Abstract: This paper focuses on I/O optimizations of N-hybrid
(New-Form of hybrid), which provides a hybrid file system space
constructed on SSD and HDD. Although the promising potentials of
SSD, such as the absence of mechanical moving overhead and high
random I/O throughput, have drawn a lot of attentions from IT
enterprises, its high ratio of cost/capacity makes it less desirable to
build a large-scale data storage subsystem composed of only SSDs. In
this paper, we present N-hybrid that attempts to integrate the strengths
of SSD and HDD, to offer a single, large hybrid file system space.
Several experiments were conducted to verify the performance of
N-hybrid.
Abstract: As data to be stored in storage subsystems
tremendously increases, data protection techniques have become more
important than ever, to provide data availability and reliability. In this
paper, we present the file system-based data protection (WOWSnap)
that has been implemented using WORM (Write-Once-Read-Many)
scheme. In the WOWSnap, once WORM files have been created, only
the privileged read requests to them are allowed to protect data against
any intentional/accidental intrusions. Furthermore, all WORM files
are related to their protection cycle that is a time period during which
WORM files should securely be protected. Once their protection cycle
is expired, the WORM files are automatically moved to the
general-purpose data section without any user interference. This
prevents the WORM data section from being consumed by
unnecessary files. We evaluated the performance of WOWSnap on
Linux cluster.