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Argon: performance insulation for shared storage servers

208

Citations

38

References

2007

Year

Abstract

Services that share a storage system should realize the same efficiency, within their share of time, as when they have the system to themselves. The Argon storage server explicitly manages its resources to bound the inefficiency arising from inter-service disk and cache interference in traditional systems. The goal is to provide each ser-vice with at least a configured fraction (e.g., 0.9) of the throughput it achieves when it has the storage server to itself, within its share of the server—a service allocated 1nth of a server should get nearly 1nth (or more) of the throughput it would get alone. Argon uses automatically-configured prefetch/write-back sizes to insulate stream-ing efficiency from disk seeks introduced by competing workloads. It uses explicit disk time quanta to do the same for non-streaming workloads with internal local-ity. It partitions the cache among services, based on their observed access patterns, to insulate the hit rate each achieves from the access patterns of others. Experiments show that, combined, these mechanisms and Argon’s au-tomatic configuration of each achieve the insulation goal. 1

References

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