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Filesystem aging: It's more usage than fullness

  • Alex Conway
  • , Eric Knorr
  • , Yizheng Jiao
  • , Michael A. Bender
  • , William Jannen
  • , Rob Johnson
  • , Donald Porter
  • , Martin Farach-Colton
  • Rutgers University
  • University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
  • Williams College
  • Dell

Research output: Contribution to conferencePaperpeer-review

23 Scopus citations

Abstract

Filesystem fragmentation is a first-order performance problem that has been the target of many heuristic and algorithmic approaches. Real-world application benchmarks show that common filesystem operations cause many filesystems to fragment over time, a phenomenon known as filesystem aging. This paper examines the common assumption that space pressure will exacerbate fragmentation. Our microbenchmarks show that space pressure can cause a substantial amount of inter-file and intra-file fragmentation. However, on a “real-world” application benchmark, space pressure causes fragmentation that slows subsequent reads by only 20% on ext4, relative to the amount of fragmentation that would occur on a file system with abundant space. The other file systems show negligible additional degradation under space pressure. Our results suggest that the effect of free-space fragmentation on read performance is best described as accelerating the filesystem aging process. The effect on write performance is non-existent in some cases, and, in most cases, an order of magnitude smaller than the read degradation from fragmentation cause by normal usage.

Original languageEnglish
StatePublished - 2019
Event11th USENIX Workshop on Hot Topics in Storage and File Systems, HotStorage 2019, co-located with USENIX ATC 2019 - Renton, United States
Duration: Jul 8 2019Jul 9 2019

Conference

Conference11th USENIX Workshop on Hot Topics in Storage and File Systems, HotStorage 2019, co-located with USENIX ATC 2019
Country/TerritoryUnited States
CityRenton
Period07/8/1907/9/19

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