetApp SAN host configurations support the NVMe over Fabrics (NVMe-oF) protocol with Asymmetric Namespace Access (ANA). In NVMe-oF environments, ANA is equivalent to asymmetric logical unit access (ALUA) multipathing in iSCSI and FCP environments. ANA is implemented using the in-kernel NVMe multipath feature.

About this task

You can use the following support and features with the NVMe-oF host configuration for Rocky Linux 9.6. You should also review the known limitations before starting the configuration process.

  • Support available:

    • Support for NVMe over TCP (NVMe/TCP) in addition to NVMe over Fibre Channel (NVMe/FC). The NetApp plug-in in the native nvme-cli package displays ONTAP details for both NVMe/FC and NVMe/TCP namespaces.

    • Running both NVMe and SCSI traffic on the same host. For example, you can configure dm-multipath for SCSI mpath devices on SCSI LUNs and use NVMe multipath to configure NVMe-oF namespace devices on the host.

    • Rocky Linux 9.6 enables in-kernel NVMe multipath for NVMe namespaces by default, removing the need for explicit settings.

    • Beginning with ONTAP 9.12.1, support for secure in-band authentication is introduced for NVMe/TCP. You can use secure in-band authentication for NVMe/TCP with Rocky Linux 9.6.

    For additional details on supported configurations, see the Interoperability Matrix Tool.

  • Features available:

    • There are no new features in this release.

  • Known limitations:

    • Avoid issuing the nvme disconnect-all command on systems booting from SAN over NVMe-TCP or NVMe-FC namespaces because it disconnects both root and data filesystems and might lead to system instability.

Step 1: Optionally, enable SAN booting

You can configure your host to use SAN booting to simplify deployment and improve scalability.

Before you begin

Use the Interoperability Matrix Tool to verify that your Linux OS, host bus adapter (HBA), HBA firmware, HBA boot BIOS, and ONTAP version support SAN booting.

Steps
  1. Create a SAN boot namespace and map it to the host.

  2. Enable SAN booting in the server BIOS for the ports to which the SAN boot namespace is mapped.

    For information on how to enable the HBA BIOS, see your vendor-specific documentation.

  3. Verify that the configuration was successful by rebooting the host and verifying that the OS is up and running.

Step 2: Validate software versions

Use the following procedure to validate the minimum supported Rocky Linux 9.6 software versions.

Steps
  1. Install Rocky Linux 9.6 on the server. After the installation is complete, verify that you are running the specified Rocky Linux 9.6 kernel:

    uname -r

    The following example shows a Rocky Linux kernel version:

    5.14.0-570.12.1.el9_6.x86_64
  2. Install the nvme-cli package:

    rpm -qa|grep nvme-cli

    The following example shows an nvme-cli package version:

    nvme-cli-2.11-5.el9.x86_64
  3. Install the libnvme package:

    rpm -qa|grep libnvme

    The following example shows an libnvme package version:

    libnvme-1.11.1-1.el9.x86_64
  4. On the Rocky Linux host, check the hostnqn string at /etc/nvme/hostnqn:

    cat /etc/nvme/hostnqn

    The following example shows an hostnqn version:

    nqn.2014-08.org.nvmexpress:uuid:4c4c4544-0056-5410-8048-b9c04f425633
  5. Verify that the hostnqn string matches the hostnqn string for the corresponding subsystem on the ONTAP array:

    ::> vserver nvme subsystem host show -vserver vs_coexistence_LPE36002
    Show example
    Vserver Subsystem Priority  Host NQN
    ------- --------- --------  ------------------------------------------------
    vs_coexistence_LPE36002
            nvme
                      regular   nqn.2014-08.org.nvmexpress:uuid:4c4c4544-0056-5410-8048-b9c04f425633
            nvme_1
                      regular   nqn.2014-08.org.nvmexpress:uuid:4c4c4544-0056-5410-8048-b9c04f425633
            nvme_2
                      regular   nqn.2014-08.org.nvmexpress:uuid:4c4c4544-0056-5410-8048-b9c04f425633
            nvme_3
                      regular   nqn.2014-08.org.nvmexpress:uuid:4c4c4544-0056-5410-8048-b9c04f425633
    4 entries were displayed.
    Note If the hostnqn strings do not match, use the vserver modify command to update the hostnqn string on your corresponding ONTAP array subsystem to match the hostnqn string from /etc/nvme/hostnqn on the host.

Step 3: Configure NVMe/FC

You can configure NVMe/FC with Broadcom/Emulex FC or Marvell/Qlogic FC adapters. For NVMe/FC configured with a Broadcom adapter, you can enable I/O requests of size 1MB.

Broadcom/Emulex

Configure NVMe/FC for a Broadcom/Emulex adapter.

Steps
  1. Verify that you are using the supported adapter model:

    1. Display the model names:

      cat /sys/class/scsi_host/host*/modelname

      You should see the following output:

      LPe36002-M64
      LPe36002-M64
    2. Display the model descriptions:

      cat /sys/class/scsi_host/host*/modeldesc

      You should see an output similar to the following example:

      Emulex LightPulse LPe36002-M64 2-Port 64Gb Fibre Channel Adapter
      Emulex LightPulse LPe36002-M64 2-Port 64Gb Fibre Channel Adapter
  2. Verify that you are using the recommended Broadcom lpfc firmware and inbox driver:

    1. Display the firmware version:

      cat /sys/class/scsi_host/host*/fwrev

      The following example shows firmware versions:

      14.0.539.16, sli-4:6:d
      14.0.539.16, sli-4:6:d
    2. Display the inbox driver version:

      cat /sys/module/lpfc/version

      The following example shows a driver version:

      0:14.4.0.6

    For the current list of supported adapter driver and firmware versions, see the Interoperability Matrix Tool.

  3. Verify that the expected output of lpfc_enable_fc4_type is set to 3:

    cat /sys/module/lpfc/parameters/lpfc_enable_fc4_type
  4. Verify that you can view your initiator ports:

    cat /sys/class/fc_host/host*/port_name

    The following example shows port identities:

    0x2100f4c7aa0cd7c2
    0x2100f4c7aa0cd7c3
  5. Verify that your initiator ports are online:

    cat /sys/class/fc_host/host*/port_state

    You should see the following output:

    Online
    Online
  6. Verify that the NVMe/FC initiator ports are enabled and that the target ports are visible:

    cat /sys/class/scsi_host/host*/nvme_info
    Show example
    NVME Initiator Enabled
    XRI Dist lpfc0 Total 6144 IO 5894 ELS 250
    NVME LPORT lpfc0 WWPN x100000109b954518 WWNN x200000109b954518 DID x000000 ONLINE
    
    NVME Statistics
    LS: Xmt 0000000000 Cmpl 0000000000 Abort 00000000
    LS XMIT: Err 00000000  CMPL: xb 00000000 Err 00000000
    Total FCP Cmpl 0000000000000000 Issue 0000000000000000 OutIO 0000000000000000
              abort 00000000 noxri 00000000 nondlp 00000000 qdepth 00000000 wqerr 00000000 err 00000000
    FCP CMPL: xb 00000000 Err 00000000
    
    NVME Initiator Enabled
    XRI Dist lpfc1 Total 6144 IO 5894 ELS 250
    NVME LPORT lpfc1 WWPN x100000109b954519 WWNN x200000109b954519 DID x020500 ONLINE
    
    NVME Statistics
    LS: Xmt 0000000000 Cmpl 0000000000 Abort 00000000
    LS XMIT: Err 00000000  CMPL: xb 00000000 Err 00000000
    Total FCP Cmpl 0000000000000000 Issue 0000000000000000 OutIO 0000000000000000
             abort 00000000 noxri 00000000 nondlp 00000000 qdepth 00000000 wqerr 00000000 err 00000000
    FCP CMPL: xb 00000000 Err 00000000
    
    NVME Initiator Enabled
    XRI Dist lpfc2 Total 6144 IO 5894 ELS 250
    NVME LPORT lpfc2 WWPN x100000109bf044b1 WWNN x200000109bf044b1 DID x022a00 ONLINE
    NVME RPORT       WWPN x200bd039eaa7dfc8 WWNN x2008d039eaa7dfc8 DID x021319 TARGET DISCSRVC ONLINE
    NVME RPORT       WWPN x2155d039eaa7dfc8 WWNN x2154d039eaa7dfc8 DID x02130f TARGET DISCSRVC ONLINE
    NVME RPORT       WWPN x2001d039eaa7dfc8 WWNN x2000d039eaa7dfc8 DID x021310 TARGET DISCSRVC ONLINE
    NVME RPORT       WWPN x200dd039eaa7dfc8 WWNN x2008d039eaa7dfc8 DID x020b15 TARGET DISCSRVC ONLINE
    NVME RPORT       WWPN x2156d039eaa7dfc8 WWNN x2154d039eaa7dfc8 DID x020b0d TARGET DISCSRVC ONLINE
    NVME RPORT       WWPN x2003d039eaa7dfc8 WWNN x2000d039eaa7dfc8 DID x020b10 TARGET DISCSRVC ONLINE
    
    NVME Statistics
    LS: Xmt 0000003049 Cmpl 0000003049 Abort 00000000
    LS XMIT: Err 00000000  CMPL: xb 00000000 Err 00000000
    Total FCP Cmpl 0000000018f9450b Issue 0000000018f5de57 OutIO fffffffffffc994c
              abort 000036d3 noxri 00000313 nondlp 00000c8d qdepth 00000000 wqerr 00000064 err 00000000
    FCP CMPL: xb 000036d1 Err 000fef0f
    
    NVME Initiator Enabled
    XRI Dist lpfc3 Total 6144 IO 5894 ELS 250
    NVME LPORT lpfc3 WWPN x100000109bf044b2 WWNN x200000109bf044b2 DID x021b00 ONLINE
    NVME RPORT       WWPN x2062d039eaa7dfc8 WWNN x2008d039eaa7dfc8 DID x022915 TARGET DISCSRVC ONLINE
    NVME RPORT       WWPN x2157d039eaa7dfc8 WWNN x2154d039eaa7dfc8 DID x02290f TARGET DISCSRVC ONLINE
    NVME RPORT       WWPN x2002d039eaa7dfc8 WWNN x2000d039eaa7dfc8 DID x022910 TARGET DISCSRVC ONLINE
    NVME RPORT       WWPN x2065d039eaa7dfc8 WWNN x2008d039eaa7dfc8 DID x020119 TARGET DISCSRVC ONLINE
    NVME RPORT       WWPN x2158d039eaa7dfc8 WWNN x2154d039eaa7dfc8 DID x02010d TARGET DISCSRVC ONLINE
    NVME RPORT       WWPN x2004d039eaa7dfc8 WWNN x2000d039eaa7dfc8 DID x020110 TARGET DISCSRVC ONLINE
    
    NVME Statistics
    LS: Xmt 0000002f2c Cmpl 0000002f2c Abort 00000000
    LS XMIT: Err 00000000  CMPL: xb 00000000 Err 00000000
    Total FCP Cmpl 000000001aaf3eb5 Issue 000000001aab4373 OutIO fffffffffffc04be
              abort 000035cc noxri 0000038c nondlp 000009e3 qdepth 00000000 wqerr 00000082 err 00000000
    FCP CMPL: xb 000035cc Err 000fcfc0
Marvell/QLogic

Configure NVMe/FC for a Marvell/QLogic adapter.

Steps
  1. Verify that you are running the supported adapter driver and firmware versions:

    cat /sys/class/fc_host/host*/symbolic_name

    The follow example shows driver and firmware versions:

    QLE2872 FW:v9.15.00 DVR:v10.02.09.300-k
    QLE2872 FW:v9.15.00 DVR:v10.02.09.300-k
  2. Verify that ql2xnvmeenable is set. This enables the Marvell adapter to function as an NVMe/FC initiator:

    cat /sys/module/qla2xxx/parameters/ql2xnvmeenable

    The expected ouptut is 1.

Step 4: Optionally, enable 1MB I/O

ONTAP reports an MDTS (Max Data Transfer Size) of 8 in the Identify Controller data. This means the maximum I/O request size can be up to 1MB. To issue I/O requests of size 1MB for a Broadcom NVMe/FC host, you should increase the lpfc value of the lpfc_sg_seg_cnt parameter to 256 from the default value of 64.

Note These steps don't apply to Qlogic NVMe/FC hosts.
Steps
  1. Set the lpfc_sg_seg_cnt parameter to 256:

    cat /etc/modprobe.d/lpfc.conf

    You should see an output similar to the following example:

    options lpfc lpfc_sg_seg_cnt=256
  2. Run the dracut -f command, and reboot the host.

  3. Verify that the value for lpfc_sg_seg_cnt is 256:

    cat /sys/module/lpfc/parameters/lpfc_sg_seg_cnt

Step 5: Verify NVMe boot services

With Rocky Linux 9.6, the nvmefc-boot-connections.service and nvmf-autoconnect.service boot services included in the NVMe/FC nvme-cli package are automatically enabled when the system boots.

After booting completes, verify that the nvmefc-boot-connections.service and nvmf-autoconnect.service boot services are enabled.

Steps
  1. Verify that nvmf-autoconnect.service is enabled:

    systemctl status nvmf-autoconnect.service
    Show example output
    nvmf-autoconnect.service - Connect NVMe-oF subsystems automatically during boot
         Loaded: loaded (/usr/lib/systemd/system/nvmf-autoconnect.service; enabled; preset: disabled)
         Active: inactive (dead)
    
    Jun 10 04:06:26 SR630-13-201.lab.eng.btc.netapp.in systemd[1]: Starting Connect NVMe-oF subsystems automatically during boot...
    Jun 10 04:06:26 SR630-13-201.lab.eng.btc.netapp.in systemd[1]: nvmf-autoconnect.service: Deactivated successfully.
    Jun 10 04:06:26 SR630-13-201.lab.eng.btc.netapp.in systemd[1]: Finished Connect NVMe-oF subsystems automatically during boot.
  2. Verify that nvmefc-boot-connections.service is enabled:

    systemctl status nvmefc-boot-connections.service
    Show example output
    nvmefc-boot-connections.service - Auto-connect to subsystems on FC-NVME devices found during boot
         Loaded: loaded (/usr/lib/systemd/system/nvmefc-boot-connections.service; enabled; preset: enabled)
         Active: inactive (dead) since Tue 2025-06-10 01:08:36 EDT; 2h 59min ago
       Main PID: 7090 (code=exited, status=0/SUCCESS)
            CPU: 30ms
    
    Jun 10 01:08:36 localhost systemd[1]: Starting Auto-connect to subsystems on FC-NVME devices found during boot...
    Jun 10 01:08:36 localhost systemd[1]: nvmefc-boot-connections.service: Deactivated successfully.
    Jun 10 01:08:36 localhost systemd[1]: Finished Auto-connect to subsystems on FC-NVME devices found during boot.

Step 6: Configure NVMe/TCP

The NVMe/TCP protocol doesn't support the auto-connect operation. Instead, you can discover the NVMe/TCP subsystems and namespaces by performing the NVMe/TCP connect or connect-all operations manually.

Steps
  1. Verify that the initiator port can fetch the discovery log page data across the supported NVMe/TCP LIFs:

    nvme discover -t tcp -w host-traddr -a traddr
    Show example
    nvme discover -t tcp -w 192.168.1.31 -a 192.168.1.24
    
    Discovery Log Number of Records 20, Generation counter 25
    =====Discovery Log Entry 0======
    trtype:  tcp
    adrfam:  ipv4
    subtype: current discovery subsystem
    treq:    not specified
    portid:  4
    trsvcid: 8009
    subnqn:  nqn.1992-08.com.netapp:sn.0f4ba1e74eb611ef9f50d039eab6cb6d:discovery
    traddr:  192.168.2.25
    eflags:  explicit discovery connections, duplicate discovery information
    sectype: none
    =====Discovery Log Entry 1======
    trtype:  tcp
    adrfam:  ipv4
    subtype: current discovery subsystem
    treq:    not specified
    portid:  2
    trsvcid: 8009
    subnqn:  nqn.1992-08.com.netapp:sn.0f4ba1e74eb611ef9f50d039eab6cb6d:discovery
    traddr:  192.168.1.25
    eflags:  explicit discovery connections, duplicate discovery information
    sectype: none
    =====Discovery Log Entry 2======
    trtype:  tcp
    adrfam:  ipv4
    subtype: current discovery subsystem
    treq:    not specified
    portid:  5
    trsvcid: 8009
    subnqn:  nqn.1992-08.com.netapp:sn.0f4ba1e74eb611ef9f50d039eab6cb6d:discovery
    traddr:  192.168.2.24
    eflags:  explicit discovery connections, duplicate discovery information
    sectype: none
    =====Discovery Log Entry 3======
    trtype:  tcp
    adrfam:  ipv4
    subtype: current discovery subsystem
    treq:    not specified
    portid:  1
    trsvcid: 8009
    subnqn:  nqn.1992-08.com.netapp:sn.0f4ba1e74eb611ef9f50d039eab6cb6d:discovery
    traddr:  192.168.1.24
    eflags:  explicit discovery connections, duplicate discovery information
    sectype: none
    =====Discovery Log Entry 4======
    trtype:  tcp
    adrfam:  ipv4
    subtype: nvme subsystem
    treq:    not specified
    portid:  4
    trsvcid: 4420
    subnqn:  nqn.1992-08.com.netapp:sn.0f4ba1e74eb611ef9f50d039eab6cb6d:subsystem. Unidirectional_DHCP_NONE_1_3
    traddr:  192.168.2.25
    eflags:  none
    sectype: none
    =====Discovery Log Entry 5======
    trtype:  tcp
    adrfam:  ipv4
    subtype: nvme subsystem
    treq:    not specified
    portid:  2
    trsvcid: 4420
    subnqn:  nqn.1992-08.com.netapp:sn.0f4ba1e74eb611ef9f50d039eab6cb6d:subsystem. Unidirectional_DHCP_NONE_1_4
    traddr:  192.168.1.25
    eflags:  none
    sectype: none
    =====Discovery Log Entry 6======
    trtype:  tcp
    adrfam:  ipv4
    subtype: nvme subsystem
    treq:    not specified
    portid:  5
    trsvcid: 4420
    subnqn:  nqn.1992-08.com.netapp:sn.0f4ba1e74eb611ef9f50d039eab6cb6d:subsystem. Unidirectional_DHCP_NONE_1_5
    traddr:  192.168.2.24
    eflags:  none
    sectype: none
    =====Discovery Log Entry 7======
    trtype:  tcp
    adrfam:  ipv4
    subtype: nvme subsystem
    treq:    not specified
    portid:  1
    trsvcid: 4420
    subnqn:  nqn.1992-08.com.netapp:sn.0f4ba1e74eb611ef9f50d039eab6cb6d:subsystem. Unidirectional_DHCP_2_2
    traddr:  192.168.1.24
    eflags:  none
    sectype: none
    =====Discovery Log Entry 8======
    trtype:  tcp
    adrfam:  ipv4
    subtype: nvme subsystem
    treq:    not specified
    portid:  4
    trsvcid: 4420
    subnqn:  nqn.1992-08.com.netapp:sn.0f4ba1e74eb611ef9f50d039eab6cb6d:subsystem. Unidirectional_DHCP_2_3
    traddr:  192.168.2.25
    eflags:  none
    sectype: none
    =====Discovery Log Entry 9======
    trtype:  tcp
    adrfam:  ipv4
    subtype: nvme subsystem
    treq:    not specified
    portid:  2
    trsvcid: 4420
    subnqn:  nqn.1992-08.com.netapp:sn.0f4ba1e74eb611ef9f50d039eab6cb6d:subsystem. Unidirectional_DHCP_2_5
    traddr:  192.168.1.25
    eflags:  none
    sectype: none
    =====Discovery Log Entry 10======
    trtype:  tcp
    adrfam:  ipv4
    subtype: nvme subsystem
    treq:    not specified
    portid:  5
    trsvcid: 4420
    subnqn:  nqn.1992-08.com.netapp:sn.0f4ba1e74eb611ef9f50d039eab6cb6d:subsystem. Bidirectional_DHCP_2_2
    traddr:  192.168.2.24
    eflags:  none
    sectype: none
    =====Discovery Log Entry 11======
    trtype:  tcp
    adrfam:  ipv4
    subtype: nvme subsystem
    treq:    not specified
    portid:  1
    trsvcid: 4420
    subnqn:  nqn.1992-08.com.netapp:sn.0f4ba1e74eb611ef9f50d039eab6cb6d:subsystem. Bidirectional_DHCP_2_3
    traddr:  192.168.1.24
    eflags:  none
    sectype: none
    =====Discovery Log Entry 12======
    trtype:  tcp
    adrfam:  ipv4
    subtype: nvme subsystem
    treq:    not specified
    portid:  4
    trsvcid: 4420
    subnqn:  nqn.1992-08.com.netapp:sn.0f4ba1e74eb611ef9f50d039eab6cb6d:subsystem. Bidirectional_DHCP_2_3
    traddr:  192.168.2.25
    eflags:  none
    sectype: none
    =====Discovery Log Entry 13======
    trtype:  tcp
    adrfam:  ipv4
    subtype: nvme subsystem
    treq:    not specified
    portid:  2
    trsvcid: 4420
    subnqn:  nqn.1992-08.com.netapp:sn.0f4ba1e74eb611ef9f50d039eab6cb6d:subsystem. Bidirectional_DHCP_NONE_2_4
    traddr:  192.168.1.25
    eflags:  none
    sectype: none
    =====Discovery Log Entry 14======
    trtype:  tcp
    adrfam:  ipv4
    subtype: nvme subsystem
    treq:    not specified
    portid:  5
    trsvcid: 4420
    subnqn:  nqn.1992-08.com.netapp:sn.0f4ba1e74eb611ef9f50d039eab6cb6d:subsystem. Bidirectional_DHCP_NONE_2_5
    traddr:  192.168.2.24
    eflags:  none
    sectype: none
    =====Discovery Log Entry 15======
    trtype:  tcp
    adrfam:  ipv4
    subtype: nvme subsystem
    treq:    not specified
    portid:  1
    trsvcid: 4420
    subnqn:  nqn.1992-08.com.netapp:sn.0f4ba1e74eb611ef9f50d039eab6cb6d:subsystem. Bidirectional_DHCP_NONE_2_6
    traddr:  192.168.1.24
    eflags:  none
    sectype: none
    =====Discovery Log Entry 16======
    trtype:  tcp
    adrfam:  ipv4
    subtype: nvme subsystem
    treq:    not specified
    portid:  4
    trsvcid: 4420
    subnqn:  nqn.1992-08.com.netapp:sn.0f4ba1e74eb611ef9f50d039eab6cb6d:subsystem. Bidirectional_DHCP_NONE_2_7
    traddr:  192.168.2.25
    eflags:  none
    sectype: none
    =====Discovery Log Entry 17======
    trtype:  tcp
    adrfam:  ipv4
    subtype: nvme subsystem
    treq:    not specified
    portid:  2
    trsvcid: 4420
    subnqn:  nqn.1992-08.com.netapp:sn.0f4ba1e74eb611ef9f50d039eab6cb6d:subsystem. Bidirectional_DHCP_NONE_2_8
    traddr:  192.168.1.25
    eflags:  none
    sectype: none
    =====Discovery Log Entry 18======
    trtype:  tcp
    adrfam:  ipv4
    subtype: nvme subsystem
    treq:    not specified
    portid:  5
    trsvcid: 4420
    subnqn:  nqn.1992-08.com.netapp:sn.0f4ba1e74eb611ef9f50d039eab6cb6d:subsystem.nvme_tcp_2
    traddr:  192.168.2.24
    eflags:  none
    sectype: none
    =====Discovery Log Entry 19======
    trtype:  tcp
    adrfam:  ipv4
    subtype: nvme subsystem
    treq:    not specified
    portid:  1
    trsvcid: 4420
    subnqn:  nqn.1992-08.com.netapp:sn.0f4ba1e74eb611ef9f50d039eab6cb6d:subsystem. Bidirectional_DHCP_NONE_2_9
    traddr:  192.168.1.24
    eflags:  none
    sectype: none
  2. Verify that the other NVMe/TCP initiator-target LIF combinations can successfully fetch discovery log page data:

    nvme discover -t tcp -w host-traddr -a traddr
    Show example
    nvme discover -t tcp -w 192.168.1.31 -a 192.168.1.24
    nvme discover -t tcp -w 192.168.2.31 -a 192.168.2.24
    nvme discover -t tcp -w 192.168.1.31 -a 192.168.1.25
    nvme discover -t tcp -w 192.168.2.31 -a 192.168.2.25
  3. Run the nvme connect-all command across all the supported NVMe/TCP initiator-target LIFs across the nodes:

    nvme connect-all -t tcp -w host-traddr -a traddr
    Show example
    nvme	connect-all	-t	tcp	-w	192.168.1.31	-a	192.168.1.24
    nvme	connect-all	-t	tcp	-w	192.168.2.31	-a	192.168.2.24
    nvme	connect-all	-t	tcp	-w	192.168.1.31	-a	192.168.1.25
    nvme	connect-all	-t	tcp	-w	192.168.2.31	-a	192.168.2.25
Note

Beginning with Rocky Linux 9.4, the setting for the NVMe/TCP ctrl_loss_tmo timeout is automatically set to "off". As a result:

  • There are no limits on the number of retries (indefinite retry).

  • You don't need to manually configure a specific ctrl_loss_tmo timeout duration when using the nvme connect or nvme connect-all commands (option -l ).

  • The NVMe/TCP controllers don't experience timeouts in the event of a path failure and remain connected indefinitely.

Step 7: Validate NVMe-oF

Verify that the in-kernel NVMe multipath status, ANA status, and ONTAP namespaces are correct for the NVMe-oF configuration.

Steps
  1. Verify that the in-kernel NVMe multipath is enabled:

    cat /sys/module/nvme_core/parameters/multipath

    You should see the following output:

    Y
  2. Verify that the appropriate NVMe-oF settings (such as, model set to NetApp ONTAP Controller and load balancing iopolicy set to round-robin) for the respective ONTAP namespaces correctly reflect on the host:

    1. Display the subsystems:

      cat /sys/class/nvme-subsystem/nvme-subsys*/model

      You should see the following output:

      NetApp ONTAP Controller
      NetApp ONTAP Controller
    2. Display the policy:

      cat /sys/class/nvme-subsystem/nvme-subsys*/iopolicy

      You should see the following output:

      round-robin
      round-robin
  3. Verify that the namespaces are created and correctly discovered on the host:

    nvme list
    Show example
    Node         SN                   Model
    ---------------------------------------------------------
    /dev/nvme4n1 81Ix2BVuekWcAAAAAAAB	NetApp ONTAP Controller
    
    
    Namespace Usage    Format             FW             Rev
    -----------------------------------------------------------
    1                 21.47 GB / 21.47 GB	4 KiB + 0 B   FFFFFFFF
  4. Verify that the controller state of each path is live and has the correct ANA status:

    NVMe/FC
    nvme list-subsys /dev/nvme4n5
    Show example
    nvme-subsys4 - NQN=nqn.1992-08.com.netapp:sn.3a5d31f5502c11ef9f50d039eab6cb6d:subsystem.nvme_1
                   hostnqn=nqn.2014-08.org.nvmexpress:uuid:e6dade64-216d-
    11ec-b7bb-7ed30a5482c3
    iopolicy=round-robin\
    +- nvme1 fc traddr=nn-0x2082d039eaa7dfc8:pn-0x2088d039eaa7dfc8,host_traddr=nn-0x20000024ff752e6d:pn-0x21000024ff752e6d live optimized
    +- nvme12 fc traddr=nn-0x2082d039eaa7dfc8:pn-0x208ad039eaa7dfc8,host_traddr=nn-0x20000024ff752e6d:pn-0x21000024ff752e6d live non-optimized
    +- nvme10 fc traddr=nn-0x2082d039eaa7dfc8:pn-0x2087d039eaa7dfc8,host_traddr=nn-0x20000024ff752e6c:pn-0x21000024ff752e6c live non-optimized
    +- nvme3 fc traddr=nn-0x2082d039eaa7dfc8:pn-0x2083d039eaa7dfc8,host_traddr=nn-0x20000024ff752e6c:pn-0x21000024ff752e6c live optimized
    NVMe/TCP
    nvme list-subsys /dev/nvme1n1
    Show example
    nvme-subsys5 - NQN=nqn.1992-08.com.netapp:sn.0f4ba1e74eb611ef9f50d039eab6cb6d:subsystem.nvme_tcp_3
    hostnqn=nqn.2014-08.org.nvmexpress:uuid:4c4c4544-0035-5910-804b-b5c04f444d33
    iopolicy=round-robin
    \
    +- nvme13 tcp traddr=192.168.2.25,trsvcid=4420,host_traddr=192.168.2.31,
    src_addr=192.168.2.31 live optimized
    +- nvme14 tcp traddr=192.168.2.24,trsvcid=4420,host_traddr=192.168.2.31,
    src_addr=192.168.2.31 live non-optimized
    +- nvme5 tcp traddr=192.168.1.25,trsvcid=4420,host_traddr=192.168.1.31,
    src_addr=192.168.1.31 live optimized
    +- nvme6 tcp traddr=192.168.1.24,trsvcid=4420,host_traddr=192.168.1.31,
    src_addr=192.168.1.31 live non-optimized
  5. Verify that the NetApp plug-in displays the correct values for each ONTAP namespace device:

    Column
    nvme netapp ontapdevices -o column
    Show example
    Device        Vserver   Namespace Path
    ----------------------- ------------------------------
    /dev/nvme1n1     linux_tcnvme_iscsi        /vol/tcpnvme_1_0_0/tcpnvme_ns
    
    NSID       UUID                                   Size
    ------------------------------------------------------------
    1    5f7f630d-8ea5-407f-a490-484b95b15dd6   21.47GB
    JSON
    nvme netapp ontapdevices -o json
    Show example
    {
      "ONTAPdevices":[
        {
          "Device":"/dev/nvme1n1",
          "Vserver":"linux_tcnvme_iscsi",
          "Namespace_Path":"/vol/tcpnvme_1_0_0/tcpnvme_ns",
          "NSID":1,
          "UUID":"5f7f630d-8ea5-407f-a490-484b95b15dd6",
          "Size":"21.47GB",
          "LBA_Data_Size":4096,
          "Namespace_Size":5242880
        },
    ]
    }

Step 8: Set up secure in-band authentication

Beginning with ONTAP 9.12.1, secure in-band authentication is supported over NVMe/TCP between a Rocky Linux 9.6 host and an ONTAP controller.

Each host or controller must be associated with a DH-HMAC-CHAP key to set up secure authentication. A DH-HMAC-CHAP key is a combination of the NQN of the NVMe host or controller and an authentication secret configured by the administrator. To authenticate its peer, an NVMe host or controller must recognize the key associated with the peer.

Set up secure in-band authentication using the CLI or a config JSON file. If you need to specify different dhchap keys for different subsystems, you must use a config JSON file.

CLI

Set up secure in-band authentication using the CLI.

Steps
  1. Obtain the host NQN:

    cat /etc/nvme/hostnqn
  2. Generate the dhchap key for the Rocky Linux 9.6 host.

    The following output describes the gen-dhchap-key command paramters:

    nvme gen-dhchap-key -s optional_secret -l key_length {32|48|64} -m HMAC_function {0|1|2|3} -n host_nqn
    •	-s secret key in hexadecimal characters to be used to initialize the host key
    •	-l length of the resulting key in bytes
    •	-m HMAC function to use for key transformation
    0 = none, 1- SHA-256, 2 = SHA-384, 3=SHA-512
    •	-n host NQN to use for key transformation

    In the following example, a random dhchap key with HMAC set to 3 (SHA-512) is generated.

    nvme gen-dhchap-key -m 3 -n nqn.2014-
    08.org.nvmexpress:uuid:e6dade64-216d-11ec-b7bb-7ed30a5482c3
    DHHC-1:03:wSpuuKbBHTzC0W9JZxMBsYd9JFV8Si9aDh22k2BR/4m852vH7KGlrJeMpzhmyjDWOo0PJJM6yZsTeEpGkDHMHQ255+g=:
  3. On the ONTAP controller, add the host and specify both dhchap keys:

    vserver nvme subsystem host add -vserver <svm_name> -subsystem <subsystem> -host-nqn <host_nqn> -dhchap-host-secret <authentication_host_secret> -dhchap-controller-secret <authentication_controller_secret> -dhchap-hash-function {sha-256|sha-512} -dhchap-group {none|2048-bit|3072-bit|4096-bit|6144-bit|8192-bit}
  4. A host supports two types of authentication methods, unidirectional and bidirectional. On the host, connect to the ONTAP controller and specify dhchap keys based on the chosen authentication method:

    nvme connect -t tcp -w <host-traddr> -a <tr-addr> -n <host_nqn> -S <authentication_host_secret> -C <authentication_controller_secret>
  5. Validate the nvme connect authentication command by verifying the host and controller dhchap keys:

    1. Verify the host dhchap keys:

      cat /sys/class/nvme-subsystem/<nvme-subsysX>/nvme*/dhchap_secret
      Show example output for a unidirectional configuration
      cat /sys/class/nvme-subsystem/nvme-subsys1/nvme*/dhchap_secret
      DHHC-1:01:CNxTYq73T9vJk0JpOfDBZrhDCqpWBN4XVZI5WxwPgDUieHAi:
      DHHC-1:01:CNxTYq73T9vJk0JpOfDBZrhDCqpWBN4XVZI5WxwPgDUieHAi:
      DHHC-1:01:CNxTYq73T9vJk0JpOfDBZrhDCqpWBN4XVZI5WxwPgDUieHAi:
      DHHC-1:01:CNxTYq73T9vJk0JpOfDBZrhDCqpWBN4XVZI5WxwPgDUieHAi:
    2. Verify the controller dhchap keys:

      cat /sys/class/nvme-subsystem/<nvme-subsysX>/nvme*/dhchap_ctrl_secret
      Show example output for a bidirectional configuration
      cat /sys/class/nvme-subsystem/nvme-
      subsys6/nvme*/dhchap_ctrl_secret
      DHHC-1:03:wSpuuKbBHTzC0W9JZxMBsYd9JFV8Si9aDh22k2BR/4m852vH7KGlrJeMpzhmyjDWOo0PJJM6yZsTeEpGkDHMHQ255+g=:
      DHHC-1:03:wSpuuKbBHTzC0W9JZxMBsYd9JFV8Si9aDh22k2BR/4m852vH7KGlrJeMpzhmyjDWOo0PJJM6yZsTeEpGkDHMHQ255+g=:
      DHHC-1:03:wSpuuKbBHTzC0W9JZxMBsYd9JFV8Si9aDh22k2BR/4m852vH7KGlrJeMpzhmyjDWOo0PJJM6yZsTeEpGkDHMHQ255+g=:
      DHHC-1:03:wSpuuKbBHTzC0W9JZxMBsYd9JFV8Si9aDh22k2BR/4m852vH7KGlrJeMpzhmyjDWOo0PJJM6yZsTeEpGkDHMHQ255+g=:
JSON file

When multiple NVMe subsystems are available on the ONTAP controller configuration, you can use the /etc/nvme/config.json file with the nvme connect-all command.

Use the -o option to generate the JSON file. See the NVMe connect-all manual pages for more syntax options.

Steps
  1. Configure the JSON file.

    Note In the following example, dhchap_key corresponds to dhchap_secret and dhchap_ctrl_key corresponds to dhchap_ctrl_secret.
    Show example
    cat /etc/nvme/config.json
    [
    {
      "hostnqn":"nqn.2014-08.org.nvmexpress:uuid:9796c1ec-0d34-11eb-
      b6b2-3a68dd3bab57",
      "hostid":"b033cd4fd6db4724adb48655bfb55448",
      "dhchap_key":" DHHC-1:01:CNxTYq73T9vJk0JpOfDBZrhDCqpWBN4XVZI5WxwPgDUieHAi:"
    },
    {
      "hostnqn":"nqn.2014-08.org.nvmexpress:uuid:4c4c4544-0035-5910-
      804b-b5c04f444d33",
      "subsystems":[
            {
              "nqn":"nqn.1992-
              08.com.netapp:sn.0f4ba1e74eb611ef9f50d039eab6cb6d:subsystem.bidi
              r_DHCP",
              "ports":[
                  {
                      "transport":"tcp",
                        "traddr":" 192.168.1.24 ",
                      "host_traddr":" 192.168.1.31 ",
                      "trsvcid":"4420",
                      "dhchap_ctrl_key":"DHHC-
                      1:03: wSpuuKbBHTzC0W9JZxMBsYd9JFV8Si9aDh22k2BR/4m852vH7KGlrJeMpzhmyjDWOo0PJJM6yZsTeEpGkDHMHQ255+g=:"
                  },
                  {
                      "transport":"tcp",
                      "traddr":" 192.168.1.25 ",
                      "host_traddr":" 192.168.1.31",
                      "trsvcid":"4420",
                      "dhchap_ctrl_key":"DHHC-
                      1:03: wSpuuKbBHTzC0W9JZxMBsYd9JFV8Si9aDh22k2BR/4m852vH7KGlrJeMpzhmyjDWOo0PJJM6yZsTeEpGkDHMHQ255+g=:"
                  },
                  {
                      "transport":"tcp",
                     "traddr":" 192.168.2.24 ",
                      "host_traddr":" 192.168.2.31",
                      "trsvcid":"4420",
                      "dhchap_ctrl_key":"DHHC-
                      1:03: wSpuuKbBHTzC0W9JZxMBsYd9JFV8Si9aDh22k2BR/4m852vH7KGlrJeMpzhmyjDWOo0PJJM6yZsTeEpGkDHMHQ255+g=:"
                  },
                  {
                      "transport":"tcp",
                      "traddr":" 192.168.2.25 ",
                        "host_traddr":" 192.168.2.31",
                      "trsvcid":"4420",
                      "dhchap_ctrl_key":"DHHC-
                      1:03: wSpuuKbBHTzC0W9JZxMBsYd9JFV8Si9aDh22k2BR/4m852vH7KGlrJeMpzhmyjDWOo0PJJM6yZsTeEpGkDHMHQ255+g=:"
                  }
              ]
          }
      ]
    }
    ]
  2. Connect to the ONTAP controller using the config JSON file:

    nvme connect-all -J /etc/nvme/config.json
    Show example
    already connected to hostnqn=nqn.2014-08.org.nvmexpress:uuid:4c4c4544-0035-5910-804b-b5c04f444d33,nqn=nqn.1992-08.com.netapp:sn.8dde3be2cc7c11efb777d039eab6cb6d:subsystem. bidi
    r_DHCP,transport=tcp,traddr=192.168.1.25,trsvcid=4420
    already connected to hostnqn=nqn.2014-08.org.nvmexpress:uuid:4c4c4544-0035-5910-804b-b5c04f444d33,nqn=nqn.1992-08.com.netapp:sn.8dde3be2cc7c11efb777d039eab6cb6d:subsystem. bidi
    r_DHCP,transport=tcp,traddr=192.168.2.25,trsvcid=4420
    already connected to hostnqn=nqn.2014-08.org.nvmexpress:uuid:4c4c4544-0035-5910-804b-b5c04f444d33,nqn=nqn.1992-08.com.netapp:sn.8dde3be2cc7c11efb777d039eab6cb6d:subsystem. bidi
    r_DHCP,transport=tcp,traddr=192.168.1.24,trsvcid=4420
    already connected to hostnqn=nqn.2014-08.org.nvmexpress:uuid:4c4c4544-0035-5910-804b-b5c04f444d33,nqn=nqn.1992-08.com.netapp:sn.8dde3be2cc7c11efb777d039eab6cb6d:subsystem. bidi
    r_DHCP,transport=tcp,traddr=192.168.2.24,trsvcid=4420
  3. Verify that the dhchap secrets have been enabled for the respective controllers for each subsystem:

    1. Verify the host dhchap keys:

      cat /sys/class/nvme-subsystem/nvme-subsys0/nvme0/dhchap_secret

      The following example shows a dhchap key:

      DHHC-1:01:CNxTYq73T9vJk0JpOfDBZrhDCqpWBN4XVZI5WxwPgDUieHAi:
    2. Verify the controller dhchap keys:

      cat /sys/class/nvme-subsystem/nvme-subsys0/nvme0/dhchap_ctrl_secret

      You should see an output similar to the following example:

      DHHC-1:03:wSpuuKbBHTzC0W9JZxMBsYd9JFV8Si9aDh22k2BR/4m852vH7KGlrJeMpzhmyjDWOo0PJJM6yZsTeEpGkDHMHQ255+g=:

Step 9: Review the known issues

There are no known issues.