Publication | Closed Access
NVMalloc: Exposing an Aggregate SSD Store as a Memory Partition in Extreme-Scale Machines
68
Citations
22
References
2012
Year
Unknown Venue
Non-volatile MemoryStorage PerformanceEngineeringComputer ArchitectureParallel StorageMemory PressureHardware SecurityData ScienceMemory PartitionSecondary Memory PartitionParallel ComputingData ManagementMemory ManagementAggregate Ssd StoreExtreme-scale MachinesComputer EngineeringComputer ScienceMemory ArchitectureStorage VirtualizationCloud ComputingParallel ProgrammingStorage System
DRAM is a precious resource in extreme-scale machines and is increasingly becoming scarce, mainly due to the growing number of cores per node. On future multi-petaflop and exaflop machines, the memory pressure is likely to be so severe that we need to rethink our memory usage models. Fortunately, the advent of non-volatile memory (NVM) offers a unique opportunity in this space. Current NVM offerings possess several desirable properties, such as low cost and power efficiency, but suffer from high latency and lifetime issues. We need rich techniques to be able to use them alongside DRAM. In this paper, we propose a novel approach for exploiting NVM as a secondary memory partition so that applications can explicitly allocate and manipulate memory regions therein. More specifically, we propose an NVMalloc library with a suite of services that enables applications to access a distributed NVM storage system. We have devised ways within NVMalloc so that the storage system, built from compute node-local NVM devices, can be accessed in a byte-addressable fashion using the memory mapped I/O interface. Our approach has the potential to re-energize out-of-core computations on large-scale machines by having applications allocate certain variables through NVMalloc, thereby increasing the overall memory capacity available. Our evaluation on a 128-core cluster shows that NVMalloc enables applications to compute problem sizes larger than the physical memory in a cost-effective manner. It can bring more performance/efficiency gain with increased computation time between NVM memory accesses or increased data access locality. In addition, our results suggest that while NVMalloc enables transparent access to NVM-resident variables, the explicit control it provides is crucial to optimize application performance.
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