4.5 Article

Leveraging Data Deduplication to Improve the Performance of Primary Storage Systems in the Cloud

Journal

IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON COMPUTERS
Volume 65, Issue 6, Pages 1775-1788

Publisher

IEEE COMPUTER SOC
DOI: 10.1109/TC.2015.2455979

Keywords

I/O deduplication; data redundancy; primary storage; I/O performance; storage capacity

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [61100033, 61472336, 61402385]
  2. US National Science Foundation (NSF) [NSF-CNS-1116606, NSF-CNS-1016609]
  3. National Key Technology R&D Program Foundation of China [2015BAH34F01, 2015BAH16F02]
  4. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities [20720140515]
  5. Direct For Computer & Info Scie & Enginr
  6. Division Of Computer and Network Systems [1116606] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

Ask authors/readers for more resources

With the explosive growth in data volume, the I/O bottleneck has become an increasingly daunting challenge for big data analytics in the Cloud. Recent studies have shown that moderate to high data redundancy clearly exists in primary storage systems in the Cloud. Our experimental studies reveal that data redundancy exhibits a much higher level of intensity on the I/O path than that on disks due to relatively high temporal access locality associated with small I/O requests to redundant data. Moreover, directly applying data deduplication to primary storage systems in the Cloud will likely cause space contention in memory and data fragmentation on disks. Based on these observations, we propose a performance-oriented I/O deduplication, called POD, rather than a capacity-oriented I/O deduplication, exemplified by iDedup, to improve the I/O performance of primary storage systems in the Cloud without sacrificing capacity savings of the latter. POD takes a two-pronged approach to improving the performance of primary storage systems and minimizing performance overhead of deduplication, namely, a request-based selective deduplication technique, called Select-Dedupe, to alleviate the data fragmentation and an adaptive memory management scheme, called iCache, to ease the memory contention between the bursty read traffic and the bursty write traffic. We have implemented a prototype of POD as a module in the Linux operating system. The experiments conducted on our lightweight prototype implementation of POD show that POD significantly outperforms iDedup in the I/O performance measure by up to 87.9 percent with an average of 58.8 percent. Moreover, our evaluation results also show that POD achieves comparable or better capacity savings than iDedup.

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