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R&D: Crash Consistent Non-Volatile Memory Express

Experimentally showing that MQFS increases IO:S of RocksDB by 36% and 28% compared to file system and Ext4 without journaling, respectively

ACM Digital Library has published, in SOSP ’21: Proceedings of the ACM SIGOPS 28th Symposium on Operating Systems Principles, an article written by Xiaojian Liao, Youyou Lu, Zhe Yang, and Jiwu Shu, Department of Computer Science and Technology, Tsinghua University, Beijing National Research Center for Information Science and Technology (BNRist).

Abstract: This paper presents crash consistent Non-Volatile Memory Express (ccNVMe), a novel extension of the NVMe that defines how host software communicates with the non-volatile memory (e.g., solid-state drive) across a PCI Express bus with both crash consistency and performance efficiency. Existing storage systems pay a huge tax on crash consistency, and thus can not fully exploit the multi-queue parallelism and low latency of the NVMe interface. ccNVMe alleviates this major bottleneck by coupling the crash consistency to the data dissemination. This new idea allows the storage system to achieve crash consistency by taking the free rides of the data dissemination mechanism of NVMe, using only two lightweight memory-mapped I/Os (MMIO), unlike traditional systems that use complex update protocol and heavyweight block I/Os. ccNVMe introduces transaction-aware MMIO and doorbell to reduce the PCIe traffic as well as to provide atomicity. We present how to build a high-performance and crash-consistent file system namely MQFS atop ccNVMe. We experimentally show that MQFS increases the IOPS of RocksDB by 36% and 28% compared to a state-of-the-art file system and Ext4 without journaling, respectively.

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