Seventh Pacific Rim International Symposium on Dependable Computing (PRDC'00)
A performance comparison between the DR-net and a hierarchical RAID system
Los Angeles, California
December 18-December 20
ISBN: 0-7695-0975-4
When the number of disks rises in disk array systems that contain multiple disk drives, system performance is limited by a bottleneck at a centralized controller and/or at a communication path that uses a bus. We evaluate, through simulation, a scalable architecture called DR-net, in which the controller functions are distributed to all disk drives and each disk has autonomy in processing its tasks. DR-net provided high throughput in proportion to the number of disks. In a conventional system, the influence of the bus setup time and concentration of the parity calculation load caused the throughput to saturate. We also show that DR-net can take advantage of disk autonomy when reconstructing data stored in failed disks. Our results indicate that the distribution of functions and the autonomy of disk drives enable better scalability and more effective utilization of system resources than with a hierarchical system.
Index Terms:
RAID; disc drives; performance evaluation; digital simulation; performance comparison; DR-net; hierarchical RAID system; disk array systems; multiple disk drives; system performance; centralized controller; communication path; scalable architecture; controller functions; bus setup time; parity calculation load; scalability; hierarchical system
Citation:
Y. Mimatsu, H. Yokota, "A performance comparison between the DR-net and a hierarchical RAID system," prdc, pp.193, Seventh Pacific Rim International Symposium on Dependable Computing (PRDC'00), 2000