scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Disk Drive Roadmap from the Thermal Perspective: A Case for Dynamic Thermal Management

TLDR
An integrated disk drive model is presented that captures the close relationships between capacity, performance and thermal characteristics over time and quantifies the drop off in IDR growth rates over the next decade if the authors are to adhere to the thermal envelope of drive design.
Abstract: 
The importance of pushing the performance envelope of disk drives continues to grow, not just in the server market but also in numerous consumer electronics products. One of the most fundamental factors impacting disk drive design is the heat dissipation and its effect on drive reliability, since high temperatures can cause off-track errors, or even head crashes. Until now, drive manufacturers have continued to meet the 40% annual growth target of the internal data rates (IDR) by increasing RPMs, and shrinking platter sizes, both of which have counter-acting effects on the heat dissipation within a drive. As this paper will show, we are getting to a point where it is becoming very difficult to stay on this roadmap. This paper presents an integrated disk drive model that captures the close relationships between capacity, performance and thermal characteristics over time. Using this model, we quantify the drop off in IDR growth rates over the next decade if we are to adhere to the thermal envelope of drive design.We present two mechanisms for buying back some of this IDR loss with Dynamic Thermal Management (DTM). The first DTM technique exploits any available thermal slack, between what the drive was intended to support and the currently lower operating temperature, to ramp up the RPM. The second DTM technique assumes that the drive is only designed for average case behavior, thus allowing higher RPMs than the thermal envelope, and employs dynamic throttling of disk drive activities to remain within this envelope.

read more

Content maybe subject to copyright    Report

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Thermal Modeling, Analysis, and Management in VLSI Circuits: Principles and Methods

TL;DR: A brief discussion of key sources of power dissipation and their temperature relation in CMOS VLSI circuits, and techniques for full-chip temperature calculation with special attention to its implications on the design of high-performance, low-power V LSI circuits is presented.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Mercury and freon: temperature emulation and management for server systems

TL;DR: Mercury, a software suite that accurately emulating temperatures based on simple layout, hardware, and componentutilization data, is introduced that runs the entire software stack natively, enables repeatable experiments, and allows the study of thermal emergencies without harming hardware reliability.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Limiting the power consumption of main memory

TL;DR: This paper proposes four techniques that limit consumption by adjusting the power states of thememory devices, as a function of the load on the memory subsystem, and shows that they can consistently limit power to a pre-established budget.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

HybridStore: A Cost-Efficient, High-Performance Storage System Combining SSDs and HDDs

TL;DR: A hybrid system called Hybrid Store is designed and evaluated to provide improved capacity planning technique to administrators with the overall goal of operating within cost-budgets and improved performance/lifetime guarantees during episodes of deviations from expected workloads through two novel mechanisms: write-regulation and fragmentation busting.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

C-Oracle: Predictive thermal management for data centers

TL;DR: This paper proposes C-Oracle, a software infrastructure for Internet services that dynamically predicts the temperature and performance impact of different thermal management reactions into the future, allowing the thermal management policy to select the best reaction at each point in time.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

A case for redundant arrays of inexpensive disks (RAID)

TL;DR: Five levels of RAIDs are introduced, giving their relative cost/performance, and a comparison to an IBM 3380 and a Fujitsu Super Eagle is compared.
Journal ArticleDOI

Polynomial Codes Over Certain Finite Fields

TL;DR: A mapping of m symbols into 2 symbols will be shown to be (2 m)/2 or ( 2 m 1)/2 symbol correcting, depending on whether m is even or odd.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Temperature-aware microarchitecture

TL;DR: HotSpot is described, an accurate yet fast model based on an equivalent circuit of thermal resistances and capacitances that correspond to microarchitecture blocks and essential aspects of the thermal package that shows that power metrics are poor predictors of temperature, and that sensor imprecision has a substantial impact on the performance of DTM.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Dynamic thermal management for high-performance microprocessors

TL;DR: This work investigates dynamic thermal management as a technique to control CPU power dissipation and explores the tradeoffs between several mechanisms for responding to periods of thermal trauma and the effects of hardware and software implementations.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Informed prefetching and caching

TL;DR: This paper shows how to use application-disclosed access patterns (hints) to expose and exploit I/O parallelism and to allocate dynamically file buffers among three competing demands: prefetching hinted blocks, caching hinted blocks for reuse, and caching recently used data for unhinted accesses.