Gibson G.A.; et. al., \File server scaling with network-attached secure disks," 1997 ACM International Conference on Measurement and Modeling of Computer Systems (SIGMETRICS 97), p. 272-84, Seattle, WA, June 1997. 59 BIBLIOGRAPHY 60

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Phoenix: A Fault-tolerant Real-time Network Attached Storage Device - Raniwala (2000)   (Correct)

....high performance LAN technology. 1.2 Phoenix Phoenix is a Linux based network attached storage device built from o the shelf PC hardware, Fast Ethernet adapter and a set of UltraSCSI disks. In addition to a lowlevel object based Application Programming Interface (API) similar to NetSCSI [7], Phoenix supports the following four unique features not found in existing research and commercial NASD systems: It supports disk access requests with guaranteed Quality of Service (QoS) speci cally, disk bandwidth guarantees. Such QoS guarantees are essential to multimedia applications. ....

....any host involvement. 2.2 Separation of Metadata Processing and Disk Accesses The idea of separating high level le system processing from low level storage management opened up the possibility of customized optimization for le metadata processing and le data movement. The NASD project at CMU [6, 7] focused on the reduction of the le server load by providing clients an object based access interface, which is more general and exible than the le based and block based interfaces supported by le systems and disk devices, respectively. This project also addressed the important security issues ....

Gibson G.A.; et. al., \File server scaling with network-attached secure disks," 1997 ACM International Conference on Measurement and Modeling of Computer Systems (SIGMETRICS 97), p. 272-84, Seattle, WA, June 1997. 59 BIBLIOGRAPHY 60

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