From Fedora Project Wiki

Specialized hardware is not needed!
You can use this page to run and test the scsi-target-utils functions without any special hardware, using either physical or virtual machines that share a network.

About

This page is intended to outline a series of steps need to quickly get a scsi-target-utils based iSCSI software target working.

Most of these instructions can also be found in a README provided by the scsi-target-utils package (see /usr/share/doc/scsi-target-utils-*/README.iscsi).

Installation

Start by installing the scsi-target-utils package using DNF:

# dnf install scsi-target-utils

Configuration

Firewall

Ensure, port 3260 is available for incoming connection and there is no firewall in the way between target and test machine.

  • Either stop your firewall:
    # service iptables stop
  • Or, open up tcp port 3260 for traffic using:
    # system-config-firewall
  • Or, modify your iptables configuration manually by
    1. editing /etc/sysconfig/iptables
    2. Then restarting iptables:
      # service iptables restart

For firewalld:

  • firewall-cmd --zone=FedoraServer --add-service=iscsi-target --permanent
  • firewall-cmd --reload

Backing Store

When configured, the tgtd service will present a block device to iSCSI initiators. You may use a LVM logical volume, a disk partition, a whole disk, or a file. For production use a LVM logical volume is typically used. For this document, we will create a file.

  1. First, create a 8Gib file:
    # truncate -s 8G /var/tmp/iscsi-disk1

Selinux

# semanage fcontext -a -t tgtd_var_lib_t /var/tmp/iscsi-disk1
# restorecon -Rv  /var/tmp/iscsi-disk1

Service startup

Configure the tgtd service to start on boot. Type:

# systemctl enable --now tgtd

Up and running in 3 steps

For the fastest way to present a target device with 1 logical unit to any initiator ... follow these three steps:

  1. First, create a target device
  2. Next, add a logical unit
  3. Finally, enable the target to accept initiators

That's it!

How to ...

The following sections detail common actions you might perform using the tgtadm utility with the configuration used above. All of the following steps are also detailed in the README.iscsi included in the scsi-target-utils package.

List active targets

At any time you can list the active targets by typing:

# tgtadm --lld iscsi --mode target --op show

Create a new target device

Create a target device:

# tgtadm --lld iscsi --mode target --op new --tid=1 --targetname iqn.2009-02.com.example:for.all

Add a logical unit (LUN)

You can add a logical unit to an existing target device by typing:

# tgtadm --lld iscsi --mode logicalunit --op new --tid 1 --lun 1 -b /var/tmp/iscsi-disk1
SELinux note
Note that /var/tmp/iscsi-disk1 will need to exist, and have the correct SELinux label, or else you will get an unhelpful "tgtadm: invalid request" error. (See above.)

Repeat this process while changing the -b parameter to add more logical units.

Permissions

The following sections detail various authentication and restrictions you can enabled using tgtadm.

List all user accounts

To display a list of all configured user accounts, type:

# tgtadm --lld iscsi --mode account --op show

Add IP wildcard to allow all initiators

# tgtadm --lld iscsi --mode target --op bind --tid 1 -I ALL

IP-based restrictions

If you've previously configured this target to accept ALL initiators, you'll need to remove that first.

# tgtadm --lld iscsi --mode target --op unbind --tid 1 -I ALL

Now, restrict access to a specific IP ...

# tgtadm --lld iscsi --mode target --op bind --tid 1 -I 10.10.0.24

Or, restrict access to a subnet ...

# tgtadm --lld iscsi --mode target --op bind --tid 1 -I 10.10.0.0/24

User/Password authentication (CHAP)

There are two types of CHAP configurations supported for iSCSI authentication:

Authentication Type A.K.A. Description
Initiator Authentication Forward, One-Way The initiator is authenticated by the target.
Target Authentication Reverse, Bi-directional, Mutual, Two-way The target is authenticated by the initiator. This method also requires Initiator Authentication.
  • Initiator Authentication is basic CHAP authentication. A username and password is created on the target. Each initiator logs into the target with this information.
  • Target Authentication is an authentication method in addition to Initiator Authentication. A separate "outgoing" username is created on the target. This username/password pair is used by the target to log into each initiator. Initiator Authentication must also be configured in this scenario.
CHAP Initiator Authentication
  1. First, create a user and password:
    # tgtadm --lld iscsi --mode account --op new --user ''consumer'' --password ''Longsw0rd''
  2. Next, add the users to an existing target device:
    # tgtadm --lld iscsi --mode account --op bind --tid 1 --user ''consumer''
  3. On the initiator's system, this username/password information is entered into /etc/iscsi/iscsid.conf as:
    • For discovery authentication (not supported by tgt yet): discovery.sendtargets.auth.{username,password}
    • For session authentication: node.session.auth.{username,password}
CHAP Target Authentication
  1. First, create a user and password:
    # tgtadm --lld iscsi --mode account --op new --user ''provider'' --password ''Shortsw0rd''
  2. Next, add the users to an existing target device:
    # tgtadm --lld iscsi --mode account --op bind --tid 1 --user ''provider'' --outgoing
  3. On the initiator's system, this username/password information is entered into /etc/iscsi/iscsid.conf as:
    • For discovery authentication (not supported by tgt yet): discovery.sendtargets.auth.{username_in,password_in}
    • For session authentication: node.session.auth.{username_in,password_in}