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Optimizing I/O Operations in File Systems for Fast Storage Devices

Authors
Son, Y.Yeom, H.Y.Han, H.
Issue Date
Jun-2017
Publisher
IEEE Computer Society
Keywords
File system; I/O stack; journaling; non-volatile memory
Citation
IEEE Transactions on Computers, v.66, no.6, pp 1071 - 1084
Pages
14
Journal Title
IEEE Transactions on Computers
Volume
66
Number
6
Start Page
1071
End Page
1084
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/cau/handle/2019.sw.cau/60830
DOI
10.1109/TC.2016.2635644
ISSN
0018-9340
1557-9956
Abstract
Fast non-volatile memory (NVM) technologies (e.g., phase change memory, spin-transfer torque memory, and MRAM) provide high performance to legacy storage systems. These NVM technologies have attractive features, such as low latency and high throughput to satisfy application performance. Accordingly, fast storage devices based on fast NVM lead to a rapid increase in the demand for diverse computer systems and environments (e.g., cloud platforms, web servers, and database systems) where they are expected to be used as primary storage. Despite the promised benefits provided by fast storage devices, modern file systems do not take advantage of the storage's full performance. In this article, we analyze and explore existing I/O strategies in read, write, journal I/O, and recovery paths between the file system and the storage device. The analysis shows that existing I/O strategies are an obstacle to get maximum performance of fast storage devices. To address this issue, we propose efficient I/O strategies that enable file systems to fully exploit the performance of fast storage devices. Our main idea is to transfer requests from discontiguous host memory buffers in the file systems to discontiguous storage segments in one I/O request to get maximize I/O performance. We implemented our scheme to read, write, journal I/O and recovery operations in the EXT4 file system and the JBD2 module. We demonstrate the implication of our idea in terms of application performance through well-known benchmarks. The experimental results show that our optimized file system achieves better performance than the existing file system, with improvements of up to 1.54 ×, 1.96× , and 2.28 × on ordered mode, data journaling mode, and recovery, respectively.
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Son, Yong Seok
소프트웨어대학 (소프트웨어학부)
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