DASH: a Recipe for a Flash-based Data Intensive Supercomputer.

SC '10: International Conference for High Performance Computing, Networking, Storage and AnalysisNovember, 2010(2010)

引用 67|浏览23
暂无评分
摘要
Data intensive computing can be defined as computation involving large datasets and complicated I/O patterns. Data intensive computing is challenging because there is a five-orders-of-magnitude latency gap between main memory DRAM and spinning hard disks; the result is that an inordinate amount of time in data intensive computing is spent accessing data on disk. To address this problem we designed and built a prototype data intensive supercomputer named DASH that exploits flash-based Solid State Drive (SSD) technology and also virtually aggregated DRAM to fill the latency gap . DASH uses commodity parts including Intel® X25-E flash drives and distributed shared memory (DSM) software from ScaleMP®. The system is highly competitive with several commercial offerings by several metrics including achieved IOPS (input output operations per second), IOPS per dollar of system acquisition cost, IOPS per watt during operation, and IOPS per gigabyte (GB) of available storage. We present here an overview of the design of DASH, an analysis of its cost efficiency, then a detailed recipe for how we designed and tuned it for high data-performance, lastly show that running data-intensive scientific applications from graph theory, biology, and astronomy, we achieved as much as two orders-of- magnitude speedup compared to the same applications run on traditional architectures.
更多
查看译文
关键词
DRAM chips,hard discs,parallel machines,DASH,DSM software,I/O patterns,SSD technology,ScaleMP,X25-E flash drives,data intensive computing,distributed shared memory software,flash-based data intensive supercomputer,flash-based solid state drive technology,graph theory,memory DRAM,spinning hard disks,
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要