Wiki . Report Bug · Request Feature
This is an unsupported update of the original driver source for FusionIO cards. It comes with no warranty, it may cause DATA LOSS or CORRUPTION. It is designed for "VSL3" i.e. the first few generations of cards. Newer cards would require VSL4 (see below). You cannot use VSL4 on the older cards, and vice versa.
For the iomemory-vsl4 driver please go to the iomemory-vsl4 repo.
Please refer to the Fusion-io and OEM Part Numbers Matrix.
Driver support for FusionIO cards has been lagging behind kernel releases, effectively making these cards an expensive paperweight when running a distribution like Ubuntu / Arch / Fedora / ProxMox which all supply newer kernels than supported by the original drivers.
We've abandoned the notion of releases, Generally main
should be checked out. main
is completely backwards compatible for all 5, and 6 kernels. The latest working tested kernel is 6.11.2.
Historically releases were tagged, and were be checked out by their tag. The release tags follow Linux Kernel versions. E.g. v5.12.1 (A Fine Boi) will work on all 5.x kernels that are 5.12 and lower, but is not guaranteed to work on 5.13. v4.20.2 - Grey Dawn supports most kernels that pre-date 5.0. Again this way of following kernel releases has been abandoned. Please follow main.
Tag | Codename |
---|---|
v5.12.1 | A Fine Boi |
v5.10.0 | Fatto Catto |
v5.6.0 | MEGACHONKER |
v4.20.3 | Grey Dawn |
Starting with Linux kernel 5.4.0, significant changes to the kernel were made that require additional boot time kernel flags for this driver to work. These affect AMD CPUs starting with 5.4.0, and Intel CPUs after about kernel 5.8.0.
When using grub as your boot loader, add the following to your /etc/default/grub by looking for GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT=""
and adding additional parameters inside the quotes.
For AMD systems:
amd_iommu=on iommu=pt
For Intel system:
iommu=pt
Example:
GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet iommu=pt"
When using systemd-boot
add the above options to the options
section of the .conf
file you're using as your loader. Typically the loader root will be /EFI
, /efi
, or /boot
. Which will have a loader/entries/
directory that contains your specific configuration files. Use your favourite editor. More information on systemd-boot
can be found here.
The driver is derived from the original iomemory-vsl-3.2.16.1732
, but has several fixes and gone through rigorous cleaning of redundant unused and old code. Active development is done on branches and merged back to main
(formerly master) when stable.
The modified source fixes several known bugs in the driver:
- silent IO drops
- crashes during driver unload
- SCSI queue settings
- BIO status handling
PRs and commits to main
have gone through testing with Flexible I/O Tester. Testing for page_cache errors, and generic FIO checksumming on read and write and different block sizes. Non main
branches are often in process of verification and under active development, and guaranteed not stable.
Note! For many systems, the best option is to use DKMS, using the instructions below. If you prefer to build the module directly, or to create a dpkg
or rpm
package, you can proceed with these options below.
Please make sure that the required dependencies are installed, as mentioned in this README
DKMS is recommended, but installation can also be done with packages or from source.
Dynamic Kernel Module Support automates away the requirement of having to repackage the kernel module with every kernel and headers update that takes place on the system. This mechanism also makes sure that the driver for the new kernel actually works, or if the source needs refreshing.
Try building from main
first as it works with most modern kernels:
git clone https://github.com/RemixVSL/iomemory-vsl
cd iomemory-vsl/
sudo make dkms
If you know you need to build a specific branch based on a specific recommendation, use:
git clone https://github.com/RemixVSL/iomemory-vsl
cd iomemory-vsl/
# OPTIONAL: Checkout a specific release. Usually using main branch is correct.
# DO THIS ONLY IF YOU'VE BEEN TOLD IT'S REQUIRED!
git checkout <release-tag>
sudo make dkms
git clone https://github.com/RemixVSL/iomemory-vsl
cd iomemory-vsl/
# OPTIONAL: Checkout a specific release. Usually using main branch is correct.
# DO THIS ONLY IF YOU'VE BEEN TOLD IT'S REQUIRED!
# git checkout <release-tag>
make module
sudo insmod root/usr/src/iomemory-vsl-3.2.16/iomemory-vsl.ko
git clone https://github.com/RemixVSL/iomemory-vsl
cd iomemory-vsl
# OPTIONAL: Checkout a specific release. Usually using main branch is correct.
# DO THIS ONLY IF YOU'VE BEEN TOLD IT'S REQUIRED!
# git checkout <release-tag>
make dpkg
git clone https://github.com/RemixVSL/iomemory-vsl
cd iomemory-vsl/
# OPTIONAL: Checkout a specific release. Usually using main branch is correct.
# DO THIS ONLY IF YOU'VE BEEN TOLD IT'S REQUIRED!
# git checkout <release-tag>
make rpm
The utilities to query and manage the drive(s) can be found in the vsl_downloads repo.
After installing the utilities and using fio-status -a
something as follows should be printed:
Found 1 ioMemory device in this system
Driver version: 3.2.16 build 1731
Adapter: Single Controller Adapter
Fusion-io ioDrive2 1.205TB, Product Number:F00-001-1T20-CS-0001, SN:1241D0259, FIO SN:1241D0259
ioDrive2 Adapter Controller, PN:PA004137009
External Power: NOT connected
PCIe Bus voltage: avg 12.02V
PCIe Bus current: avg 0.77A
PCIe Bus power: avg 9.21W
PCIe Power limit threshold: 24.75W
PCIe slot available power: unavailable
Connected ioMemory modules:
fct0: Product Number:F00-001-1T20-CS-0001, SN:1241D0259
fct0 Attached
ioDrive2 Adapter Controller, Product Number:F00-001-1T20-CS-0001, SN:1241D0259
ioDrive2 Adapter Controller, PN:PA004137009
SMP(AVR) Versions: App Version: 1.0.29.0, Boot Version: 0.0.8.1
Located in slot 0 Center of ioDrive2 Adapter Controller SN:1241D0259
Powerloss protection: protected
PCI:00:04.0, Slot Number:3
Vendor:1aed, Device:2001, Sub vendor:1aed, Sub device:2001
Firmware v7.1.15, rev 110356 Public
UEFI Option ROM v3.2.6, rev 1212 Enabled
1205.00 GBytes device size
Format: v500, 2353515625 sectors of 512 bytes
PCIe slot available power: unavailable
PCIe negotiated link: 4 lanes at 5.0 Gt/sec each, 2000.00 MBytes/sec total
Internal temperature: 64.47 degC, max 64.97 degC
Internal voltage: avg 1.02V, max 1.02V
Aux voltage: avg 2.49V, max 2.49V
Reserve space status: Healthy; Reserves: 100.00%, warn at 10.00%
Active media: 100.00%
Rated PBW: 17.00 PB, 99.46% remaining
Lifetime data volumes:
Physical bytes written: 92,553,058,889,120
Physical bytes read : 82,741,942,333,288
RAM usage:
Current: 389,636,800 bytes
Peak : 389,636,800 bytes
Contained VSUs:
fioa: ID:0, UUID:0f402a7e-9948-7a4f-a2d0-7b0cb4d1ecda
fioa State: Online, Type: block device
ID:0, UUID:0f402a7e-9948-7a4f-a2d0-7b0cb4d1ecda
1205.00 GBytes device size
Format: 2353515625 sectors of 512 bytes
Where dmesg
contains the actual driver version tag of the running driver
vagrant@fio:~/iomemory-vsl/root/usr/src/iomemory-vsl-3.2.16$ dmesg | grep "ioDrive driver"
[ 3.122269] <6>fioinf ioDrive driver 5.11.10-b29020f-3.2.16.1731 loading...
- Open an issue in this Github repo
- Join our Discord server at https://discord.gg/VxDvVy3EdS
The support and maintenance of this driver is made possible by the people that actively contribute or contributed to its code base or by supporting the project in other ways.
Name | Discord | |
---|---|---|
Demetrius Cassidy | @Tourman | Long nights of cleaning the codebase, setting up the Discord channel and guiding people through firmware upgrades |
Vince Fleming | Donating a 1.2TB IoDrive2 for debugging problems |
Obviously all the regulars on the Discord channel, notably @bplein, @AcquaCow and @Tear.
Oh yes and the folks that were at Fusion IO for creating this product that was way ahead of its time and delivering the integration shim sources with the driver core.
Tools and resources often used to figure out what changed, and why things are not working as they are supposed to.
Source | |
---|---|
Elixir | Making the Linux source code browsable and easy to compare changes over time |
ZOL | A source of inspiration for changes in the block layers of the linux kernel that we get to deal with |
LKML | Sometimes the first or last resort to figure out why something changed in the kernel, or where |
The Nvidia Forum | Because they are hot to trot they encounter problems before we do, so we get to ride on their coat tails.... sometimes....though often not |
Ghidra | The Ghidra project from the NSA that allows a look under the covers to figure out things inside non-sourcy libs |
Installing the fio-util, fio-common, fio-preinstall and fio-sysvinit are recommended. When moving from source 2.3.11 to source 3.2.10 the firmware HAS TO BE UPDATED to 3.2.10.20150212. For the move to 3.2.15, and 3.2.16 from 3.2.10 we've not seen any issues.
Though the newer the firmware often the better. If your card is not supported with the latest firmware drop by the Discord channel and someone might be able to help you.