OSDI 2000 Abstract
Interposed Request Routing for Scalable Network Storage
Darrell C. Anderson, Jeffrey S. Chase, and Amin M. Vahdat, Duke University
Abstract
This paper explores interposed request
routing in Slice, a new storage system architecture for high-speed networks incorporating network-
attached block storage. Slice interposes a request
switching filter called a µproxy along each
client's network path to the storage service (e.g.,
in a network adapter or switch). The µproxy intercepts request traffic and distributes it across a server
ensemble. We propose request routing schemes for
I/O and file service traffic, and explore their effect
on service structure.
The Slice prototype uses a packet lter µproxy
to virtualize the standard Network File System
(NFS) protocol, presenting to NFS clients a unified shared file volume with scalable bandwidth and
capacity. Experimental results from the industry-
standard SPECsfs97 workload demonstrate that
the architecture enables construction of powerful
network-attached storage services by aggregating
cost-effective components on a switched Gigabit
Ethernet LAN.
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