R&D: Influence of Workloads and Depth Queue on Performance of SSD Disk RAID-0 Level Array
Analyzes effect of RAID-0 array size (number of SSD units), average block size, and queue depth to RAID-0 array performance.
This is a Press Release edited by StorageNewsletter.com on May 15, 2020 at 2:08 pmIEEE Xplore has published, in 2020 19th International Symposium INFOTEH-JAHORINA (INFOTEH) proceedings, an article written by Nikola Davidović, University of East Sarajevo, Faculty of Electrical Engineering, East Sarajevo, RS, BiH, Slobodan Obradović, Information Tehnology School, Belgrade, Serbia, Borislav Ðorđević , and Valentina Timčenko, Mihajlo Pupin Institute, University of Belgrade, Belgrade, Serbia.
Abstract: “The RAID-0 level represents a group of N independent disks. The data is written consecutively in blocks to various hardware units. This procedure increases the total storage space. Since the capacity of SSD devices is relatively small, connecting them into a N disks RAID-0 array results in a device N times larger than the smallest device. RAID 0 allows multiple devices to be accessed simultaneously, that is, to obtain write and read speed operations in proportion to the number of SSDs that are forming the array (if the bus speed allows). However, the performance of the RAID-0 array, besides the impact of the number of used units, is also affected by other parameters. The paper analyzes the effect of RAID-0 array size (number of SSD units), average block size, and queue depth to the RAID-0 array performance. “