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The Design and Implementation of a Log-Structured File System

by Mendel Rosenblum, John K. Ousterhout - ACM Transactions on Computer Systems , 1992
"... This paper presents a new technique for disk storage management called a log-structured file system. A logstructured file system writes all modifications to disk sequentially in a log-like structure, thereby speeding up both file writing and crash recovery. The log is the only structure on disk; it ..."
Abstract - Cited by 1092 (8 self) - Add to MetaCart
for reads and large writes. Even when the overhead for cleaning is included, Sprite LFS can use 70 % of the disk bandwidth for writing, whereas Unix file systems typically can use only 5-10%. 1.

A Fast File System for UNIX

by Marshall Kirk Mckusick, William N. Joy, Samuel J. Leffler, Robert S. Fabry - ACM Transactions on Computer Systems , 1984
"... A reimplementation of the UNIX file system is described. The reimplementation provides substantially higher throughput rates by using more flexible allocation policies that allow better locality of reference and can be adapted to a wide range of peripheral and processor characteristics. The new file ..."
Abstract - Cited by 565 (6 self) - Add to MetaCart
A reimplementation of the UNIX file system is described. The reimplementation provides substantially higher throughput rates by using more flexible allocation policies that allow better locality of reference and can be adapted to a wide range of peripheral and processor characteristics. The new

The Unix Time-Sharing System

by D. M. Ritchie, K. Thompson - Communications of the ACM , 1974
"... Unix is a general-purpose, multi-user, interactive operating system for the larger Digital Equipment Corporation PDP-11 and the Interdata 8/32 computers. It offers a number of features seldom found even in larger operating systems, including i A hierarchical file system incorporating demountable vol ..."
Abstract - Cited by 539 (14 self) - Add to MetaCart
Unix is a general-purpose, multi-user, interactive operating system for the larger Digital Equipment Corporation PDP-11 and the Interdata 8/32 computers. It offers a number of features seldom found even in larger operating systems, including i A hierarchical file system incorporating demountable

Coda: A Highly Available File System for a Distributed Workstation Environment

by Mahadev Satyanarayanan, James J. Kistler, Puneet Kumar, Maria E. Okasaki, Ellen H. Siegel, David C. Steere - IN IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON COMPUTERS , 1990
"... Coda is a file system for a large-scale distributed computing environment composed of Unix workstations. It provides resiliency to server and network failures through the use of two distinct but complementary mechanisms. One mechanism, server replication,stores copies of a file at multiple servers ..."
Abstract - Cited by 530 (45 self) - Add to MetaCart
Coda is a file system for a large-scale distributed computing environment composed of Unix workstations. It provides resiliency to server and network failures through the use of two distinct but complementary mechanisms. One mechanism, server replication,stores copies of a file at multiple

A Cryptographic File System for Unix

by Matt Blaze , 1993
"... Although cryptographic techniques areplaying an increasingly important role in modern computing system security,userlevel tools for encrypting file data arecumbersome and suffer from a number of inherent vulnerabilities. The Cryptographic File System (CFS) pushes encryption services into the file sy ..."
Abstract - Cited by 269 (4 self) - Add to MetaCart
system itself. CFS supports securestorage at the system level through a standardUnix file system interface to encrypted files. Users associate a cryptographic key with the directories they wish to protect. Files in these directories (as well as their pathname components) aretransparently encrypted

File System Design for an NFS File Server Appliance

by Dave Hitz, James Lau, Michael Malcolm , 1994
"... Network Appliance recently began shipping a new kind of network server called an NFS file server appliance, which is a dedicated server whose sole function is to provide NFS file service. The file system requirements for an NFS appliance are different from those for a general-purpose UNIX system, b ..."
Abstract - Cited by 338 (2 self) - Add to MetaCart
Network Appliance recently began shipping a new kind of network server called an NFS file server appliance, which is a dedicated server whose sole function is to provide NFS file service. The file system requirements for an NFS appliance are different from those for a general-purpose UNIX system

A Trace-Driven Analysis of the UNIX 4.2 BSD File System

by John Ousterhout, Herve Da Costa, David Harrison, John A. Kunze, Mike Kupfer, James G. Thompson , 1985
"... We analyzed the UNIX 4.2 BSD file system by recording userlevel activity in trace files and writing programs to analyze the traces. The tracer did not record individual read and write operations, yet still provided tight bounds on what information was accessed and when. The trace analysis shows that ..."
Abstract - Cited by 277 (5 self) - Add to MetaCart
We analyzed the UNIX 4.2 BSD file system by recording userlevel activity in trace files and writing programs to analyze the traces. The tracer did not record individual read and write operations, yet still provided tight bounds on what information was accessed and when. The trace analysis shows

UNIX Disk Access Patterns

by Chris Ruemmler, John Wilkes , 1993
"... Disk access patterns are becoming ever more important to understand as the gap between processor and disk performance increases. The study presented here is a detailed characterization of every lowlevel disk access generated by three quite different systems over a two month period. The contributions ..."
Abstract - Cited by 277 (20 self) - Add to MetaCart
. The contributions of this paper are the detailed information we provide about the disk accesses on these systems (many of our results are significantly different from those reported in the literature, which provide summary data only for file-level access on small-memory systems); and the analysis of a set

Frangipani: A Scalable Distributed File System

by Chandramohan A. Thekkath, Timothy Mann, Edward K. Lee
"... The ideal distributed file system would provide all its users with coherent, shared access to the same set of files,yet would be arbitrarily scalable to provide more storage space and higher performance to a growing user community. It would be highly available in spite of component failures. It woul ..."
Abstract - Cited by 320 (1 self) - Add to MetaCart
The ideal distributed file system would provide all its users with coherent, shared access to the same set of files,yet would be arbitrarily scalable to provide more storage space and higher performance to a growing user community. It would be highly available in spite of component failures

Characteristics of File System Workloads,”

by Drew Roselli , Jacob R Lorch , Thomas E Anderson , 1998
"... Abstract In this paper, we describe the collection and analysis of file system traces from a variety of different environments, including both UNIX and NT systems, clients and servers, and instructional and production ..."
Abstract - Cited by 269 (3 self) - Add to MetaCart
Abstract In this paper, we describe the collection and analysis of file system traces from a variety of different environments, including both UNIX and NT systems, clients and servers, and instructional and production
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