- With multiple disks, we can improve the transfer rate as well (or instead) by striping data across the disks.
- In its simplest form, data striping consists of splitting the bits of each byte across multiple disks; such striping is called
bit-level striping.
- For example, if we have an array of eight disks, we write bit of each byte to disk .
- The array of eight disks can be treated as a single disk with sectors that are eight times the normal size and, more important that have eight times the access rate.
- Parallelism in a disk system, as achieved through striping, has two main goals:
- Increase the throughput of multiple small accesses (that is, page accesses) by load balancing.
- Reduce the response time of large accesses.
Cem Ozdogan
2010-05-25