• Title/Summary/Keyword: 메모리 상의 코어 파일 시스템

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A Self-Description File System for NAND Flash Memory (낸드 플래시 메모리를 위한 자기-서술 파일 시스템)

  • Han, Jun-Yeong;Park, Sang-Oh;Kim, Sung-Jo
    • Journal of KIISE:Computing Practices and Letters
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    • v.15 no.2
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    • pp.98-113
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    • 2009
  • Conventional file systems for harddisk drive cannot be applied to NAND flash memory, because the physical characteristics of NAND flash memory differs from those of harddisk drive. To address this problem, various file systems with better reliability and efficiency have also been developed recently. However, those file systems have inherent overheads for updating the file's metadata pages, because those file systems save file's meta-data and data separately. Furthermore, those file systems have a critical reliability problem: file systems fail when either a page in meta-data of a file system or a file itself fails. In this paper, we propose a self-description page technique and In Memory Core File System technique to address these efficiency and reliability problems, and develop SDFS(Self-Description File System) newly. SDFS can be safely recovered, although some pages fail, and improves write and read performance by 36% and 15%, respectively, and reduces mounting time by 1/20 compared with YAFFS2.

Design and Implementation of NVM-based Concurrent Journaling Scheme (저널링 파일 시스템을 위한 비휘발성 메모리 기반 병행적 저널링 기법의 설계 및 구현)

  • Pak, Suehee;Lee, Eunyoung;Han, Hyuck
    • The Journal of the Korea Contents Association
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    • v.21 no.7
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    • pp.157-163
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    • 2021
  • A single write operation in a file system can modify multiple data, but these changes in the file system are not atomically written to disk. Thus, for the consistency of the file system, conventional journaling guarantees crash consistency instead of sacrificing the system performance. It is known that using non-volatile memory as a journal space can alleviate performance degradation due to low latency and byte-level accessibility of non-volatile memory. However, none of the journaling techniques considering non-volatile memory provide scalability. In this paper, journal space on non-volatile memory is divided into multiple regions for scalable journaling, thus dispersing concentrated operations in one region. Second, the journal area-specific operator structure is used to accelerate data write operations to storage devices. We apply the proposed technique to JFS to evaluate it on multi-core servers equipped with high-performance storage devices. The evaluation results show that the proposed technique performs better than the existing technique of the NVM-based journaling file system.

Performance Evaluation and Optimization of Journaling File Systems with Multicores and High-Performance Flash SSDs (멀티코어 및 고성능 플래시 SSD 환경에서 저널링 파일 시스템의 성능 평가 및 최적화)

  • Han, Hyuck
    • The Journal of the Korea Contents Association
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    • v.18 no.4
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    • pp.178-185
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    • 2018
  • Recently, demands for computer systems with multicore CPUs and high-performance flash-based storage devices (i.e., flash SSD) have rapidly grown in cloud computing, surer-computing, and enterprise storage/database systems. Journaling file systems running on high-performance systems do not exploit the full I/O bandwidth of high-performance SSDs. In this article, we evaluate and analyze the performance of the Linux EXT4 file system with high-performance SSDs and multicore CPUs. The system used in this study has 72 cores and Intel NVMe SSD, and the flash SSD has performance up to 2800/1900 MB/s for sequential read/write operations. Our experimental results show that checkpointing in the EXT4 file system is a major overhead. Furthermore, we optimize the checkpointing procedure and our optimized EXT4 file system shows up to 92% better performance than the original EXT4 file system.

Design and Evaluation of a High-performance Journaling Scheme for Non-volatile Memory (비휘발성 메모리를 고려한 고성능 저널링 기법 설계 및 평가)

  • Han, Hyuck
    • The Journal of the Korea Contents Association
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    • v.20 no.8
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    • pp.368-374
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    • 2020
  • Journaling file systems (JFS) manage changes of file systems not yet committed in a data structure known as a journal to restore the file system in the event of an unexpected failure. Extra write operations required for journaling negatively affect the performance of JFS. The high-performance and byte-addressable non-volatile memory (NVM) was expected to easily mitigate these performance problems by providing NVM space as journal storage. However, even with such non-volatile memory technologies, performance problems still arise due to scalability problems inherent in processing transactions of JFS. To solve this problem, we proposes a technique for processing file system transactions for scalable performance. To this end, lock-free data structures are used and multiple I/O requests are allowed to simultaneously be processed on high-performance storage devices with multiple I/O channels. We evaluate the file system with the proposed technique by comparing the original ext4 file system and the recent proposed NVM-based journaling file system on a multi-core server, and experimental results show that our file system has better performance (up-to 2.9/2.3 times) than the original ext4 file system and the recent NVM-based journaling file system, respectively.