• DocumentCode
    2947141
  • Title

    Essential roles of exploiting internal parallelism of flash memory based solid state drives in high-speed data processing

  • Author

    Chen, Feng ; Lee, Rubao ; Zhang, Xiaodong

  • fYear
    2011
  • fDate
    12-16 Feb. 2011
  • Firstpage
    266
  • Lastpage
    277
  • Abstract
    Flash memory based solid state drives (SSDs) have shown a great potential to change storage infrastructure fundamentally through their high performance and low power. Most recent studies have mainly focused on addressing the technical limitations caused by special requirements for writes in flash memory. However, a unique merit of an SSD is its rich internal parallelism, which allows us to offset for the most part of the performance loss related to technical limitations by significantly increasing data processing throughput. In this work we present a comprehensive study of essential roles of internal parallelism of SSDs in high-speed data processing. Besides substantially improving I/O bandwidth (e.g. 7.2×), we show that by exploiting internal parallelism, SSD performance is no longer highly sensitive to access patterns, but rather to other factors, such as data access interferences and physical data layout. Specifically, through extensive experiments and thorough analysis, we obtain the following new findings in the context of concurrent data processing in SSDs. (1) Write performance is largely independent of access patterns (regardless of being sequential or random), and can even outperform reads, which is opposite to the long-existing common understanding about slow writes on SSDs. (2) One performance concern comes from interference between concurrent reads and writes, which causes substantial performance degradation. (3) Parallel I/O performance is sensitive to physical data-layout mapping, which is largely not observed without parallelism. (4) Existing application designs optimized for magnetic disks can be suboptimal for running on SSDs with parallelism. Our study is further supported by a group of case studies in database systems as typical data-intensive applications. With these critical findings, we give a set of recommendations to application designers and system architects for exploiting internal parallelism and maximizing the performance potentia l of SSDs.
  • Keywords
    flash memories; parallel processing; flash memory; high speed data processing; internal parallelism; magnetic disks; physical data layout mapping; solid state drives; storage infrastructure; Ash; Bandwidth; Hard disks; Layout; Optimization; Parallel processing; Throughput;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    High Performance Computer Architecture (HPCA), 2011 IEEE 17th International Symposium on
  • Conference_Location
    San Antonio, TX
  • ISSN
    1530-0897
  • Print_ISBN
    978-1-4244-9432-3
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/HPCA.2011.5749735
  • Filename
    5749735