English

VAT: Asymptotic Cost Analysis for Multi-Level Key-Value Stores

Distributed, Parallel, and Cluster Computing 2020-03-03 v1 Databases Data Structures and Algorithms

Abstract

Over the past years, there has been an increasing number of key-value (KV) store designs, each optimizing for a different set of requirements. Furthermore, with the advancements of storage technology the design space of KV stores has become even more complex. More recent KV-store designs target fast storage devices, such as SSDs and NVM. Most of these designs aim to reduce amplification during data reorganization by taking advantage of device characteristics. However, until today most analysis of KV-store designs is experimental and limited to specific design points. This makes it difficult to compare tradeoffs across different designs, find optimal configurations and guide future KV-store design. In this paper, we introduce the Variable Amplification- Throughput analysis (VAT) to calculate insert-path amplification and its impact on multi-level KV-store performance.We use VAT to express the behavior of several existing design points and to explore tradeoffs that are not possible or easy to measure experimentally. VAT indicates that by inserting randomness in the insert-path, KV stores can reduce amplification by more than 10x for fast storage devices. Techniques, such as key-value separation and tiering compaction, reduce amplification by 10x and 5x, respectively. Additionally, VAT predicts that the advancements in device technology towards NVM, reduces the benefits from both using key-value separation and tiering.

Cite

@article{arxiv.2003.00103,
  title  = {VAT: Asymptotic Cost Analysis for Multi-Level Key-Value Stores},
  author = {Nikos Batsaras and Giorgos Saloustros and Anastasios Papagiannis and Panagiota Fatourou and Angelos Bilas},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2003.00103},
  year   = {2020}
}
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