Persistent Memcached: Bringing Legacy Code to Byte-Addressable Persistent Memory
Persistent Memcached: Bringing Legacy Code to Byte-Addressable Persistent Memory
11 May 2017
We report our experience building and evaluating pmemcached, a version of memcached ported to byteaddressable persistent memory. Persistent memory is expected to not only improve overall performance of applications’ persistence tier, but also vastly reduce the “warm up” time needed for applications after a restart. We decided to test this hypothesis on memcached, a popular key-value store. We took the extreme view of persisting memcached’s entire state, resulting in a virtually instantaneous warm up phase. Since memcached is already optimized for DRAM, we expected our port to be a straightforward engineering effort. However, the effort turned out to be surprisingly complex during which we encountered several non-trivial problems that challenged the boundaries of memcached’s architecture. We detail these experiences and corresponding lessons learned.
Venue : 9th USENIX Workshop on Hot Topics in Storage and File Systems (HotStorage '17)
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