DocumentCode
1830354
Title
IP storage and the CPU consumption myth
Author
Horst, Robert
Author_Institution
3ware Inc., Mountain View, CA, USA
fYear
2001
fDate
2001
Firstpage
194
Lastpage
200
Abstract
Addresses a key issue that arises when attaching storage devices directly to IP networks: the perceived need for hardware acceleration of the TCP/IP networking stack. While many implicitly assume that acceleration is required, the evidence shows that this conclusion is not well-founded. In the past, network accelerators have had mixed success, and the current economic justification for hardware acceleration is poor, given the low cost of host CPU cycles. The I/O load for many applications is dominated by disk latency, not transfer rate, and hardware protocol accelerators have little effect on the I/O performance in these environments. Application benchmarks were run on an IP storage subsystem to measure performance and CPU utilization on e-mail, database, file serving and backup applications. The results show that good performance can be obtained without protocol acceleration
Keywords
input-output programs; local area networks; performance evaluation; storage media; transport protocols; CPU consumption; CPU utilization; I/O load; I/O performance; IP networks; IP storage subsystem; TCP/IP networking stack; application benchmarks; attached storage devices; database applications; disk latency; economic justification; electronic mail; file backup applications; file serving applications; hardware acceleration; hardware protocol accelerators; host CPU cycle cost; Acceleration; Costs; Databases; Delay; Environmental economics; Hardware; IP networks; Joining processes; Protocols; TCPIP;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Network Computing and Applications, 2001. NCA 2001. IEEE International Symposium on
Conference_Location
Cambridge, MA
Print_ISBN
0-7695-1432-4
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/NCA.2001.962532
Filename
962532
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