Design of a Host Interface Logic for GC-Free SSDs

Garbage collection (GC) and resource contention on I/O buses (channels) are among the critical bottlenecks in solid-state drives (SSDs) that cannot be easily hidden. Most existing I/O scheduling algorithms in the host interface logic (HIL) of state-of-the-art SSDs are oblivious to such low-level per...

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Veröffentlicht in:IEEE transactions on computer-aided design of integrated circuits and systems 2020-08, Vol.39 (8), p.1674-1687
Hauptverfasser: Jung, Myoungsoo, Choi, Wonil, Kwon, Miryeong, Srikantaiah, Shekhar, Yoo, Joonhyuk, Kandemir, Mahmut Taylan
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Garbage collection (GC) and resource contention on I/O buses (channels) are among the critical bottlenecks in solid-state drives (SSDs) that cannot be easily hidden. Most existing I/O scheduling algorithms in the host interface logic (HIL) of state-of-the-art SSDs are oblivious to such low-level performance bottlenecks in SSDs. As a result, SSDs may violate quality of service (QoS) requirements by not being able to meet the deadlines of I/O requests. In this paper, we propose a novel host interface I/O scheduler that is both GC aware and QoS aware. The proposed scheduler redistributes the GC overheads across noncritical I/O requests and reduces channel resource contention. Our experiments with workloads from various application domains revealed that the proposed client-level SSD scheduler reduces the standard deviation for latency by 52.5% and the worst-case latency by 86.6%, compared to the state-of-the-art I/O schedulers used for the HIL. In addition, for I/O requests smaller than a superpage, the proposed scheduler avoids channel resource conflicts and reduces latency by 29.2% in comparison to the state-of-the-art I/O schedulers. Furthermore, we present an extension of the proposed I/O scheduler for enterprise SSDs based on the NVMe protocol.
ISSN:0278-0070
1937-4151
DOI:10.1109/TCAD.2019.2919035