1,289 research outputs found
A Cache Management Strategy to Replace Wear Leveling Techniques for Embedded Flash Memory
Prices of NAND flash memories are falling drastically due to market growth
and fabrication process mastering while research efforts from a technological
point of view in terms of endurance and density are very active. NAND flash
memories are becoming the most important storage media in mobile computing and
tend to be less confined to this area. The major constraint of such a
technology is the limited number of possible erase operations per block which
tend to quickly provoke memory wear out. To cope with this issue,
state-of-the-art solutions implement wear leveling policies to level the wear
out of the memory and so increase its lifetime. These policies are integrated
into the Flash Translation Layer (FTL) and greatly contribute in decreasing the
write performance. In this paper, we propose to reduce the flash memory wear
out problem and improve its performance by absorbing the erase operations
throughout a dual cache system replacing FTL wear leveling and garbage
collection services. We justify this idea by proposing a first performance
evaluation of an exclusively cache based system for embedded flash memories.
Unlike wear leveling schemes, the proposed cache solution reduces the total
number of erase operations reported on the media by absorbing them in the cache
for workloads expressing a minimal global sequential rate.Comment: Ce papier a obtenu le "Best Paper Award" dans le "Computer System
track" nombre de page: 8; International Symposium on Performance Evaluation
of Computer & Telecommunication Systems, La Haye : Netherlands (2011
Dynamic Virtual Page-based Flash Translation Layer with Novel Hot Data Identification and Adaptive Parallelism Management
Solid-state disks (SSDs) tend to replace traditional motor-driven hard disks in high-end storage devices in past few decades. However, various inherent features, such as out-of-place update [resorting to garbage collection (GC)] and limited endurance (resorting to wear leveling), need to be reduced to a large extent before that day comes. Both the GC and wear leveling fundamentally depend on hot data identification (HDI). In this paper, we propose a hot data-aware flash translation layer architecture based on a dynamic virtual page (DVPFTL) so as to improve the performance and lifetime of NAND flash devices. First, we develop a generalized dual layer HDI (DL-HDI) framework, which is composed of a cold data pre-classifier and a hot data post-identifier. Those can efficiently follow the frequency and recency of information access. Then, we design an adaptive parallelism manager (APM) to assign the clustered data chunks to distinct resident blocks in the SSD so as to prolong its endurance. Finally, the experimental results from our realized SSD prototype indicate that the DVPFTL scheme has reliably improved the parallelizability and endurance of NAND flash devices with improved GC-costs, compared with related works.Peer reviewe
Self-Learning Hot Data Prediction: Where Echo State Network Meets NAND Flash Memories
© 2019 IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted. Permission from IEEE must be obtained for all other uses, in any current or future media, including reprinting/republishing this material for advertising or promotional purposes, creating new collective works, for resale or redistribution to servers or lists, or reuse of any copyrighted component of this work in other works.Well understanding the access behavior of hot data is significant for NAND flash memory due to its crucial impact on the efficiency of garbage collection (GC) and wear leveling (WL), which respectively dominate the performance and life span of SSD. Generally, both GC and WL rely greatly on the recognition accuracy of hot data identification (HDI). However, in this paper, the first time we propose a novel concept of hot data prediction (HDP), where the conventional HDI becomes unnecessary. First, we develop a hybrid optimized echo state network (HOESN), where sufficiently unbiased and continuously shrunk output weights are learnt by a sparse regression based on L2 and L1/2 regularization. Second, quantum-behaved particle swarm optimization (QPSO) is employed to compute reservoir parameters (i.e., global scaling factor, reservoir size, scaling coefficient and sparsity degree) for further improving prediction accuracy and reliability. Third, in the test on a chaotic benchmark (Rossler), the HOESN performs better than those of six recent state-of-the-art methods. Finally, simulation results about six typical metrics tested on five real disk workloads and on-chip experiment outcomes verified from an actual SSD prototype indicate that our HOESN-based HDP can reliably promote the access performance and endurance of NAND flash memories.Peer reviewe
- …