| By Martin Petersen | Article Rating: |
|
| January 3, 2008 02:00 PM EST | Reads: |
11,104 |
Data corruption is an insidious problem in storage. While there are many forms of
corruption, there are also many ways to prevent them. For example, enterprise
class servers use error checking and correcting caches and memory to protect
against single and double bit errors. System buses have similar protective
measures such as parity. Communications going over the network are protected by
checksums.
On the
storage side many installations employ RAID (Redundant Array of Inexpensive
Disk) technology to protect against disk failure. In the case of hardware RAID,
the array firmware will often use advanced checksumming techniques and media
scrubbing to detect and potentially correct errors. The disk drives also
feature sophisticated error corrective measures, and storage protocols such as
Fibre Channel and iSCSI feature a Cyclic Redundancy Check (CRC) that guards
against data corruption on the wire.
At the top of the I/O stack, modern filesystems such as Oracle's btrfs use checksumming techniques on both data and filesystem metadata. This allows the filesystem code to detect data that has gone bad either on disk or in transit. The filesystem can then take corrective action, fail the I/O request, or notify the user.
A common trait in most of the existing protective measures is that they work in their own isolated domains or at best between two adjacent nodes in the I/O path. There has been no common method for ensuring true end-to-end data integrity…until now. Before describing this new technology in detail, let’s look at how data corruption is handled by currently shipping products.
Published January 3, 2008 Reads 11,104
Copyright © 2008 SYS-CON Media, Inc. — All Rights Reserved.
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More Stories By Martin Petersen
Martin K. Petersen has been involved in Linux development since the early nineties. He has worked on PA-RISC and IA-64 Linux ports for HP as well as the XFS filesystem and the Altix kernel for SGI. Martin works in Oracle's Linux Engineering group where he focuses on enterprise storage technologies.
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