We present a disk array architecture that does not require users to perform any maintenance tasks over the expected lifetime of the array. Preliminary results indicate that the key factor in the feasibility of our design is the failure rate of unused spare disks. As long as these rates remain negligible, zero maintenance disk arrays with at least 77 disks can provide a five-year reliability of five nines (99.999 percent) with a space overhead comparable to that of mirroring. If this is not the case, we would need between 64 and 70 percent extra spare disks to achieve the same five-year reliability, which would result in a higher space overhead. © 2013 IEEE
We present a disk array organization that adapts itself to successive disk failures. When all disks ...
Abstract: Disk arrays were proposed in the 1980s as a way to use parallelism between multiple disks ...
The performance of traditional RAID Level 5 arrays is, for many applications, unacceptably poor whil...
Abstract—As the prices of magnetic storage continue to decrease, the cost of replacing failed disks ...
Abstract—As the prices of magnetic storage continue to decrease, the cost of replacing failed disks ...
Redundancy based on a parity encoding has been proposed for insuring that disk arrays provide highly...
Disk arrays are commonly designed to ensure that stored data will always be able to withstand a disk...
Today's computer systems entrust the bulk of their data to disk drives. This data must be reliably s...
Magnetic disks are the least reliable component of most computer systems. In addition, their failure...
Abstract—Disk failure rates vary so widely among different makes and models that designing storage s...
Abstract—Disk drives are known to fail at a higher rate during their first year of operation than du...
Disk scrubbing periodically scans the contents of a disk array to detect the presence of irrecoverab...
Abstract: Disk arrays were proposed in the 1980s as a way to use parallelism between multiple disks ...
There exists a wide variety of applications in which data availability must be continuous, that is, ...
Abstract — RAID has long been established as an effective way to provide highly reliable as well as ...
We present a disk array organization that adapts itself to successive disk failures. When all disks ...
Abstract: Disk arrays were proposed in the 1980s as a way to use parallelism between multiple disks ...
The performance of traditional RAID Level 5 arrays is, for many applications, unacceptably poor whil...
Abstract—As the prices of magnetic storage continue to decrease, the cost of replacing failed disks ...
Abstract—As the prices of magnetic storage continue to decrease, the cost of replacing failed disks ...
Redundancy based on a parity encoding has been proposed for insuring that disk arrays provide highly...
Disk arrays are commonly designed to ensure that stored data will always be able to withstand a disk...
Today's computer systems entrust the bulk of their data to disk drives. This data must be reliably s...
Magnetic disks are the least reliable component of most computer systems. In addition, their failure...
Abstract—Disk failure rates vary so widely among different makes and models that designing storage s...
Abstract—Disk drives are known to fail at a higher rate during their first year of operation than du...
Disk scrubbing periodically scans the contents of a disk array to detect the presence of irrecoverab...
Abstract: Disk arrays were proposed in the 1980s as a way to use parallelism between multiple disks ...
There exists a wide variety of applications in which data availability must be continuous, that is, ...
Abstract — RAID has long been established as an effective way to provide highly reliable as well as ...
We present a disk array organization that adapts itself to successive disk failures. When all disks ...
Abstract: Disk arrays were proposed in the 1980s as a way to use parallelism between multiple disks ...
The performance of traditional RAID Level 5 arrays is, for many applications, unacceptably poor whil...