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/freebsd/usr.sbin/iscsid/
H A Discsid.h97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
H A Dlogin.c97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
H A Discsid.c97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
/freebsd/sys/dev/iscsi/
H A Discsi.h97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
H A Discsi_ioctl.h97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
H A Dicl.h97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
H A Dicl.c97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
H A Dicl_soft.c97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
H A Discsi.c97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
/freebsd/sys/dev/iser/
H A Dicl_iser.c97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
/freebsd/usr.bin/iscsictl/
H A Discsictl.c97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
/freebsd/sys/cam/ctl/
H A Dctl_frontend_iscsi.h97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
H A Dctl_ioctl.h97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
H A Dctl_frontend_iscsi.c97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
/freebsd/usr.sbin/ctld/
H A Dlogin.c97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
H A Dctld.h97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
H A Dkernel.c97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
H A Dctld.c97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
/freebsd/usr.sbin/ctladm/
H A Dctladm.c97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279

/freebsd/sys/dev/cxgbe/cxgbei/
H A Dicl_cxgbei.c97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279
97b84d34 Thu Aug 25 05:22:53 GMT 2016 Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> Make the iSCSI parameter negotiation more flexible.

Decouple the send and receive limits on the amount of data in a single
iSCSI PDU. MaxRecvDataSegmentLength is declarative, not negotiated, and
is direction-specific so there is no reason for both ends to limit
themselves to the same min(initiator, target) value in both directions.

Allow iSCSI drivers to report their send, receive, first burst, and max
burst limits explicitly instead of using hardcoded values or trying to
derive all of them from the receive limit (which was the only limit
reported by the drivers prior to this change).

Display the send and receive limits separately in the userspace iSCSI
utilities.

Reviewed by: jpaetzel@ (earlier version), trasz@
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7279