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Fall 2004 Colloquium Series Garth
Gibson Dr. Garth Gibson, will talk about Storage Aggregation
for Performance and Availability: The Path from Physical RAID to Virtual
Objects. Almost two decades ago, Dr. Garth Gibson characterized five
ways that multiple small disks could be used to "virtualize" a single
large disk for better cost-performance and availability. Called the
five levels of Redundant Arrays of Inexpensive Disks (RAID), this work
started him on a career of storage systems research. Years later, with
the advent of packetized SCSI over Fibrechannel networks, it became
clear to him that disks would come out from behind servers and become
first class citizens on a variety of networks, increasing parallelism,
addressable storage, and the variety of fault domains. Beginning as
Network Attached Secure Disks (NASD) and evolving into Object Storage
Devices (OSD), such devices virtualize storage extents, encapsulating
layout of variable length related data with extensible attributes and
per-object access control enforced in each device. Now almost ten years
of research has been done in multiple institutions, Garth has turned
to commercializing the concepts in the Panasas Storage Cluster and others
have completed the first round of standardization. Garth Gibson is co-founder and Chief Technology Officer at Panasas Inc. and an associate professor of Computer Science and Electrical and Computer Engineering at Carnegie Mellon University. Garth received a Ph.D. in Computer Science from the University of California at Berkeley in 1991. While at Berkeley, he did the groundwork research and co-wrote the seminal paper on RAID, then Redundant Arrays of Inexpensive Disks, for which he received the 1999 IEEE Reynold B. Johnson Information Storage Award for outstanding contributions in the field of information storage. Joining the faculty at Carnegie Mellon University in 1991, Garth founded the CMU's Parallel Data Laboratory and the Network Attached Storage Device (NASD) working group of the National Storage Industry Consortium (NSIC). His NASD research with CMU and NSIC is a basis for the Storage Networking Industry Association's Object-based Storage Devices (OSD) technical working group, and its sister ANSI T10 OSD working group. Garth sits on a variety of academic and industrial service committees including the Technical Council of the Storage Networking Industry Association and the steering committee of the USENIX Conference on File and Storage Technologies (FAST). IS&T Colloquium Committee Host: Ben Kobler, Sign language interpreter upon request: 301-286-8313 |
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| Information Science & Technology Colloquium Series Responsible NASA Official: Paul Hunter Curator: Patrick Healey + Privacy Policy and Important Notices This file was last modified on Friday, 04-Apr-2008 15:05:56 EDT |
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