NAME
ctld
—
CAM Target Layer / iSCSI target
daemon
SYNOPSIS
ctld |
[-d ] [-f
config-file] [-u ] |
DESCRIPTION
Thectld
daemon is responsible for managing the CAM
Target Layer configuration, accepting incoming iSCSI connections, performing
authentication and passing connections to the kernel part of the native iSCSI
target.
Upon startup, the ctld
daemon parses the
configuration file. If it encounters any errors,
ctld
exits. It then compares the configuration with
the kernel list of LUNs managed by previously running
ctld
instances, removes LUNs no longer existing in
the configuration file, and creates new LUNs as necessary. After that it
listens for the incoming iSCSI connections, performs authentication, and, if
successful, passes the connections to the kernel part of CTL iSCSI target,
cfiscsi(4), which handles it from that point.
When it receives a SIGHUP signal, the ctld
reloads its configuration and applies the changes to the kernel. Changes are
applied in a way that avoids unnecessary disruptions; for example removing
one LUN does not affect other LUNs.
When exiting gracefully, the ctld
daemon
removes LUNs it managed and forcibly disconnects all the clients. Otherwise
- for example, when killed with SIGKILL - LUNs stay configured and clients
remain connected.
To perform administrative actions that apply to already connected sessions, such as forcing termination, use ctladm(8).
The following options are available:
-f
config-file- Specifies the name of the configuration file. The default is /etc/ctl.conf.
-d
- Debug mode. The daemon sends verbose debug output to standard error, and does not put itself in the background. The daemon will also not fork and will exit after processing one connection. This option is only intended for debugging the target.
-u
- Use UCL configuration file format instead of the traditional non-UCL format.
FILES
- /etc/ctl.conf
- The configuration file for
ctld
. The file format and configuration options are described in ctl.conf(5). - /var/run/ctld.pid
- The default location of the
ctld
PID file.
EXIT STATUS
The ctld
utility exits 0 on success, and
>0 if an error occurs.
SEE ALSO
HISTORY
The ctld
command appeared in
FreeBSD 10.0.
AUTHORS
The ctld
was developed by
Edward Tomasz Napierala
<trasz@FreeBSD.org>
under sponsorship from the FreeBSD Foundation.