Abstract

Sanitization is an effective approach for ensuring data security through scrubbing invalid but sensitive data pages, with the cost of impacts on storage performance due to moving out valid pages from the sanitization-required wordline, which is a logical read/write unit and consists of multiple pages in high-density SSDs. To minimize the impacts on I/O latency and data security, this article proposes a polling-based scheduling approach for data sanitization in high-density SSDs. Our method polls a specific SSD channel for completing data sanitization at the block granularity, meanwhile other channels can still service I/O requests. Furthermore, our method assigns a low priority to the blocks that are more likely to have future adjacent page invalidations inside sanitization-required wordlines, while selecting the sanitization block, to minimize the negative impacts of moving valid pages. Through a series of emulation experiments on several disk traces of real-world applications, we show that our proposal can decrease the negative effects of data sanitization in terms of the risk-performance index, which is a united time metric of I/O responsiveness and the unsafe time interval, by 16.34% , on average, compared to related sanitization methods.

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