Provided by: open-iscsi_2.1.9-3ubuntu5.2_amd64 bug

NAME

       iscsiadm - open-iscsi administration utility

SYNOPSIS

       iscsiadm  -m  discoverydb [-hV] [-d debug_level] [-P printlevel] [-I iface -t type -p ip:port [-lD] ] | [
       [-p ip:port -t type] [-o operation] [-n name] [-v value] [-lD] ]

       iscsiadm -m discovery [-hV] [-d debug_level] [-P printlevel] [-I iface] [-t type] [-p ip:port] [-l]

       iscsiadm -m node [-hV]  [-d  debug_level]  [-P  printlevel]  [-L  all,manual,automatic,onboot]  [-W]  [-U
       all,manual,automatic,onboot]  [-S] [ [-T targetname -p ip:port -I iface] [-l|-u|-R|-s] ] [ [-o operation]
       [-n name] [-v value] [-p ip:port] ]

       iscsiadm -m session [-hV] [-d debug_level] [-P printlevel] [-r sessionid|sysfsdir [-R] [-u|-s|-o new] ]

       iscsiadm -m iface [-hV] [-d debug_level] [-P printlevel] [-I ifacename | -H hostno|MAC] [ [-o  operation]
       [-n name] [-v value] ] [ -C ping [-a ip] [-b packetsize] [-c count] [-i interval] ]

       iscsiadm -m fw [-d debug_level] [-l] [-W] [-n name] [-v value]

       iscsiadm  -m  host  [-P  printlevel]  [-H  hostno|MAC] [ [-C chap [-x chap_tbl_idx] ] | [-C flashnode [-A
       portal_type] [-x flashnode_idx] ] | [-C stats] ] [ [-o operation] [-n name] [-v value] ]

       iscsiadm -k priority

DESCRIPTION

       The iscsiadm utility is a command-line tool allowing discovery and login to iSCSI  targets,  as  well  as
       access and management of the open-iscsi database.

       Open-iscsi  does  not  use  the  term  node  as  defined by the iSCSI RFC, where a node is a single iSCSI
       initiator or target. Open-iscsi uses the term node to refer to a portal on a target.

       For session mode, a session id (sid) is used. The sid of a session can be found by  running  iscsiadm  -m
       session  -P  1. The session id and sysfs path are not currently persistent and is partially determined by
       when the session is setup.

NOTES

       Many of the node and discovery operations require that the iSCSI daemon (iscsid) be running.  If  running
       on a system that uses systemd, the daemon may start up automatically, if enabled, when needed.

       Open-iscsi has two groups of files it needs to store or get access to, while running: the HOMEDIR and the
       DBROOT. The following describes them:

       Home Directory
              The home directory for open-iscsi is /etc/iscsi. This is where it keeps  it's  configuration  file
              (iscsid.conf) and it's initiator name file (initiatorname.iscsi).

       Database Root Directory
              The database root directory for open-iscsi is /etc/iscsi. This is where it keeps its flat database
              files, such as it's list of nodes (see below).

OPTIONS

       -a, --ip=ipaddr
              ipaddr can be IPv4 or IPv6.

              This option is only valid for ping submode.

       -A, --portal_type=[ipv4|ipv6]
              Specify the portal type for the new flash node entry to be created.

              This option is only valid for flashnode submode of host mode and only with new operation.

       -b, --packetsize=packetsize
              Specify the ping packetsize.

              This option is only valid for ping submode.

       -c, --count=count
              count specifies the number of ping iterations.

              This option is only valid for ping submode.

       -C, --submode=op
              Specify the submode for mode. op must be name of submode.

              Currently iscsiadm supports ping as a submode for iface. For example:

              iscsiadm -m iface -I ifacename -C ping -a ipaddr -b packetsize -c count -i interval

              For host, it supports chap, flashnode and stats as submodes. For example:

              iscsiadm -m host -H hostno -C chap -x chap_tbl_idx -o operation

              iscsiadm -m host -H hostno -C flashnode -x flashnode_idx -o operation

              iscsiadm -m host -H hostno -C stats

       -d, --debug=debug_level
              print debugging information. Valid values for debug_level are 0 to 8.

       -h, --help
              display help text and exit

       -H, --host=[hostno|MAC]
              The host argument specifies the SCSI host to use for the operation. It can be the scsi host number
              assigned to the host by the kernel's scsi layer, or the MAC address of a scsi host.

       -i, --interval=interval
              interval specifies the delay between two ping iterations.

              This option is only valid for ping submode.

       -I, --interface=[iface]
              The  interface  argument specifies the iSCSI interface to use for the operation.  iSCSI interfaces
              (iface)  are  defined  in  /etc/iscsi/ifaces.  For  hardware  iSCSI  (e.g.  qla4xxx)   the   iface
              configuration  must  have  the  hardware  address  (iface.hwaddress  = port's MAC address) and the
              driver/transport_name (iface.transport_name). The iface's name is then the filename of  the  iface
              configuration.  For  software iSCSI, the iface configuration must have either the hardware address
              (iface.hwaddress), or the network layer's interface name (iface.net_ifacename), and it  must  have
              the driver/transport_name.

              The  available drivers/iscsi_transports are tcp (software iSCSI over TCP/IP), iser (software iSCSI
              over InfiniBand), qla4xxx (Qlogic 4XXXX and 82XXX HBAs), cxgb3i and  cxgb4i  (Chelsio  T3  and  T4
              adapters), bnx2i (QLogic Netextreme II adapters), be2iscsi (Emulex 10G adapter), qedi (QLogic QEDI
              25/40/100Gb adapter), and ocs  (Emulex  One  Connect  storage).   Some  of  these  are  considered
              experimental, as they are not fully tested.

              The  hwaddress  is the MAC address or for software iSCSI it may be the special value default which
              directs the initiator to not bind the session to a specific hardware resource  and  instead  allow
              the  network  or  InfiniBand  layer  to  decide  what  to  do. There is no need to create an iface
              configuration with the default behavior. If you do not specify an iface, then the default behavior
              is used.

              As  mentioned  above there is a special iface name default. There are others which do not bind the
              session to a specific card, but instead bind the session to the transport: iser,  cxgb3i,  cxgb4i,
              and bnx2i.

              In  discovery  mode  multiple  interfaces  can  be specified by passing in multiple -I/--interface
              instances. For example:

              sh# iscsiadm -m discoverydb -t st -p ip:port -I iface0 -I iface2 --discover

              Will direct iscsiadm to setup the node db to create records which will create sessions through the
              two interfaces passed in.

              In node mode, only a single interface is supported in each call to iscsiadm.

              This option is valid for discovery, node and iface modes.

       -k, --killiscsid=[priority]
              Currently  priority  must  be  zero. This will immediately stop all iscsid operations and shutdown
              iscsid. It does not logout any sessions. Running this command is the same as doing killall iscsid.
              Neither should normally be used, because if iscsid is doing error recovery or if there is an error
              while iscsid is not running, the system may not be able to recover.   This  command  and  iscsid's
              SIGTERM handling are experimental.

       -D, --discover
              Discover  targets  using  the  discovery record with the recid matching the the discovery type and
              portal passed in. If there is no matching  record,  it  will  be  created  using  the  iscsid.conf
              discovery  settings.   This  must be passed in to discoverydb mode to instruct iscsiadm to perform
              discovery.

              This option is only valid for SendTargets discovery mode.

       -l, --login
              For node and fw modes, login to a specified record. For discovery mode, login  to  all  discovered
              targets.

              This  option  is  only  valid for discovery, node, and fw modes.  For fw mode only, name and value
              pairs can optionally be passed in, so that those values get used for the sessions created. In this
              case, no op is needed, since update is assumed.

       -L, --loginall=[all|manual|automatic|onboot]
              For node mode, login to all sessions with the node or conn startup values passed in or all running
              session, except ones marked onboot, if all is passed in.

              This option is only valid for node mode (it is valid but not functional for session mode).

       -W, ---no_wait
              In node, discovery, or fw (firmware) mode, do not wait for a response from  the  target(s).   This
              means  that success will be returned if the command is able to send the login requests, whether or
              not they succeed. In this case, it will be up to the caller to  poll  for  success  (i.e.  session
              creation).

       -m, --mode op
              specify the mode. op must be one of discovery, discoverydb, node, fw, host, iface or session.

              If  no  other  options  are  specified:  for  discovery,  discoverydb  and node mode, all of their
              respective records are displayed; for session  mode,  all  active  sessions  and  connections  are
              displayed; for fw mode, all boot firmware values are displayed; for host mode, all iSCSI hosts are
              displayed; and for iface mode, all interfaces setup in /etc/iscsi/ifaces are displayed.

       -n, --name=name
              In node mode, specify a field name in a record. In flashnode submode of host mode, specify name of
              the flash node parameter.

              For use with the update operator.

       -o, --op=op
              Specifies a database operator op. op must be one of new, delete, update, show or nonpersistent.

              For iface mode, apply and applyall are also applicable.

              For flashnode submode of host mode, login and logout are also applicable.

              This  option  is valid for all modes except fw. Delete should not be used on a running session. If
              it is iscsiadm will stop the session and then delete the record.

              An op of new creates a new database record for a given object. In node  mode,  the  recid  is  the
              target  name  and portal (IP:port). In iface mode, the recid is the iface name. In discovery mode,
              the recid is the portal and discovery type.

              In session mode, the new operation logs in a new session using the same node  database  and  iface
              information as the specified session.

              In discovery mode, if the recid and new operation is passed in, but the --discover argument is not
              passed in, then iscsiadm will only create a discovery record (it will not perform  discovery).  If
              the --discover argument is passed in with the portal and discovery type, then iscsiadm will create
              the discovery record if needed, and it will create records for portals returned by the target that
              do not yet have a node DB record.

              Setting  op  to  delete  deletes the specified recid. In discovery mode, if iscsiadm is performing
              discovery, it will delete records for portals that are no longer returned.

              Setting op to update will update the recid with name to the specified value. In discovery mode, if
              iscsiadm  is  performing  discovery the recid, name and value arguments are not needed. The update
              operation will operate on the portals returned by the target, and will  update  the  node  records
              with information from the configuration file and command line.

              The  op value of show is the default behaviour for node, discovery and iface mode. It is also used
              when there are no commands passed into session mode and a running sid is passed in.  If  name  and
              value are passed in, they are currently ignored in show mode.

              An op value of nonpersistent instructs iscsiadm to not manipulate the node DB.

              An op value of apply will cause the network settings to take effect on the specified iface.

              An op value of applyall will cause the network settings to take effect on all the ifaces whose MAC
              address or host number matches that of the specific host.

              An op value of login will log into the specified flash node entry.

              An op value of logout does the logout from the given flash node entry.

       -p, --portal=ip[:port]
              Use target portal with IP address ip and port port. If port is not passed in the default value  of
              3260 is used.

              IPv6 addresses can be specified as [ddd.ddd.ddd.ddd]:port or ddd.ddd.ddd.ddd.

              Hostnames can also be used for the ip argument.

              This option is only valid for discovery, or for node operations with the new operator.

              This  should  be  used  along with --target in node mode, to specify what the open-iscsi documents
              refer to as a node or node record. Note: open-iscsi's use of the word node,  does  not  match  the
              iSCSI RFC's iSCSI Node term.

       -P, --print=printlevel
              If  in  node mode print nodes in tree format. If in session mode print sessions in tree format. If
              in discovery mode print the nodes in tree format.

       -T, --targetname=targetname
              Use target targetname.

              This should be used along with --portal in node mode, to specify  what  the  open-iscsi  documents
              refer  to  as  a  node or node record. Note: open-iscsi's use of the word node, does not match the
              iSCSI RFC's iSCSI Node term.

       -r, --sid=sid | sysfsdir
              Use session ID sid. The session ID of a session can be found from running iscsiadm in session mode
              with the --info argument.

              Instead  of  a session ID, a sysfs path containing the session can be used.  For example using one
              of        the         following:         /sys/devices/platform/hostH/sessionS/targetH:B:I/H:B:I:L,
              /sys/devices/platform/hostH/sessionS/targetH:B:I, or /sys/devices/platform/hostH/sessionS, for the
              sysfsdir argument would result in the session with session ID S to be used.

              sid | sysfsdir is only required for session mode.

       -R, --rescan
              In session mode, if sid is also passed in, rescan the session.  If  no  sid  has  been  passed  in
              rescan all running sessions.

              In node mode, rescan a session running through the target, portal, iface tuple passed in.

       -s, --stats
              Display session statistics.  This option when used with host mode, displays host statistics.

       -S, --show
              When displaying records, do not hide masked values, such as the CHAP secret (password).

              This option is only valid for node and session mode.

       -t, --type=type
              type must be sendtargets (or abbreviated as st), isns (if enabled), or fw. See the DISCOVERY TYPES
              section.

              This option is only valid for discovery mode.

       -u, --logout
              Logout for the specified record.

              This option is only valid for node and session mode.

       -U, --logoutall=[all,manual,automatic|onboot]
              Logout of all sessions with the node or conn startup values passed in  or  all  running  sessions,
              except ones marked onboot, if all is passed in.

              This option is only valid for node mode (it is valid but not functional for session mode).

       -v, --value=value
              Specify a value for use with the update operator, or for firmware login mode.

              This option is only valid for node mode and flashnode submode of host mode.

       -V, --version
              Display version and exit.

       -x, --index=index
              Specify the index of the entity to operate on.

              This option is only valid for chap and flashnode submodes of host mode.

DISCOVERY TYPES

       iSCSI  defines  3  discovery  types:  SendTargets,  SLP,  and iSNS.  SLP is not widely supported, and not
       supported by this pacakge.  SNS supported depends on build options, but is enabled by default.

       A special discovery type called fw (for firmware) is also supported, for discovering firmware interfaces,
       and populating the interface database in the process.

       SendTargets
              A  native iSCSI protocol which allows each iSCSI target to send a list of available targets to the
              initiator.

       iSNS   iSNS (Internet Storage Name Service) records information about storage  volumes  within  a  larger
              network.  To  utilize  iSNS,  pass  the  address  and optionally the port of the iSNS server to do
              discovery to.

       fw     Firmware mode.  Several NICs and systems contain a mini iSCSI initiator  which  can  be  used  for
              boot.  To  get  the  values  used for boot the fw option can be used.  Doing fw discovery does not
              store persistent records in the node or discovery  DB,  because  the  values  are  stored  in  the
              system's or NIC's resource.

              Performing  fw  discovery  will print the portals, like with other discovery methods. To see other
              settings like CHAP values and initiator settings, like you would in node mode, run iscsiadm -m fw.

EXIT STATUS

       On success 0 is returned. On error one of the return codes below will be returned.

       Commands that operate on multiple objects (sessions, records, etc), iscsiadm/iscsistart will  return  the
       first  error  that  is  encountered.   iscsiadm/iscsistart  will  attempt to execute the operation on the
       objects it can. If no objects are found ISCSI_ERR_NO_OBJS_FOUND is returned.

       0      ISCSI_SUCCESS - command executed successfully.

       1      ISCSI_ERR - generic error code.

       2      ISCSI_ERR_SESS_NOT_FOUND - session could not be found.

       3      ISCSI_ERR_NOMEM - could not allocate resource for operation.

       4      ISCSI_ERR_TRANS - connect problem caused operation to fail.

       5      ISCSI_ERR_LOGIN - generic iSCSI login failure.

       6      ISCSI_ERR_IDBM - error accessing/managing iSCSI DB.

       7      ISCSI_ERR_INVAL - invalid argument.

       8      ISCSI_ERR_TRANS_TIMEOUT - connection timer expired while trying to connect.

       9      ISCSI_ERR_INTERNAL - generic internal iscsid/kernel failure.

       10     ISCSI_ERR_LOGOUT - iSCSI logout failed.

       11     ISCSI_ERR_PDU_TIMEOUT - iSCSI PDU timed out.

       12     ISCSI_ERR_TRANS_NOT_FOUND - iSCSI transport module not loaded in kernel or iscsid.

       13     ISCSI_ERR_ACCESS - did not have proper  OS  permissions  to  access  iscsid  or  execute  iscsiadm
              command.

       14     ISCSI_ERR_TRANS_CAPS - transport module did not support operation.

       15     ISCSI_ERR_SESS_EXISTS - session is logged in.

       16     ISCSI_ERR_INVALID_MGMT_REQ - invalid IPC MGMT request.

       17     ISCSI_ERR_ISNS_UNAVAILABLE - iSNS service is not supported.

       18     ISCSI_ERR_ISCSID_COMM_ERR - a read/write to iscsid failed.

       19     ISCSI_ERR_FATAL_LOGIN - fatal iSCSI login error.

       20     ISCSI_ERR_ISCSID_NOTCONN - could not connect to iscsid.

       21     ISCSI_ERR_NO_OBJS_FOUND - no records/targets/sessions/portals found to execute operation on.

       22     ISCSI_ERR_SYSFS_LOOKUP - could not lookup object in sysfs.

       23     ISCSI_ERR_HOST_NOT_FOUND - could not lookup host.

       24     ISCSI_ERR_LOGIN_AUTH_FAILED - login failed due to authorization failure.

       25     ISCSI_ERR_ISNS_QUERY - iSNS query failure.

       26     ISCSI_ERR_ISNS_REG_FAILED - iSNS registration/deregistration failed.

       27     ISCSI_ERR_OP_NOT_SUPP - operation not support

       28     ISCSI_ERR_BUSY - device or resource in use

       29     ISCSI_ERR_AGAIN - operation failed, but retrying later may succeed

       30     ISCSI_ERR_UNKNOWN_DISCOVERY_TYPE - unknown discovery type

       31     ISCSI_ERR_CHILD_TERMINATED - child process terminated

       32     ISCSI_ERR_SESSION_NOT_CONNECTED - session likely not connected

EXAMPLES

       Discover targets at a given IP address:

              sh# iscsiadm --mode discoverydb --type sendtargets --portal 192.168.1.10 --discover

       Login, must use a node record id found by the discovery:

              sh# iscsiadm --mode node --targetname iqn.2001-05.com.doe:test --portal 192.168.1.1:3260 --login

       Logout:

              sh# iscsiadm --mode node --targetname iqn.2001-05.com.doe:test --portal 192.168.1.1:3260 --logout

       List node records:

              sh# iscsiadm --mode node

       Display all data for a given node record:

              sh# iscsiadm --mode node --targetname iqn.2001-05.com.doe:test --portal 192.168.1.1:3260

       List all sessions:

              sh# iscsiadm --mode session

       List all sessions in tree format:

              sh# iscsiadm --mode session  --print

FILES

       /etc/iscsi/iscsid.conf
              The configuration file read by iscsid and iscsiadm on startup.

       /etc/iscsi/initiatorname.iscsi
              The  file  containing  the  iSCSI  InitiatorName and InitiatorAlias read by iscsid and iscsiadm on
              startup.

       /etc/iscsi/nodes/
              This directory contains the nodes with their targets.

       /etc/iscsi/send_targets
              This directory contains the portals.

SEE ALSO

       iscsid(8)

AUTHORS

       Open-iSCSI project <http://www.open-iscsi.com/>
       Alex Aizman <itn780@yahoo.com>
       Dmitry Yusupov <dmitry_yus@yahoo.com>

                                                    Mar 2022                                         ISCSIADM(8)