scholarly journals A File Allocation Strategy for Energy-Efficient Disk Storage Systems

2008 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ekow J Otoo ◽  
Ekow J. Otoo ◽  
Doron Rotem ◽  
Ali Pinar ◽  
Shi-Chiang Tsao
Author(s):  
Alexander Thomasian

Data storage requirements have consistently increased over time. According to the latest WinterCorp survey (http://www/WinterCorp.com), “The size of the world’s largest databases has tripled every two years since 2001.” With database size in excess of 1 terabyte, there is a clear need for storage systems that are both cost effective and highly reliable. Historically, large databases are implemented on mainframe systems. These systems are large and expensive to purchase and maintain. In recent years, large data warehouse applications are being deployed on Linux and Windows hosts, as replacements for the existing mainframe systems. These systems are significantly less expensive to purchase while requiring less resources to run and maintain. With large databases it is less feasible, and less cost effective, to use tapes for backup and restore. The time required to copy terabytes of data from a database to a serial medium (streaming tape) is measured in hours, which would significantly degrade performance and decreases availability. Alternatives to serial backup include local replication, mirroring, or geoplexing of data. The increasing demands of larger databases must be met by less expensive disk storage systems, which are yet highly reliable and less susceptible to data loss. This article is organized into five sections. The first section provides background information that serves to introduce the concepts of disk arrays. The following three sections detail the concepts used to build complex storage systems. The focus of these sections is to detail: (i) Redundant Arrays of Independent Disks (RAID) arrays; (ii) multilevel RAID (MRAID); (iii) concurrency control and storage transactions. The conclusion contains a brief survey of modular storage prototypes.


Sensors ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
pp. 44 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yi-Han Xu ◽  
Jing-Wei Xie ◽  
Yang-Gang Zhang ◽  
Min Hua ◽  
Wen Zhou

Wireless body area networks (WBANs) have attracted great attention from both industry and academia as a promising technology for continuous monitoring of physiological signals of the human body. As the sensors in WBANs are typically battery-driven and inconvenient to recharge, an energy efficient resource allocation scheme is essential to prolong the lifetime of the networks, while guaranteeing the rigid requirements of quality of service (QoS) of the WBANs in nature. As a possible alternative solution to address the energy efficiency problem, energy harvesting (EH) technology with the capability of harvesting energy from ambient sources can potentially reduce the dependence on the battery supply. Consequently, in this paper, we investigate the resource allocation problem for EH-powered WBANs (EH-WBANs). Our goal is to maximize the energy efficiency of the EH-WBANs with the joint consideration of transmission mode, relay selection, allocated time slot, transmission power, and the energy constraint of each sensor. In view of the characteristic of the EH-WBANs, we formulate the energy efficiency problem as a discrete-time and finite-state Markov decision process (DFMDP), in which allocation strategy decisions are made by a hub that does not have complete and global network information. Owing to the complexity of the problem, we propose a modified Q-learning (QL) algorithm to obtain the optimal allocation strategy. The numerical results validate the effectiveness of the proposed scheme as well as the low computation complexity of the proposed modified Q-learning (QL) algorithm.


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