Title :
High-performance disk I/O in a bus-based system
Author :
Kadambi, Sudarshan ; Harden, Jim C. ; Linder, Daniel H.
Author_Institution :
NSF Eng. Res. Center for Comput. Field Simulation, Mississippi State Univ., MS, USA
Abstract :
Processor and memory speeds continue to increase dramatically. The large gap in access times between memories and disk storage devices results in limiting the overall system performance. A major contribution to the slow response of storage devices are mechanical latencies arising from disk platter rotation and read/write head actuators, but other limitations are a result of system component interaction. Even though higher densities and rotational speeds reduce mechanical latencies, this reduction is not enough to satisfy the increasing appetite for higher bandwidth and lower latency. The concept of striping data across disk arrays is used to help solve this problem. Custom I/O subsystem design often proves uneconomical. The paper describes an I/O system implementation using off the shelf components and the issues involved in achieving the sustained 20 MByte/sec transfer rate required by the design
Keywords :
hard discs; performance evaluation; storage management; system buses; 20 MByte/s; I/O system implementation; access times; bus-based system; data striping; disk storage devices; high-performance disk I/O; mechanical latencies; off the shelf components; system component interaction; system performance; transfer rate; Actuators; Bandwidth; Computational modeling; Computerized monitoring; Delay; Hard disks; Instruments; Magnetic heads; Microprocessors; Probes;
Conference_Titel :
System Theory, 1995., Proceedings of the Twenty-Seventh Southeastern Symposium on
Conference_Location :
Starkville, MS
Print_ISBN :
0-8186-6985-3
DOI :
10.1109/SSST.1995.390578