Raid 4 & 5 Illustration
14.8 Tertiary-Storage Structure
Tertiary Storage Devices
• Low cost is the defining characteristic of tertiary storage.
• Generally, tertiary storage is built using removable media
• Common examples of removable media are floppy disks and CD-ROMs; other types are available.
Removable Disks
• Floppy disk — thin flexible disk coated with magnetic material, enclosed in a protective plastic case.
– Most floppies hold about 1 MB; similar technology is used for removable disks that hold more than 1 GB.
– Removable magnetic disks can be nearly as fast as hard disks, but they are at a greater risk of damage from exposure.
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.
• Optical disks do not use magnetism; they employ special materials that are altered by laser light.
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.
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 Issues
• Major OS jobs are to manage physical devices and to present a virtual machine abstraction to applications
• For hard disks, the OS provides two abstraction:
– Raw device – an array of data blocks.
– File system – the OS queues and schedules the interleaved requests from several applications.
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 tape 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.
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.
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.
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
Speed
• Two aspects of speed in tertiary storage are bandwidth and latency.
• Bandwidth is measured in bytes per second.
– Sustained bandwidth – average data rate during a large transfer; # of bytes/transfer time.
Data rate when the data stream is actually flowing.
– Effective bandwidth – average over the entire I/O time, including seek or locate, and cartridge switching. Drive’s overall data rate.
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
Reliability
• A fixed disk drive is likely to be more reliable than a removable disk or tape drive.
• An optical cartridge is likely to be more reliable than a magnetic disk or tape.
• A head crash in a fixed hard disk generally destroys the
data, whereas the failure of a tape drive or optical disk drive often leaves the data cartridge unharmed.
Cost
• Main memory is much more expensive than disk storage
• The cost per megabyte of hard disk storage is competitive with magnetic tape if only one tape is used per drive.
• The cheapest tape drives and the cheapest disk drives have had about the same storage capacity over the years.
• Tertiary storage gives a cost savings only when the number of cartridges is considerably larger than the number of
drives.