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nndocs:sandbox [2024/09/08 22:00] – Import IQN and NQN sections; unify network list style naptasticnndocs:sandbox [2025/05/04 02:15] (current) – [Networks] make a table. Might be fun. naptastic
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 =====Names===== =====Names=====
-===Hosts===+====Hosts====
 A hostname must be pronounced and spelled one way, unambiguously. It should be a member of a set, but not any set another host belongs to. It must be lowercase. It should be possible to type from primitive typing devices like TV remotes. A hostname must be pronounced and spelled one way, unambiguously. It should be a member of a set, but not any set another host belongs to. It must be lowercase. It should be possible to type from primitive typing devices like TV remotes.
  
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 | Days of the week | sunday | | Days of the week | sunday |
 | Medications | pepto | | Medications | pepto |
 +| Animals | duckling, shark (oops; there shouldn't be two in the same category) |
 +| Food | cherry |
  
-===IQNs=== +====IQN and NQN==== 
-We do iSCSI Qualified Names by the book, but as simply as possible. A couple of examples:+We do iSCSI and NVMe Qualified Names by the book, but as simply as possible. A couple of examples:
  
-    iqn.2014-08.rocks.narf.sadness +    iqn.2014-08.rocks.narf.southpark:duckling 
-    iqn.2004-12.com.naptastic.quirk+    nqn.2004-12.com.naptastic.quirk:68
  
-IQNs can also have :more.stuff on the end. I can't come up with a use case, since hostnames are already fully-qualified and unique.+  * 'iqn' for iSCSI or 'nqn' for NVMe-oF 
 +  * YYYY-MM is the month in which the domain was registered. 
 +  * the hostname is in backwards DNS order 
 +  * :initiator or :namespace
  
-There are still some :01 suffixes lurking around the networkFix them or don't; just don't make new ones.+From the perspective of a host, every storage bus has a numberBus 0 is the local PCI busBus 1 is for the host acting as an initiator. Higher numbers are for a host acting as a target. Connections go like this:
  
-Ideally, /etc/iscsi/initiatorname.iscsi gets the right value as part of system provisioning, and the target only ever has to use the host's correct nameThere's a strong warning about changing IninitatorName in that file; if you're changing it to the correct value (i.e., the value in the target's ACL) then it's fine.+  iqn.2004-12.com.naptastic.rocky:01 -> iqn.2014-08.rocks.narf.southpark:68
  
-===NQNs=== +Since rocky's host number is 68, any other host wishing to share storage with rocky should do so on their own target bus number 68The network is responsible to connect rocky's bus 01 with southpark's bus 68.
-NQNs: nqn.2014-08.rocks.narf.hostname is the whole thing. No :01 or any of that jazz, at least not yet.+
  
-===Interfaces===+====Interfaces====
 All hosts currently have 1 or 2 Ethernet ports on the mainboard, 0 or 1 wireless devices, 0 or 1 quad-port Ethernet cards, 0 or 1 Infiniband/VPI cards. They all get used differently, so... I'm going to name them differently. All hosts currently have 1 or 2 Ethernet ports on the mainboard, 0 or 1 wireless devices, 0 or 1 quad-port Ethernet cards, 0 or 1 Infiniband/VPI cards. They all get used differently, so... I'm going to name them differently.
  
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   * mlxX: mlx ports when they are configured for Ethernet operation   * mlxX: mlx ports when they are configured for Ethernet operation
  
-===MAC addresses===+ 
 +---- 
 +=====Numbers===== 
 + 
 +====MAC addresses====
 I'm not actually forcing MAC addresses on anything... yet. Just making a note that I'm not actually forcing MAC addresses on anything... yet. Just making a note that
   * NAP is 6e:61:70 in hexadecimal   * NAP is 6e:61:70 in hexadecimal
-  * nap is 4e:41:40 in hexadecimal+  * nap is 4e:41:50 in hexadecimal
  
 As of September 2024, neither prefix has been assigned to a vendor. As of September 2024, neither prefix has been assigned to a vendor.
  
-===IP Addresses===+=== MAC addresses for the quad-port gigabit cards === 
 +southpark en(0..3): 
 +      hardware ethernet 00:10:18:f8:02:20; 
 +      hardware ethernet 00:10:18:f8:02:22; 
 +      hardware ethernet 00:10:18:f8:02:24; 
 +      hardware ethernet 00:10:18:f8:02:26; 
 + 
 +in a drawer: 
 +      hardware ethernet 00:10:18:f8:2e:10; 
 +      hardware ethernet 00:10:18:f8:2e:12; 
 +      hardware ethernet 00:10:18:f8:2e:14; 
 +      hardware ethernet 00:10:18:f8:2e:16; 
 + 
 +====IPv6==== 
 +IPv6 local unique addresses have four parts: 
 +  - 8 bits of fixed prefix (fd) 
 +  - 40 bits of pseudorandom prefix 
 +  - 16 bits of subnet 
 +  - 64 bits of GUID 
 + 
 +My top 48 bits are going to be fd20:4e41:5020. Subnet bits should match their Infiniband subnet. Host bits come from the hardware address. 
 + 
 +====IP Addresses====
 We use 172.20.0.0/16. The second octet is always 20, until I expand to multiple sites. The third octet is the function number. The last octet is the host number. We use 172.20.0.0/16. The second octet is always 20, until I expand to multiple sites. The third octet is the function number. The last octet is the host number.
  
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     * (0x3000 isn't a valid range for IB subnets since it would result in partial membership. Setting the high bit to 1 gives 0xb000.)     * (0x3000 isn't a valid range for IB subnets since it would result in partial membership. Setting the high bit to 1 gives 0xb000.)
  
-===Networks===+====Networks===
 + 
 + 
 +^ Network ^ IPv4 Range ^ IPv6 Range ^ IB Subnet ^ VLAN ^ VXLAN IP ^ VXLAN ID ^ 
 +| green | 172.20.0/22 | fd20:4e41:5020:ffff::/64. | ffff | | 225.172.20.64 | 64 |
  
   * 0-3/22: "green": all emo* and eth* devices should get bridged to this network.   * 0-3/22: "green": all emo* and eth* devices should get bridged to this network.
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     * 1: .0-255 contains IPMI interfaces and nothing else right now     * 1: .0-255 contains IPMI interfaces and nothing else right now
     * 2: .0-255 is for unassigned DHCP hosts     * 2: .0-255 is for unassigned DHCP hosts
-    * 3: .0-254 is for VMs that are expected to only run on a specific physical host. Hosts  +    * 3: .0-254 is for VMs that are expected to only run on a specific physical host.
-      * .32-39: butler+
       * .72-79: carbon       * .72-79: carbon
       * .80-87: duckling       * .80-87: duckling
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 I am no longer able to manage the TP-link switch. It's fixed configuration. I'm not using VLANs so I don't know how it will behave with them. I am no longer able to manage the TP-link switch. It's fixed configuration. I'm not using VLANs so I don't know how it will behave with them.
  
-===Host Numbers===+====Host Numbers====
  
   * 3: sunday   * 3: sunday
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   * 13: southpark (2023)   * 13: southpark (2023)
   * 14: pepto (2026)   * 14: pepto (2026)
-  * 15..23: (mainframe expanders. If we get bigger than 16 nodes I don't mind renumbering again.)+  * 15..23: (future expansion)
   * 24..31: switches   * 24..31: switches
     * 24: butwhy b4:fb:e4:23:52:01     * 24: butwhy b4:fb:e4:23:52:01
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   * 35: xp-pe (tbh idk if this still exists)   * 35: xp-pe (tbh idk if this still exists)
   * 36: tf2   * 36: tf2
 +  * 68: rocky (VM with SR-IOV parts)
  
-=== MAC addresses for the quad-port gigabit cards === +----
-This was in shark, and is now in a drawer: +
-      hardware ethernet 00:10:18:f8:02:20; +
-      hardware ethernet 00:10:18:f8:02:22; +
-      hardware ethernet 00:10:18:f8:02:24; +
-      hardware ethernet 00:10:18:f8:02:26;+
  
-duckling en(0..3) +=====Big Idea Dumping Ground===== 
-      hardware ethernet 00:10:18:f8:2e:10; +====SoC on a PCI card==== 
-      hardware ethernet 00:10:18:f8:2e:12; +Mostly this is to enable other projectsIt needs at least these features: 
-      hardware ethernet 00:10:18:f8:2e:14; + 
-      hardware ethernet 00:10:18:f8:2e:16;+  * reasonable amount of CPU and DRAM 
 +  * PCIe 3.0 x1 or better 
 +  * Internal ports
 +    - m.2 slot 
 +    - 40-pin with GPIO, I2C, etc... 
 +    - LP-DIMM 
 +  * External ports
 +    - HDMI 
 +    - gigabit Ethernet 
 +    - (2) USB 3.1 
 + 
 +The card presents itself to its host as one or more devices. It can pass through its USB host adapter, network adapter, and m.2 slot, and act as a GPU. It supports SR-IOV. You can boot off it. With the right hardware support, it should be able to stay awake while the host powers off or reboots. 
 + 
 +====PCIe networking==== 
 +These products
 + 
 +  - Retimer cards in x4, x8, and x16 
 +  - Switch cards in x8 and x16 
 +  - Outboard switches with just ports 
 +  - Device shelves 
 +    * Switch IC 
 +    * Stand-up card slots 
 +    * OCP slot, maybe? 
 +    * PCI and ISA bridges 
 +  - USB device holder 
 +  - SATA/SAS and NVMe backplanes 
 + 
 +The paradigm is "assign devices to hosts" rather than "hosts communicating". The storage shelves don't need to have file services or even know about filesystems. They will show up as a PCI device with storage attached to whatever system they're connected. This is a "peripheral area network" and if CXL becomes part of the mix, it's "memory area network" as well. 
 + 
 +Everything except retimer cards needs an API and UI for managing things. 
 + 
 +====Better Audio Stack==== 
 +Want to: 
 +  - Connect to all ports in the system 
 +  - Dynamically resample to buffers in shared memory 
 +  - RDMA to/from other hosts 
 +    (is RDMA multicast possible? That would be so fucking sick) 
 +  - Full mixing capability 
 +  - Backend for jackd 
 + 
 +====Better DAW==== 
 +Core concept is a piece of virtual tape that's infinitely long, infinitely wide, and has an infinite number of tape heads that can all be accessed remotely. A recording session is a server you log into, send recorded audio, receive mixed audio, and update a database of what should play when and with what settings. 
 + 
 +====RDMA to a Commodore 64==== 
 +The 6502 can't drive the C64's memory anywhere near full-speed, but the ROM port has a DMA pin, so a DMA-capable cartridge can do impossibly cool things. I'd like to find a good demo playback engine that already exists, and adapt it to play back data being streamed in over a network. 
 + 
 +====Better Mixer==== 
 +FIXME
nndocs/sandbox.1725832806.txt.gz · Last modified: 2024/09/08 22:00 by naptastic