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SK hynix and Los Alamos Labs to demo key-value store accelerating SSD

KV Computational Storage Device will be hauled out at Flash Memory Summit next week

Updated SK hynix is developing a computational storage device with the US Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) that will focus on accelerating indexing capabilities to speed analysis of massive volumes of data.

LANL, sk hynix Computational Storage Device

Pic via: LANL

The memory and storage chipmaker, which last year picked up Intel's NAND flash and solid-state drive businesses, said it is to demonstrate what it describes as the world's first ordered Key Value Store Computational Storage Device (KV-CSD). This demonstration is understood to be happening at the Flash Memory Summit next week.

Computational storage focuses on processing large volumes of data as close as possible to where that data is stored, rather than wasting time shuffling it around. Perhaps the most common implementation of a computational storage device (CSD) is an SSD where processing capability, in the shape of a CPU or FPGA, is embedded into the drive controller so it can directly access data stored in the NAND flash chips.

SK hynix said its researchers have shown it is possible to push the indexing capability into its KV-CSD prototype, and this is claimed to speed up some of LANL’s applications for analyzing simulation data by as much as a thousand times.

The reason for this is that LANL is moving its large-scale simulation input-output (I/O) from files to record- and column-based formats, so that analytics can be performed using standard tools from the big data analytics community.

Embedding indexing capabilities into the storage devices themselves means that the data can be indexed as it is being written, saving “orders of magnitude” of data movement when it comes to retrieving it for analysis, according to LANL.

One of LANL’s missions is designing and maintaining the US nuclear stockpile, which involves some extremely complex simulations.

LANL’s High Performance Computing division leader Gary Grider said that moving the facility’s large-scale physics simulations from file-based I/O to record- and columnar-indexed I/O has already shown incredible speedups for analysis of simulation output.

“Demonstrations like this show it is possible to build an ordered KV-CSD that moves the ordering and indexing of data as close to the storage device as possible, maximizing the wins on retrieval from on-the-fly indexing as data is written to the storage. The ordering capability enables range queries that are particularly useful in computational science applications as well as point queries that key value storage is known for,” Grider said.

Los Alamos National Laboratory and SK hynix have signed a memorandum of understanding with regard to the design, implementation and evaluation of the KV-CSD. We asked whether this MoU will allow SK hynix to manufacture and market the device to other buyers once it has been successfully deployed at LANL. ®

Updated to add on August 2:

LANL told us that the memorandum of understanding allows SK hynix to commercialize whatever solutions they see fit with this technology, and they hope it will prove useful for other applications.

Grider told us that an earlier KV-CSD it deployed from Samsung a couple of years ago was unordered, but that an ordered KV-CSD allows you to do range queries (where you don't know the key but you know the range of values).

"This is an important distinction, because the ordered KV-CSD is a much harder thing to do but much more useful to a much broader market – for example this hardware solution does the same thing that software products like LevelDB and RocksDB do except the ordered KV-CSD is in hardware and that market is large and broad," Grider said.

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