Open-Channel SSD (What is it Good For)

Ivan Luiz Picoli, Niclas Hedam, Pınar Tözün, Philippe Bonnet

Research output: Contribution to conferencePaperResearchpeer-review

16 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Open-Channel SSDs are storage devices that let hosts take full control over data placement and I/O scheduling. In recent years, they have gained acceptance in data centers (e.g., Alibaba) and for computational storage (e.g., Pliops). Open-Channel SSDs require a host-based Flash Translation Layer (FTL) that manages the physical address space they expose. Open-source FTLs are now available for Open-Channel SSDs, providing either a generic yet tunable block device interface (e.g., pblk, SPDK, OX-Block), or application-specific FTLs developed for a specific data system (e.g., LightLSM, OX-ELEOS). In this paper, we share our experience developing three of those FTLs in the context of the OX controller. We position Open-Channel SSDs in the SSD landscape and discuss their relevance for data systems. In particular, we argue that Open-Channel SSDs cannot be considered as a uniform class of devices. Our main contribution is a description of the key design decisions we took in OX related to Open-Channel SSDs. We reflect on lessons learned and propose hints for the co-design of data systems and Open-Channel SSDs.

Original languageEnglish
Publication date2020
Publication statusPublished - 2020
Event10th Annual Conference on Innovative Data Systems Research, CIDR 2020 - Amsterdam, Netherlands
Duration: 12 Jan 202015 Jan 2020

Conference

Conference10th Annual Conference on Innovative Data Systems Research, CIDR 2020
Country/TerritoryNetherlands
CityAmsterdam
Period12/01/202015/01/2020

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 10th Annual Conference on Innovative Data Systems Research, CIDR 2020.

Cite this