CH 12
CH 12
Systems
Operating System Concepts – 8th Edition 12.2 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Objectives
Describe the physical structure of secondary and tertiary
storage devices and the resulting effects on the uses of the
devices
Explain the performance characteristics of mass-storage
devices
Discuss operating-system services provided for mass
storage, including RAID and HSM
Operating System Concepts – 8th Edition 12.3 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Overview of Mass Storage Structure
Magnetic disks provide bulk of secondary storage of modern computers
Drives rotate at 60 to 200 times per second
Transfer rate is rate at which data flow between drive and computer
Positioning time (random-access time) is time to move disk arm to
desired cylinder (seek time) and time for desired sector to rotate
under the disk head (rotational latency)
Head crash results from disk head making contact with the disk
surface
That’s bad
Disks can be removable
Drive attached to computer via I/O bus
Busses vary, including EIDE, ATA, SATA, USB, Fibre Channel, SCSI
Host controller in computer uses bus to talk to disk controller built
into drive or storage array
Operating System Concepts – 8th Edition 12.4 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Moving-head Disk Mechanism
Operating System Concepts – 8th Edition 12.5 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Overview of Mass Storage Structure (Cont.)
Magnetic tape
Was early secondary-storage medium
Relatively permanent and holds large quantities of data
Access time slow
Random access ~1000 times slower than disk
Mainly used for backup, storage of infrequently-used data,
transfer medium between systems
Kept in spool and wound or rewound past read-write head
Once data under head, transfer rates comparable to disk
20-200GB typical storage
Common technologies are 4mm, 8mm, 19mm, LTO-2 and
SDLT
Operating System Concepts – 8th Edition 12.6 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Disk Structure
Disk drives are addressed as large 1-dimensional arrays of
logical blocks, where the logical block is the smallest unit of
transfer.
Operating System Concepts – 8th Edition 12.7 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Disk Attachment
Host-attached storage accessed through I/O ports talking to
I/O busses
SCSI itself is a bus, up to 16 devices on one cable, SCSI
initiator requests operation and SCSI targets perform tasks
Each target can have up to 8 logical units (disks attached
to device controller
FC is high-speed serial architecture
Can be switched fabric with 24-bit address space – the
basis of storage area networks (SANs) in which many
hosts attach to many storage units
Can be arbitrated loop (FC-AL) of 126 devices
Operating System Concepts – 8th Edition 12.8 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Network-Attached Storage
Network-attached storage (NAS) is storage made available
over a network rather than over a local connection (such as
a bus)
NFS and CIFS are common protocols
Implemented via remote procedure calls (RPCs) between
host and storage
New iSCSI protocol uses IP network to carry the SCSI
protocol
Operating System Concepts – 8th Edition 12.9 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Storage Area Network
Common in large storage environments (and becoming more
common)
Multiple hosts attached to multiple storage arrays - flexible
Operating System Concepts – 8th Edition 12.10 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Disk Scheduling
The operating system is responsible for using hardware
efficiently — for the disk drives, this means having a fast
access time and disk bandwidth.
Access time has two major components
Seek time is the time for the disk are to move the heads
to the cylinder containing the desired sector.
Rotational latency is the additional time waiting for the
disk to rotate the desired sector to the disk head.
Minimize seek time
Seek time seek distance
Disk bandwidth is the total number of bytes transferred,
divided by the total time between the first request for
service and the completion of the last transfer.
Operating System Concepts – 8th Edition 12.11 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Disk Scheduling (Cont.)
Several algorithms exist to schedule the servicing of disk I/O
requests.
We illustrate them with a request queue (0-199).
Head pointer 53
Operating System Concepts – 8th Edition 12.12 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
FCFS
Operating System Concepts – 8th Edition 12.13 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
SSTF
Selects the request with the minimum seek time from the
current head position.
SSTF scheduling is a form of SJF scheduling; may cause
starvation of some requests.
Illustration shows total head movement of 236 cylinders.
Operating System Concepts – 8th Edition 12.14 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
SSTF (Cont.)
Operating System Concepts – 8th Edition 12.15 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
SCAN
The disk arm starts at one end of the disk, and moves toward
the other end, servicing requests until it gets to the other
end of the disk, where the head movement is reversed and
servicing continues.
Sometimes called the elevator algorithm.
Illustration shows total head movement of 208 cylinders.
Operating System Concepts – 8th Edition 12.16 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
SCAN (Cont.)
Operating System Concepts – 8th Edition 12.17 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
C-SCAN
Provides a more uniform wait time than SCAN.
The head moves from one end of the disk to the other.
servicing requests as it goes. When it reaches the other end,
however, it immediately returns to the beginning of the disk,
without servicing any requests on the return trip.
Treats the cylinders as a circular list that wraps around from
the last cylinder to the first one.
Operating System Concepts – 8th Edition 12.18 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
C-SCAN (Cont.)
Operating System Concepts – 8th Edition 12.19 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
C-LOOK
Version of C-SCAN
Arm only goes as far as the last request in each direction,
then reverses direction immediately, without first going all
the way to the end of the disk.
Operating System Concepts – 8th Edition 12.20 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
C-LOOK (Cont.)
Operating System Concepts – 8th Edition 12.21 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Selecting a Disk-Scheduling Algorithm
SSTF is common and has a natural appeal
SCAN and C-SCAN perform better for systems that place a
heavy load on the disk.
Performance depends on the number and types of requests.
Requests for disk service can be influenced by the file-
allocation method.
The disk-scheduling algorithm should be written as a
separate module of the operating system, allowing it to be
replaced with a different algorithm if necessary.
Either SSTF or LOOK is a reasonable choice for the default
algorithm.
Operating System Concepts – 8th Edition 12.22 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Disk Management
Low-level formatting, or physical formatting — Dividing a disk
into sectors that the disk controller can read and write.
To use a disk to hold files, the operating system still needs
to record its own data structures on the disk.
Partition the disk into one or more groups of cylinders.
Logical formatting or “making a file system”.
Boot block initializes system.
The bootstrap is stored in ROM.
Bootstrap loader program.
Methods such as sector sparing used to handle bad blocks.
Operating System Concepts – 8th Edition 12.23 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Booting from a Disk in Windows 2000
Operating System Concepts – 8th Edition 12.24 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Swap-Space Management
Swap-space — Virtual memory uses disk space as an
extension of main memory.
Swap-space can be carved out of the normal file system,or,
more commonly, it can be in a separate disk partition.
Swap-space management
4.3BSD allocates swap space when process starts; holds
text segment (the program) and data segment.
Kernel uses swap maps to track swap-space use.
Solaris 2 allocates swap space only when a page is
forced out of physical memory, not when the virtual
memory page is first created.
Operating System Concepts – 8th Edition 12.25 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Data Structures for Swapping on Linux
Systems
Operating System Concepts – 8th Edition 12.26 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
RAID Structure
RAID – multiple disk drives provides reliability via
redundancy.
Operating System Concepts – 8th Edition 12.27 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
RAID (cont)
Several improvements in disk-use techniques involve the use
of multiple disks working cooperatively.
Operating System Concepts – 8th Edition 12.28 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
RAID Levels
Operating System Concepts – 8th Edition 12.29 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
RAID (0 + 1) and (1 + 0)
Operating System Concepts – 8th Edition 12.30 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Stable-Storage Implementation
Write-ahead log scheme requires stable storage.
Operating System Concepts – 8th Edition 12.31 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Tertiary Storage Devices
Low cost is the defining characteristic of tertiary storage.
Operating System Concepts – 8th Edition 12.32 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Removable Disks
Floppy disk — thin flexible disk coated with magnetic
material, enclosed in a protective plastic case.
Operating System Concepts – 8th Edition 12.33 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Removable Disks (Cont.)
A magneto-optic disk records data on a rigid platter coated
with magnetic material.
Laser heat is used to amplify a large, weak magnetic field
to record a bit.
Laser light is also used to read data (Kerr effect).
The magneto-optic head flies much farther from the disk
surface than a magnetic disk head, and the magnetic
material is covered with a protective layer of plastic or
glass; resistant to head crashes.
Operating System Concepts – 8th Edition 12.34 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
WORM Disks
The data on read-write disks can be modified over and over.
WORM (“Write Once, Read Many Times”) disks can be written
only once.
Thin aluminum film sandwiched between two glass or plastic
platters.
To write a bit, the drive uses a laser light to burn a small
hole through the aluminum; information can be destroyed by
not altered.
Very durable and reliable.
Read Only disks, such ad CD-ROM and DVD, com from the
factory with the data pre-recorded.
Operating System Concepts – 8th Edition 12.35 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Tapes
Compared to a disk, a tape is less expensive and holds more
data, but random access is much slower.
Tape is an economical medium for purposes that do not
require fast random access, e.g., backup copies of disk data,
holding huge volumes of data.
Large tape installations typically use robotic tape changers
that move tapes between tape drives and storage slots in a
tape library.
stacker – library that holds a few tapes
silo – library that holds thousands of tapes
A disk-resident file can be archived to tape for low cost
storage; the computer can stage it back into disk storage for
active use.
Operating System Concepts – 8th Edition 12.36 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Operating System Issues
Major OS jobs are to manage physical devices and to present
a virtual machine abstraction to applications
Operating System Concepts – 8th Edition 12.37 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Application Interface
Most OSs handle removable disks almost exactly like fixed
disks — a new cartridge is formatted and an empty file
system is generated on the disk.
Tapes are presented as a raw storage medium, i.e., and
application does not not open a file on the tape, it opens the
whole tape drive as a raw device.
Usually the tape drive is reserved for the exclusive use of
that application.
Since the OS does not provide file system services, the
application must decide how to use the array of blocks.
Since every application makes up its own rules for how to
organize a tape, a tape full of data can generally only be
used by the program that created it.
Operating System Concepts – 8th Edition 12.38 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Tape Drives
The basic operations for a tape drive differ from those of a
disk drive.
locate positions the tape to a specific logical block, not an
entire track (corresponds to seek).
The read position operation returns the logical block number
where the tape head is.
The space operation enables relative motion.
Tape drives are “append-only” devices; updating a block in
the middle of the tape also effectively erases everything
beyond that block.
An EOT mark is placed after a block that is written.
Operating System Concepts – 8th Edition 12.39 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
File Naming
The issue of naming files on removable media is especially
difficult when we want to write data on a removable
cartridge on one computer, and then use the cartridge in
another computer.
Contemporary OSs generally leave the name space problem
unsolved for removable media, and depend on applications
and users to figure out how to access and interpret the data.
Some kinds of removable media (e.g., CDs) are so well
standardized that all computers use them the same way.
Operating System Concepts – 8th Edition 12.40 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Hierarchical Storage Management (HSM)
A hierarchical storage system extends the storage hierarchy
beyond primary memory and secondary storage to
incorporate tertiary storage — usually implemented as a
jukebox of tapes or removable disks.
Usually incorporate tertiary storage by extending the file
system.
Small and frequently used files remain on disk.
Large, old, inactive files are archived to the jukebox.
HSM is usually found in supercomputing centers and other
large installations that have enormous volumes of data.
Operating System Concepts – 8th Edition 12.41 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Speed
Two aspects of speed in tertiary storage are bandwidth and
latency.
Operating System Concepts – 8th Edition 12.42 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Speed (Cont.)
Access latency – amount of time needed to locate data.
Access time for a disk – move the arm to the selected
cylinder and wait for the rotational latency; < 35
milliseconds.
Access on tape requires winding the tape reels until the
selected block reaches the tape head; tens or hundreds of
seconds.
Generally say that random access within a tape cartridge
is about a thousand times slower than random access on
disk.
The low cost of tertiary storage is a result of having many
cheap cartridges share a few expensive drives.
A removable library is best devoted to the storage of
infrequently used data, because the library can only satisfy a
relatively small number of I/O requests per hour.
Operating System Concepts – 8th Edition 12.43 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Reliability
A fixed disk drive is likely to be more reliable than a
removable disk or tape drive.
Operating System Concepts – 8th Edition 12.44 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Cost
Main memory is much more expensive than disk storage
The cheapest tape drives and the cheapest disk drives have
had about the same storage capacity over the years.
Operating System Concepts – 8th Edition 12.45 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Price per Megabyte of DRAM, From 1981 to 2004
Operating System Concepts – 8th Edition 12.46 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Price per Megabyte of Magnetic Hard Disk, From 1981 to 2004
Operating System Concepts – 8th Edition 12.47 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Price per Megabyte of a Tape Drive, From 1984-2000
Operating System Concepts – 8th Edition 12.48 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
End of Chapter 12