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Inside Solid State Drives (SSDs)

Solid State Drives (SSDs) are gaining momentum in enterprise and client applications, replacing Hard Disk Drives (HDDs) by offering higher performance and lower power. In the enterprise, developers of data center server and storage systems have seen CPU performance growing exponentially for the past...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Micheloni, Rino, Marelli, Alessia, Eshghi, Kam
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: Springer 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-5146-0
http://cds.cern.ch/record/1500430
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author Micheloni, Rino
Marelli, Alessia
Eshghi, Kam
author_facet Micheloni, Rino
Marelli, Alessia
Eshghi, Kam
author_sort Micheloni, Rino
collection CERN
description Solid State Drives (SSDs) are gaining momentum in enterprise and client applications, replacing Hard Disk Drives (HDDs) by offering higher performance and lower power. In the enterprise, developers of data center server and storage systems have seen CPU performance growing exponentially for the past two decades, while HDD performance has improved linearly for the same period. Additionally, multi-core CPU designs and virtualization have increased randomness of storage I/Os. These trends have shifted performance bottlenecks to enterprise storage systems. Business critical applications such as online transaction processing, financial data processing and database mining are increasingly limited by storage performance. In client applications, small mobile platforms are leaving little room for batteries while demanding long life out of them. Therefore, reducing both idle and active power consumption has become critical. Additionally, client storage systems are in need of significant performance improvement as well as supporting small robust form factors. Ultimately, client systems are optimizing for best performance/power ratio as well as performance/cost ratio. SSDs promise to address both enterprise and client storage requirements by drastically improving performance while at the same time reducing power. Inside Solid State Drives walks the reader through all the main topics related to SSDs: from NAND Flash to memory controller (hardware and software), from I/O interfaces (PCIe/SAS/SATA) to reliability, from errror correction codes (BCH and LDPC) to encryption, from Flash signal processing to hybrid storage. We hope you enjoy this tour inside Solid State Drives.
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spelling cern-15004302021-04-22T00:00:41Zdoi:10.1007/978-94-007-5146-0http://cds.cern.ch/record/1500430engMicheloni, RinoMarelli, AlessiaEshghi, KamInside Solid State Drives (SSDs)EngineeringSolid State Drives (SSDs) are gaining momentum in enterprise and client applications, replacing Hard Disk Drives (HDDs) by offering higher performance and lower power. In the enterprise, developers of data center server and storage systems have seen CPU performance growing exponentially for the past two decades, while HDD performance has improved linearly for the same period. Additionally, multi-core CPU designs and virtualization have increased randomness of storage I/Os. These trends have shifted performance bottlenecks to enterprise storage systems. Business critical applications such as online transaction processing, financial data processing and database mining are increasingly limited by storage performance. In client applications, small mobile platforms are leaving little room for batteries while demanding long life out of them. Therefore, reducing both idle and active power consumption has become critical. Additionally, client storage systems are in need of significant performance improvement as well as supporting small robust form factors. Ultimately, client systems are optimizing for best performance/power ratio as well as performance/cost ratio. SSDs promise to address both enterprise and client storage requirements by drastically improving performance while at the same time reducing power. Inside Solid State Drives walks the reader through all the main topics related to SSDs: from NAND Flash to memory controller (hardware and software), from I/O interfaces (PCIe/SAS/SATA) to reliability, from errror correction codes (BCH and LDPC) to encryption, from Flash signal processing to hybrid storage. We hope you enjoy this tour inside Solid State Drives.Springeroai:cds.cern.ch:15004302013
spellingShingle Engineering
Micheloni, Rino
Marelli, Alessia
Eshghi, Kam
Inside Solid State Drives (SSDs)
title Inside Solid State Drives (SSDs)
title_full Inside Solid State Drives (SSDs)
title_fullStr Inside Solid State Drives (SSDs)
title_full_unstemmed Inside Solid State Drives (SSDs)
title_short Inside Solid State Drives (SSDs)
title_sort inside solid state drives (ssds)
topic Engineering
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-5146-0
http://cds.cern.ch/record/1500430
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