Joo-Young Hwang, principal engineer at Samsung, presents F2FS (Flash-Friendly File System), a new file system designed for storage in mobile devices at the Embedded Linux Conference in Barcelona, Spain, on November 5, 2012.
Abstract:
Recent mobile devices adopt various flash storages as a primary storage. File system support for those flash storages is a must for flash device performance and lifespan. I will present a new file system, called F2FS, designed for mobile flash storages. F2FS is designed considering the characteristics of the underlying flash storage which has flash translation layer (FTL). F2FS outperforms EXT4, which is a popular file system for Android phones, in most of benchmarks. I will describe motivation, design, and implementation of the file system, then show performance comparison data with EXT4. Target audiences are those who are interested in file system support for flash storages such as eMMC and SSD. Kernel and file system expertise helps but is not mandatory to listen to this talk.
The talk is divided into 4 sections:
- Introduction – NAND flash memories (SSD, eMMC, SD card) and current file systems and memory management used.
- F2FS Design Overview
- Performance Evaluation Results – Ext4 vs F2FS on eMMC in Pandaboard (Linux) and Galaxy Nexus (Android).
- Summary
You can also download the slides for this presentation. You can find more information on F2FS lwn article. F2FS has been added to Linux 3.6 and greater.
Jean-Luc started CNX Software in 2010 as a part-time endeavor, before quitting his job as a software engineering manager, and starting to write daily news, and reviews full time later in 2011.
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