tcmu 1.5.4-2 source package in Ubuntu

Changelog

tcmu (1.5.4-2) unstable; urgency=medium

  * QA upload.
  * fix lintian warning about odd systemd service location
  * Bump standards version

 -- Neil Williams <email address hidden>  Fri, 24 Sep 2021 14:08:43 +0100

Upload details

Uploaded by:
Debian QA Group
Uploaded to:
Sid
Original maintainer:
Debian QA Group
Architectures:
any
Section:
misc
Urgency:
Medium Urgency

See full publishing history Publishing

Series Pocket Published Component Section
Jammy release universe misc

Downloads

File Size SHA-256 Checksum
tcmu_1.5.4-2.dsc 1.9 KiB de7549f3a3cb97b6cd3bb31c0de913aac29b04bc8f87a41070cd1fe59cd2b670
tcmu_1.5.4.orig.tar.xz 127.3 KiB 9dd159ce9692550731728b30b788ecf7adaa3cfdcd74f868e1caaa6e723ba5d7
tcmu_1.5.4-2.debian.tar.xz 5.8 KiB 7efd30c75756aee433aa204d3b359e37a8d9bafd9ccd72e4dfebb9dfbeab7166

Available diffs

No changes file available.

Binary packages built by this source

libtcmu2: Library that handles the userspace side of the LIO TCM-User backstore

 LIO is the SCSI target in the Linux kernel. It is entirely kernel
 code, and allows exported SCSI logical units (LUNs) to be backed by
 regular files or block devices. But, if one want to get fancier with
 the capabilities of the device one is emulating, the kernel is not
 necessarily the right place. While there are userspace libraries for
 compression, encryption, and clustered storage solutions like Ceph or
 Gluster, these are not accessible from the kernel.
 .
 The TCMU userspace-passthrough backstore allows a userspace process
 to handle requests to a LUN. But since the kernel-user interface that
 TCMU provides must be fast and flexible, it is complex enough that
 one would like to avoid each userspace handler having to write boilerplate
 code.
 .
 tcmu-runner handles the messy details of the TCMU interface -- UIO,
 netlink, pthreads, and DBus -- and exports a more friendly C plugin
 module API. Modules using this API are called "TCMU
 handlers". Handler authors can write code just to handle the SCSI
 commands as desired, and can also link with whatever userspace
 libraries they like.
 .
 This is the library package

libtcmu2-dbgsym: debug symbols for libtcmu2
tcmu-runner: Daemon that handles the userspace side of the LIO TCM-User backstore

 LIO is the SCSI target in the Linux kernel. It is entirely kernel
 code, and allows exported SCSI logical units (LUNs) to be backed by
 regular files or block devices. But, if one want to get fancier with
 the capabilities of the device one is emulating, the kernel is not
 necessarily the right place. While there are userspace libraries for
 compression, encryption, and clustered storage solutions like Ceph or
 Gluster, these are not accessible from the kernel.
 .
 The TCMU userspace-passthrough backstore allows a userspace process
 to handle requests to a LUN. But since the kernel-user interface that
 TCMU provides must be fast and flexible, it is complex enough that
 one would like to avoid each userspace handler having to write boilerplate
 code.
 .
 tcmu-runner handles the messy details of the TCMU interface -- UIO,
 netlink, pthreads, and DBus -- and exports a more friendly C plugin
 module API. Modules using this API are called "TCMU
 handlers". Handler authors can write code just to handle the SCSI
 commands as desired, and can also link with whatever userspace
 libraries they like.
 .
 This is the daemon package

tcmu-runner-dbgsym: debug symbols for tcmu-runner