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Architecture and Design of the Linux Storage Stack

You're reading from   Architecture and Design of the Linux Storage Stack Gain a deep understanding of the Linux storage landscape and its well-coordinated layers

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781837639960
Length 246 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Muhammad Umer Muhammad Umer
Author Profile Icon Muhammad Umer
Muhammad Umer
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Toc

Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: Diving into the Virtual Filesystem
2. Chapter 1: Where It All Starts From – The Virtual Filesystem FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Explaining the Data Structures in a VFS 4. Chapter 3: Exploring the Actual Filesystems Under the VFS 5. Part 2: Navigating Through the Block Layer
6. Chapter 4: Understanding the Block Layer, Block Devices, and Data Structures 7. Chapter 5: Understanding the Block Layer, Multi-Queue, and Device Mapper 8. Chapter 6: Understanding I/O Handling and Scheduling in the Block Layer 9. Part 3: Descending into the Physical Layer
10. Chapter 7: The SCSI Subsystem 11. Chapter 8: Illustrating the Layout of Physical Media 12. Part 4: Analyzing and Troubleshooting Storage Performance
13. Chapter 9: Analyzing Physical Storage Performance 14. Chapter 10: Analyzing Filesystems and the Block Layer 15. Chapter 11: Tuning the I/O Stack 16. Index 17. Other Books You May Enjoy

Summary

This chapter focused on two major topics, the device model and the SCSI subsystem in Linux. We started by giving a brief overview of the device model in Linux and how the kernel provides its view in user space through the Sysfs VFS. We then moved on to the exploration of the SCSI subsystem and explained its three-level architecture.

As explained in this chapter, SCSI defines both an interface and a data protocol to connect different types of devices to a system. As a medium, it defines a bus for data transmission, and as a protocol, it defines how devices communicate with each other via the SCSI bus. When an application in user space initiates a write request to store data, the SCSI subsystem converts this write request into a SCSI command, to write the requested data on the specified disk location. It acts as a mediator between the higher layers in the I/O stack and the physical storage. SCSI does not assume responsibility for the assembly of blocks during transport or...

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