DocumentCode
1841504
Title
Striped tape arrays
Author
Drapeau, Ann L. ; Katz, Randy H.
Author_Institution
California Univ., Berkeley, CA, USA
fYear
1993
fDate
26-29 Apr 1993
Firstpage
257
Lastpage
265
Abstract
How data striping ideas apply to arrays of magnetic tape drives is being investigated. Data striping increases throughput and reduces response time for large accesses to a storage system. Striped magnetic tape systems are particularly appealing because many inexpensive magnetic tape drives have low bandwidth. Striping may offer dramatic performance improvements for these systems. Several important issues in designing striped tape systems are considered: the choice of tape drives and robots, whether to stripe within or between robots, and the choice of the best scheme for distributing data on cartridges. One of the most troublesome problems in striped-tape arrays is the synchronization of transfers across tape drives. Another issue is how improved devices will affect the desirability of striping in the future. The results of simulations comparing the performance of striped-tape systems to nonstriped systems are presented
Keywords
magnetic tape storage; performance evaluation; storage management; data striping; large accesses; magnetic tape drives; response time; robots; striped-tape arrays; synchronization; tape drives; throughput; Bandwidth; Costs; Delay; Disk drives; Earth Observing System; NASA; Robotics and automation; Robots; Space technology; Throughput;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Mass Storage Systems, 1993. Putting all that Data to Work. Proceedings., Twelfth IEEE Symposium on
Conference_Location
Monterey, CA
Print_ISBN
0-8186-3460-X
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/MASS.1993.289751
Filename
289751
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