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Forgetting based File Cache Management Scheme for Non-Volatile Memory
Non-volatile memory (NVM) supports both byte addressability and non-volatility. These characteristics make it feasible for NVM to be employed at any layer of the memory hierarchy such as cache, memory and disk. An interesting characteristic of NVM is that, even though it supports non-volatility, its retention capability is limited. Furthermore NVM has tradeoff between its retention capability and write latency. In this paper, we propose a novel NVM-based file cache management scheme that makes use of the limited retention capability to improve the cache performance. Experimental results with real-workloads show that our scheme can reduce access latency by up to 31% (24.4% average) compared with the conventional LRU based cache management scheme.
Improving Periodic Flush Overhead of File Systems Using Non-volatile Buffer Cache
Eunji Lee, Hyojung Kang, Kern Koh, Hyokyung Bahn
File I/O buffer cache plays an important role in narrowing the wide speed gap between the main memory and the secondary storage. However, data loss or inconsistencies may occur if the system crashes before the data that has been updated in the buffer cache is flushed to storage. Thus, most operating systems adopt a daemon that periodically flushes dirty data to the secondary storage. In this study, we show that periodic flushes account for 30-70% of the total write traffic to storage and remove this inefficiency by implementing a small, non-volatile buffer cache. Specifically, we present space-efficient management techniques, such as delta-write and fragment-grouping, and show that the storage write traffic and throughput can be improved by a margin of 44.2% and 23.6%, respectively, with only a small NVRAM.
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