PRISM: Zooming in Persistent RAM Storage Behavior
Ju-Young Jung and Sangyeun Cho.
Proceedings of the IEEE Int'l Symposium on Performance Analysis of Systems and
Software (ISPASS), Austin, Texas, April 2011. (Best
Paper Nominated)
Abstract:
It has been foreseen that some of the roles assumed by conventional rotating
hard disk drives (HDDs) will migrate to solid-state drives (SSDs) and emerging
persistent RAM storages. New persistent RAM storages have critical advantages
over HDDs and even SSDs in terms of performance and power. Persistent RAM
technologies are flexible enough to be used for both storage and main
memory—in future platforms, this flexibility will allow tighter integration
of a system's memory and storage hierarchy. On the other hand, designers are
faced with new technical issues to address to fully exploit the benefits of
persistent RAM technologies and hide their downsides. In this paper, we
introduce PRISM (PeRsIstent RAM Storage Monitor)—our novel infrastructure
that enables exploring various design trade-offs of persistent RAM storage.
PRISM allows designers to examine a persistent RAM storage's low-level
behavior and evaluate its various architectural organizations while running
realistic workloads, as well as storage activities of a contemporary
off-the-shelf OS. PRISM builds on kernel source code level instrumentation and
the standard Linux device driver mechanism to generate persistent RAM storage
traces. Moreover, PRISM includes a storage architecture simulator to
faithfully model major persistent RAM storage hardware components. To
illustrate how and with what PRISM can help the user, we present a case study
that involves running an OLTP (on-line transaction processing) workload. PRISM
successfully provides the detailed performance analysis results, while
incurring acceptable overheads. Based on our experience, we believe that PRISM
is a versatile tool for exploring persistent RAM storage design choices
ranging from OS-level resource management policy down to chip-level storage
organization.