Sciweavers

USENIX
1990

Efficient User-Level File Cache Management on the Sun Vnode Interface

13 years 5 months ago
Efficient User-Level File Cache Management on the Sun Vnode Interface
In developing a distributed file system, there are several good reasons for implementing the client file cache manager as a user-level process. These include ease of implementation, increased portability, and minimal impact on kernel size. For reasons of compatibility it is also desirable to use a standard file intercept mechanism on the client. The Sun VFS/Vnode file system interface is such a standard. However, this interface is designed for kernel-based file systems, and a user-level cache manager that used the Vnode mechanism would pay a large performance penalty due to the high number of kernel to cache manager context switches per file system call. This paper describes our solution to the problem for the Coda file system. By using a relatively small amount of kernel code to cache critical information, we are able to retain the much larger and more complex components of the Coda cache manager in a user level process. The measurements of Coda presented here confirm the performance...
David C. Steere, James J. Kistler, Mahadev Satyana
Added 07 Nov 2010
Updated 07 Nov 2010
Type Conference
Year 1990
Where USENIX
Authors David C. Steere, James J. Kistler, Mahadev Satyanarayanan
Comments (0)