That makes sense! I notice that Xen also has a scsifront driver that
escaped my attention, for this very purpose.

-anil

> On 29 Sep 2015, at 16:38, Justin Cormack <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> Yes, if you use it to transport a real scsi device it acts as a normal
> scsi transport. If it is an emulated scsi device it is not so
> interesting. I think Google are using SR-IOV scsi devices, which can
> be soft partitioned into virtual physical devices underneath probably
> which is why they use it.
> 
> Justin
> 


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