File System Level Circularity Requirement

Author(s):  
Mukhtar Azeem ◽  
Majid Iqbal Khan ◽  
Arfan Nazir
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Armando Fandango ◽  
William Rivera

Scientific Big Data being gathered at exascale needs to be stored, retrieved and manipulated. The storage stack for scientific Big Data includes a file system at the system level for physical organization of the data, and a file format and input/output (I/O) system at the application level for logical organization of the data; both of them of high-performance variety for exascale. The high-performance file system is designed with concurrent access, high-speed transmission and fault tolerance characteristics. High-performance file formats and I/O are designed to allow parallel and distributed applications with easy and fast access to Big Data. These specialized file formats make it easier to store and access Big Data for scientific visualization and predictive analytics. This chapter provides a brief review of the characteristics of high-performance file systems such as Lustre and GPFS, and high-performance file formats such as HDF5, NetCDF, MPI-IO, and HDFS.


Author(s):  
Antonio Savoldi ◽  
Paolo Gubian

This chapter is aimed at introducing SIM and USIM card forensics, which pertains to the Small Scale Digital Device Forensics (SSDDF) (Harril, & Mislan, 2007) field. Particularly, we would like to pinpoint what follows. First, we will introduce the smart card world, giving a sufficiently detailed description regarding the main physical and logical main building blocks. Then we will give a general overview on the extraction of the standard part of the file system. Moreover, we will present an effective methodology to acquire all the observable memory content, that is, the whole set of files which represent the full file system of such devices. Finally, we will discuss some potential cases of data hiding at the file system level, presenting at the same time a detailed and useful procedure used by forensics practitioners to deal with such a problem.


2015 ◽  
Vol 42 (6) ◽  
pp. 691-698
Author(s):  
Changhee Han ◽  
Junhee Ryu ◽  
Dongeun Lee ◽  
Kyungtae Kang ◽  
Heonshik Shin
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Cheol-Oh Kang ◽  
Jong-Jin Won ◽  
Sung-Jin Park ◽  
Jea-Cheol Ryou
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Taeseok Kim ◽  
Youjip Won ◽  
Doohan Kim ◽  
Kern Koh ◽  
Yong H. Shin
Keyword(s):  

2016 ◽  
Vol 8 (3) ◽  
pp. 223-228 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thi Thu Giang Tran ◽  
Duc Quang Le ◽  
Trung Dung Tran

Author(s):  
Meghan A. Fisher ◽  
Pádraig Ó. Conbhuí ◽  
Cathal Ó. Brion ◽  
Jean-Thomas Acquaviva ◽  
Seán Delaney ◽  
...  

Seismic data-sets are extremely large and are broken into data files, ranging in size from 100s of GiBs to 10s of TiBs and larger. The parallel I/O for these files is complex due to the amount of data along with varied and multiple access patterns within individual files. Properties of legacy file formats, such as the de-facto standard SEG-Y, also contribute to the decrease in developer productivity while working with these files. SEG-Y files embed their own internal layout which could lead to conflict with traditional, file-system-level layout optimization schemes. Additionally, as seismic files continue to increase in size, memory bottlenecks will be exacerbated, resulting in the need for smart I/O optimization not only to increase the efficiency of read/writes, but to manage memory usage as well. The ExSeisDat (Extreme-Scale Seismic Data) set of libraries addresses these problems through the development and implementation of easy to use, object oriented libraries that are portable and open source with bindings available in multiple languages. The lower level parallel I/O library, ExSeisPIOL (Extreme-Scale Seismic Parallel I/O Library), targets SEG-Y and other proprietary formats, simplifying I/O by internally interfacing MPI-I/O and other I/O interfaces. The I/O is explicitly handled; end users only need to define the memory limits, decomposition of I/O across processes, and data access patterns when reading and writing data. ExSeisPIOL bridges the layout gap between the SEG-Y file structure and file system organization. The higher level parallel seismic workflow library, ExSeisFlow (Extreme-Scale Seismic workFlow), leverages ExSeisPIOL, further simplifying I/O by implicitly handling all I/O parameters, thus allowing geophysicists to focus on domain-specific development. Operations in ExSeisFlow focus on prestack processing and can be performed on single traces, individual gathers, and across entire surveys, including out of core sorting, binning, filtering, and transforming. To optimize memory management, the workflow only reads in data pertinent to the operations being performed instead of an entire file. A smart caching system manages the read data, discarding it when no longer needed in the workflow. As the libraries are optimized to handle spatial and temporal locality, they are a natural fit to burst buffer technologies, particularly DDN’s Infinite Memory Engine (IME) system. With appropriate access semantics or through the direct exploitation of the low-level interfaces, the ExSeisDat stack on IME delivers a significant improvement to I/O performance over standalone parallel file systems like Lustre.


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