Architectural support for persistent memory systems
The long stated vision of persistent memory is set to be realized with the release of 3D XPoint memory by Intel and Micron. Persistent memory, as the name suggests, amalgamates the persistence (non-volatility) property of storage devices (like disks) with byte-addressability and low latency of memor...
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Format: | Dissertation |
Language: | English |
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ProQuest Dissertations & Theses
01-01-2018
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Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | The long stated vision of persistent memory is set to be realized with the release of 3D XPoint memory by Intel and Micron. Persistent memory, as the name suggests, amalgamates the persistence (non-volatility) property of storage devices (like disks) with byte-addressability and low latency of memory. These properties of persistent memory coupled with its accessibility through the processor load/store interface enable programmers to design in-memory persistent data structures. An important challenge in designing persistent memory systems is to provide support for maintaining crash consistency of these in-memory data structures. Crash consistency is necessary to ensure the correct recovery of program state after a crash. Ordering is a primitive that can be used to design crash consistent programs. It provides guarantees on the order of updates to persistent memory. Atomicity can also be used to design crash consistent programs via two primitives. First, as an atomic durability primitive which guarantees that in the presence of system crashes updates are made durable atomically, which means either all or none of the updates are made durable. Second, in the form of ACID transactions that guarantee atomic visibility and atomic durability. Existing systems do not support ordering, let alone atomic durability or ACID. In fact, these systems implement various performance enhancing optimizations that deliberately reorder updates to memory. Moreover, software in these systems cannot explicitly control the movement of data from volatile cache to persistent memory. Therefore, any ordering requirement has to be enforced synchronously which degrades performance because program execution is stalled waiting for updates to reach persistent memory. This thesis aims to provide the design principles and efficient implementations for three crash consistency primitives: ordering, atomic durability and ACID transactions. A set of persistency models have been proposed recently which provide support for the ordering primitive. This thesis extends the taxonomy of these models by adding buffering, which allows the hardware to enforce ordering in the background, as a new layer of classification. It then goes on show how the existing implementation of a buffered model degenerates to a performance inefficient non-buffered model because of the presence of conflicts and proposes efficient solutions to eliminate or limit the impact of these conflicts with minimal hardware modifications. This thesis also proposes the first implementation of a buffered model for a server class processor with multi-banked caches and multiple memory controllers. Write ahead logging (WAL) is a commonly used approach to provide atomic durability. This thesis argues that existing implementations ofWAL in software are not only inefficient, because of the fine grained ordering dependencies, but also waste precious execution cycles to implement a fundamentally data movement task. It then proposes ATOM, a hardware log manager based on undo logging that performs the logging operation out of the critical path. This thesis presents the design principles behind ATOM and two techniques that optimize its performance. These techniques enable the memory controller to enforce fine grained ordering required for logging and to even perform logging in some cases. In doing so, ATOM significantly reduces processor stall cycles and improves performance. The most commonly used abstraction employed to atomically update persistent data is that of durable transactions with ACID (Atomicity, Consistency, Isolation and Durability) semantics that make updates within a transaction both visible and durable atomically. As a final contribution, this thesis tackles the problem of providing efficient support for durable transactions in hardware by integrating hardware support for atomic durability with hardware transactional memory (HTM). It proposes DHTM (durable hardware transactional memory) in which durability is considered as a first class design constraint. DHTM guarantees atomic durability via hardware redo-logging, and integrates this logging support with a commercial HTM to provide atomic visibility. Furthermore, DHTM leverages the same logging infrastructure to extend the supported transaction size, from being L1-limited to the LLC, with minor changes to the coherence protocol. |
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