CS Seminar: An Overview
of Emerging New Memory Technologies and Their
Implications for System Software
Tuesday, August 20 2013, 11:00 AM - noon
Room 3507, Nguyen Engineering Building
Sam Noh
School of Computer and Information Engineering, Hong-Ik
University, South Korea
Abstract
New memory technologies which have characteristics of both
a storage device, with its non-volatilty, and conventional
DRAM, with byte addressability, are currently being
developed by all major semiconductor companies. In this
talk, I will give an overview of the so-called next
generation memory technology arena, briefly discussing the
characteristics of the various next generation memory
technologies that are in development. Then, and more
importantly, I will discuss the system software issues
that we may have to revisit with the advent of these new
types of memory. Finally, as an example of its use, I will
present one recent work, which we call UBJ (Unioning of
the Buffer cache and Journaling), that provides a simple
and yet elegant way of exploiting the non- volatile
characteritic of next generation memory for
performance and reliability enhancements.
*The paper where UBJ is proposed received the best paper
award at the 11th USENIX Conference on File and Storage
Technologies (FAST’13).
Speaker's Bio
Sam H. Noh received the BS degree in computer engineering
from the Seoul National University, Korea in 1986, and the
PhD degree from the Department of Computer Science,
University of Maryland at College Park in 1993. He held a
visiting faculty position at the George
Washington University from 1993 to 1994 before joining
Hong-Ik University in Seoul Korea, where he is now
a Professor in the School of Computer and Information
Engineering. He has served as PC at various major
conferences throughout the years, more recently for the
IEEE RTCSA and the USENIX FAST. His research interests are
in operating system issues pertaining to embedded/computer
systems in general. In particular, his main focus of
research has been on use of flash memory and new
emerging memory technologies in systems. (Check out
htttp://next.hongik.ac.kr for more details.)