Litcius/Paper detail

Assise: Performance and Availability via Client-local {NVM} in a Distributed File System

Thomas E. Anderson, Marco Canini, Jongyul Kim, Dejan Kostić, Youngjin Kwon, Simon Peter, Waleed Reda, Henry N. Schuh, Emmett Witchel

2020King Abdullah University of Science and Technology Repository (King Abdullah University of Science and Technology)23 citationsOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The adoption of low latency persistent memory modules (PMMs) upends the long-established model of remote storage for distributed file systems. Instead, by colocating computation with PMM storage, we can provide applications with much higher IO performance, sub-second application failover, and strong consistency. To demonstrate this, we built the Assise distributed file system, based on a persistent, replicated coherence protocol that manages client-local PMM as a linearizable and crash-recoverable cache between applications and slower (and possibly remote) storage. Assise maximizes locality for all file IO by carrying out IO on process-local, socket-local, and client-local PMM whenever possible. Assise minimizes coherence overhead by maintaining consistency at IO operation granularity, rather than at fixed block sizes.
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\nWe compare Assise to Ceph/BlueStore, NFS, and Octopus on a cluster with Intel Optane DC PMMs and SSDs for common cloud applications and benchmarks, such as LevelDB, Postfix, and FileBench. We find that Assise improves write latency up to 22x, throughput up to 56x, fail-over time up to 103x, and scales up to 6x better than its counterparts, while providing stronger consistency semantics.

Topics & Concepts

Computer scienceOperating systemCache coherenceFile systemCacheParallel computingEmbedded systemCPU cacheCache algorithmsAdvanced Data Storage TechnologiesCloud Computing and Resource ManagementCaching and Content Delivery