Exploiting parallelism in I/O scheduling for access conflict minimization in flash-based solid state drives

Congming Gao, Liang Shi, Mengying Zhao, Chun Jason Xue, Kaijie Wu, Edwin H.M. Sha

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference contributionpeer-review

77 Scopus citations

Abstract

Solid state drives (SSDs) have been widely deployed in personal computers, data centers, and cloud storages. In order to improve performance, SSDs are usually constructed with a number of channels with each channel connecting to a number of NAND flash chips. Despite the rich parallelism offered by multiple channels and multiple chips per channel, recent studies show that the utilization of flash chips (i.e. the number of flash chips being accessed simultaneously) is seriously low. Our study shows that the low chip utilization is caused by the access conflict among I/O requests. In this work, we propose Parallel Issue Queuing (PIQ), a novel I/O scheduler at the host system, to minimize the access conflicts between I/O requests. The proposed PIQ schedules I/O requests without conflicts into the same batch and I/O requests with conflicts into different batches. Hence the multiple I/O requests in one batch can be fulfilled simultaneously by exploiting the rich parallelism of SSD. And because PIQ is implemented at the host side, it can take advantage of rich resource at host system such as main memory and CPU, which makes the overhead negligible. Extensive experimental results show that PIQ delivers significant performance improvement to the applications that have heavy access conflicts.

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publication2014 30th Symposium on Mass Storage Systems and Technologies, MSST 2014
PublisherIEEE Computer Society
ISBN (Print)9781479956715
DOIs
StatePublished - 2014
Externally publishedYes
Event30th Symposium on Massive Storage Systems and Technologies, MSST 2014 - Santa Clara, CA, United States
Duration: 2 Jun 20146 Jun 2014

Publication series

NameIEEE Symposium on Mass Storage Systems and Technologies
ISSN (Print)2160-1968

Conference

Conference30th Symposium on Massive Storage Systems and Technologies, MSST 2014
Country/TerritoryUnited States
CitySanta Clara, CA
Period2/06/146/06/14

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Exploiting parallelism in I/O scheduling for access conflict minimization in flash-based solid state drives'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this