19th IEEE International Parallel and Distributed Processing Symposium (IPDPS'05) - Workshop 10
Power and Performance in I/O for Scientific Applications
Denver, Colorado
April 04-April 08
ISBN: 0-7695-2312-9
L. Ward, Sandia National Laboratories
The I/O patterns of large scale scientific applications can often be characterized as small, non-contiguous, and regular. From a performance and power perspective, this is perhaps the worse kind of I/O for a disk. Two approaches to mitigating the mechanical limitations of disks are write-back caches and software-directed power management. Previous distributed caches are plagued by synchronization and scalability issues. The Direct Access Cache: DAChe system is a user-level distributed cached that addresses both these problems. Past work on managing disk power during run time were effective, one should be able to improve on those results by adopting a proactive scheme.
Citation:
K. Coloma, A. Choudhary, A. Ching, W. K. Liao, S. W. Son, M. Kandemir, L. Ward, "Power and Performance in I/O for Scientific Applications," ipdps, vol. 11, pp.224b, 19th IEEE International Parallel and Distributed Processing Symposium (IPDPS'05) - Workshop 10, 2005