DocumentCode :
3431116
Title :
Stonehenge: a fault-tolerant real-time network-attached storage device
Author :
Chiueh, Tzi-cker
Author_Institution :
Rether Networks Inc., Centereach, NY, USA
fYear :
2001
fDate :
2001
Firstpage :
57
Lastpage :
61
Abstract :
Stonehenge is a real-time network-attached storage device (NASD) that guarantees real-time data delivery to network clients even across single-disk failures. Stonehenge supports both best-effort and real-time disk read/write services, which are accessed through an object-based interface. Data access requests sent to Stonehenge can be serviced in a server push or a client pull mode. Stonehenge´s ability to guarantee real-time disk performance results from a cycle-based scan-order disk scheduling mechanism. However, Stonehenge´s disk I/O cycle is either completely utilized or completely idle. This on-off disk scheduling model effectively reduces the power consumption of the disk subsystem, without increasing the buffer size requirement. Finally Stonehenge exploits unused disk storage space and maintains additional redundancy dynamically beyond the RAIDS-style parity. This extra redundancy, typically in the form of disk block replication, reduces the time to reconstruct the data on the failed disk. This paper describes the system architecture of Stonehenge and reports preliminary performance measurements collected from an initial Linux-based prototype implementation using Fast Ethernet and UltraSCSI disks
Keywords :
RAID; fault tolerant computing; file servers; local area networks; real-time systems; Fast Ethernet; Linux-based prototype implementation; RAIDS-style parity; Stonehenge; UltraSCSI disks; buffer size requirement; client pull mode; disk scheduling model; fault-tolerant real-time network-attached storage device; object-based interface; real-time data delivery; real-time disk read/write services; scan-order disk scheduling mechanism; server push; single-disk failures; Bandwidth; Energy consumption; Ethernet networks; Fault tolerance; File servers; Network servers; Permission; Power system modeling; Prototypes; Redundancy;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Hot Interconnects 9, 2001.
Conference_Location :
Stanford, CA
Print_ISBN :
0-7695-1357-3
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/HIS.2001.946694
Filename :
946694
Link To Document :
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