Abstract

Most state-of-the-art commercial storage virtualization systems focus only on one particular storage attribute, capacity. This paper describes the design, implementation and evaluation of a multi-dimensional storage virtualization system called Stonehenge, which is able to virtualize a cluster-based physical storage system along multiple dimensions, including bandwidth, capacity, and latency. As a result, Stonehenge is able to multiplex multiple virtual disks, each with a distinct bandwidth, capacity, and latency attribute, on a single physical storage system as if they are separate physical disks. A key enabling technology for Stonehenge is an efficiency-aware real-time disk scheduling algorithm called dual-queue disk scheduling, which maximizes disk utilization efficiency while providing Quality of Service (QoS) guarantees. To optimize disk utilization efficiency, Stonehenge exploits run-time measurements extensively, for admission control, computing latency-derived bandwidth requirement, and predicting disk service time.

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