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Chapter 13:disk Storage and Basic File Structures

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
76 views

Chapter 13:disk Storage and Basic File Structures

Uploaded by

msskjc
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 31

CHAPTER 13:DISK

STORAGE AND BASIC FILE


STRUCTURES

Copyright © 2007 Ramez Elmasri


and Shamkant B. Navathe Disk Storage and Basic File Structures
Storage Hierarchy Includes Two Main
Slide 13-
2
Categories:
 Primary storage.
 This category includes storage media that can be
operated on directly by the computer central
processing unit (CPU)
 Secondary storage.
 This category includes magnetic disks, optical disks,
and tapes.
Storage of Databases
Slide 13-
3

 Most databases are stored permanently on magnetic


disk secondary storage, for the following reasons
 Databases are too large to fit entirely in main memory.
 The circumstances that cause permanent loss of stored
data arise less frequently for disk secondary storage than
for primary storage.
 The cost of storage per unit of data is less for disk than
for primary storage
Secondary Storage Devices:
Slide 13-
4
Disk Devices
 The most basic unit of data on the disk is a single bit of
information
 To code information, bits are grouped into bytes
 The capacity of a disk is the number of bytes it can
store
 Data stored as magnetized areas on magnetic disk
surfaces.
 A disk is single sided if it stores information on only
one of its surfaces and double-sided if both surfaces are
used
 A disk pack contains several magnetic disks connected
to a rotating spindle.
Secondary Storage Devices:
Slide 13-
5
Disk Devices(contd.)
 Disks are divided into concentric circular tracks on each disk
surface.
 Track capacities vary typically from 4 to 50 Kbytes or more
 A track is divided into smaller blocks or sectors
 because it usually contains a large amount of information
 The division of a track into sectors is hard-coded on the disk
surface and cannot be changed.
Secondary Storage Devices:
Slide 13-
6
Disk Devices(contd.)
 A track is divided into blocks.
 The block size B is fixed for each system.
 Typical block sizes range from B=512 bytes to B=4096 bytes.
 Whole blocks are transferred between disk and main memory for
processing.
Secondary Storage Devices:
Slide 13-
7
Disk Devices(contd.)
Secondary Storage Devices:
Slide 13-
8
Disk Devices(contd.)
 A read-write head moves to the track that contains the block
to be transferred.
 Disk rotation moves the block under the read-write head for
reading or writing.
 A physical disk block (hardware) address consists of:
 a cylinder number (imaginary collection of tracks of same radius
from all recorded surfaces)
 the track number or surface number (within the cylinder)
 and block number (within track).
 In many modern disk drives, a single number called LBA
(Logical Block Address)
 The total time needed to locate and transfer an arbitrary block,
given its address, is the sum of the seek time, rotational delay,
and block transfer time
Secondary Storage Devices:
Slide 13-
9
Disk Devices(contd.)

 Reading or writing a disk block is time consuming


because of the seek time s and rotational delay
(latency) rd.
Secondary Storage Devices:
Slide 13-
10
Disk Devices(contd.)
Typical Disk Parameters
Slide 13-
11

(Courtesy of Seagate Technology)


Placing File Records On Disk
Slide 13-
12
Records and Record Types
 Records usually describe entities and their attributes
 A collection of field names and their corresponding
data types constitutes a record type
 Fields themselves may be fixed length or variable
length
 Variable length fields can be mixed into one record:
 Separator characters or length fields are needed so that the
record can be “parsed.”
Placing File Records On Disk
Record Blocking and Spanned Versus Unspanned Records
Slide 13-
13

 Blocking:
 Refers to storing a number of records in one block on
the disk.
 Blocking factor (bfr) refers to the number of
records per block.
 There may be empty space in a block if an integral
number of records do not fit in one block.
 Spanned Records:
 Refers to records that exceed the size of one or more
blocks and hence span a number of blocks.
Placing File Records On Disk
Allocating File Blocks on Disk
Slide 13-
14

 A file is a sequence of records, where each record is a


collection of data values (or data items).
 A file descriptor (or file header) includes information that
describes the file, such as the field names and their data types,
and the addresses of the file blocks on disk.
 Records are stored on disk blocks.
 The blocking factor bfr for a file is the (average) number of
file records stored in a disk block.
 A file can have fixed-length records or variable-length
records.
Placing File Records On
Slide 13-
15
Disk(Contd..)
 Three record storage formats are structured below
as:
 (a) A Fixed –Length record with six fields and
size of 71 bytes
 (b) A record with two variable-length fields and
three fixed length fields
 (c) A variable- field record with three types of
separator characters
Placing File Records On
Slide 13-
16
Disk(Cont..)
Placing File Records On Disk
Allocating File Blocks on Disk(contd.)
Slide 13-
17

 File records can be unspanned or spanned


 Unspanned: no record can span two blocks
 Spanned: a record can be stored in more than one block
 The physical disk blocks that are allocated to hold the records
of a file can be contiguous, linked, or indexed.
 In a file of fixed-length records, all records have the same
format. Usually, unspanned blocking is used with such files.
 Files of variable-length records require additional information
to be stored in each record, such as separator characters and
field types.
 Usually spanned blocking is used with such files.
Placing File Records On Disk
Types of record organization (a) unspanned and
Slide 13-
18
(b) spanned
Operation on Files
Slide 13-
19

 Typical file operations include:


 OPEN: Readies the file for access, and associates a pointer that will refer to a
current file record at each point in time.
 FIND: Searches for the first file record that satisfies a certain condition, and makes
it the current file record.
 FINDNEXT: Searches for the next file record (from the current record) that
satisfies a certain condition, and makes it the current file record.
 READ: Reads the current file record into a program variable.
 INSERT: Inserts a new record into the file & makes it the current file record.
 DELETE: Removes the current file record from the file, usually by marking the
record to indicate that it is no longer valid.
 MODIFY: Changes the values of some fields of the current file record.
 CLOSE: Terminates access to the file.
 REORGANIZE: Reorganizes the file records.
 For example, the records marked deleted are physically removed from the file or a
new organization of the file records is created.
 READ_ORDERED: Read the file blocks in order of a specific field of the file.
Files of Unordered Records
Slide 13-
20
(Heap Files)
 Also called a heap or a pile file.
 New records are inserted at the end of the file.
 A linear search through the file records is
necessary to search for a record.
 This requires reading and searching half the file blocks
on the average, and is hence quite expensive.
 Record insertion is quite efficient.
 Reading the records in order of a particular field
requires sorting the file records.
Files Of Ordered Records (Sorted
Slide 13-
21
Files)
 Also called a sequential file.
 File records are kept sorted by the values of an ordering field.
 Insertion is expensive: records must be inserted in the correct order.
 It is common to keep a separate unordered overflow (or transaction)
file for new records to improve insertion efficiency; this is periodically
merged with the main ordered file.
 A binary search can be used to search for a record on its ordering field
value.
 This requires reading and searching log of the file blocks on the
2
average, an improvement over linear search.
 Reading the records in order of the ordering field is quite efficient.
FILES OF ORDERED RECORDS (SORTED
FILES)(contd.)
Slide 13-
22
Average Access Times
Slide 13-
23

 The following table shows the average access time


to access a specific record for a given type of file
Parallelizing Disk Access using RAID
Slide 13-
24
Technology.
 Secondary storage technology must take steps to
keep up in performance and reliability with
processor technology.
 A major advance in secondary storage technology is
represented by the development of RAID, which
originally stood for Redundant Arrays of
Inexpensive Disks.
 The main goal of RAID is to even out the widely
different rates of performance improvement of disks
against those in memory and microprocessors.
RAID Technology (contd.)
Slide 13-
25

 A natural solution is a large array of small


independent disks acting as a single higher-
performance logical disk.
 A concept called data striping is used, which
utilizes parallelism to improve disk performance.
 Data striping distributes data transparently over
multiple disks to make them appear as a single
large, fast disk.
RAID Technology (contd.)
Slide 13-
26

 Different raid organizations were defined based on different combinations


of the two factors of granularity of data interleaving (striping) and pattern
used to compute redundant information.
 Raid level 0 has no redundant data and hence has the best write
performance at the risk of data loss
 Raid level 1 uses mirrored disks.
 Raid level 2 uses memory-style redundancy by using Hamming codes,
which contain parity bits for distinct overlapping subsets of
components. Level 2 includes both error detection and correction.
 Raid level 3 uses a single parity disk relying on the disk controller to
figure out which disk has failed.
 Raid Levels 4 and 5 use block-level data striping, with level 5
distributing data and parity information across all disks.
 Raid level 6 applies the so-called P + Q redundancy scheme using
Reed-Soloman codes to protect against up to two disk failures by using
just two redundant disks.
Use of RAID Technology (contd.)
Slide 13-
27

 Different raid organizations are being used under different situations


 Raid level 1 (mirrored disks) is the easiest for rebuild of a disk from other disks
 It is used for critical applications like logs
 Raid level 2 uses memory-style redundancy by using Hamming codes, which
contain parity bits for distinct overlapping subsets of components.
 Level 2 includes both error detection and correction.
 Raid level 3 (single parity disks relying on the disk controller to figure out which
disk has failed) and level 5 (block-level data striping) are preferred for Large
volume storage, with level 3 giving higher transfer rates.
 Most popular uses of the RAID technology currently are:
 Level 0 (with striping), Level 1 (with mirroring) and Level 5 with an extra drive for
parity.
 Design Decisions for RAID include:
 Level of RAID, number of disks, choice of parity schemes, and grouping of disks
for block-level striping.
Use of RAID
Technology (contd.)
Slide 13-
28
Trends in Disk Technology
Slide 13-
29
Storage Area Networks
Slide 13-
30

 The demand for higher storage has risen considerably in


recent times.
 Organizations have a need to move from a static fixed data
center oriented operation to a more flexible and dynamic
infrastructure for information processing.
 Thus they are moving to a concept of Storage Area Networks
(SANs).
 In a SAN, online storage peripherals are configured as nodes on
a high-speed network and can be attached and detached from
servers in a very flexible manner.
 This allows storage systems to be placed at longer distances
from the servers and provide different performance and
connectivity options.
Storage Area Networks (contd.)
Slide 13-
31

 Advantages of SANs are:


 Flexible many-to-many connectivity among servers and storage
devices using fiber channel hubs and switches.
 Up to 10km separation between a server and a storage system
using appropriate fiber optic cables.
 Better isolation capabilities allowing non-disruptive addition of
new peripherals and servers.
 SANs face the problem of combining storage options from
multiple vendors and dealing with evolving standards of
storage management software and hardware.

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