Efficient Reduction of Access Latency through Object Correlations in Virtual Environments

Object correlations are common semantic patterns in virtual environments. They can be exploited to improve the effectiveness of storage caching, prefetching, data layout, and disk scheduling. However, we have little approaches for discovering object correlations in VE to improve the performance of s...

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Main Authors: Damon Shing-Min Liu, Shao-Shin Hung
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2007-01-01
Series:EURASIP Journal on Advances in Signal Processing
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2007/10289
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spelling doaj-166e92a8c9a74940a9d49740ed5faca22020-11-24T23:28:06ZengSpringerOpenEURASIP Journal on Advances in Signal Processing1687-61721687-61802007-01-01200710.1155/2007/10289Efficient Reduction of Access Latency through Object Correlations in Virtual EnvironmentsDamon Shing-Min LiuShao-Shin HungObject correlations are common semantic patterns in virtual environments. They can be exploited to improve the effectiveness of storage caching, prefetching, data layout, and disk scheduling. However, we have little approaches for discovering object correlations in VE to improve the performance of storage systems. Being an interactive feedback-driven paradigm, it is critical that the user receives responses to his navigation requests with little or no time lag. Therefore, we propose a class of view-based projection-generation method for mining various frequent sequential traversal patterns in the virtual environments. The frequent sequential traversal patterns are used to predict the user navigation behavior and, through clustering scheme, help to reduce disk access time with proper patterns placement into disk blocks. Finally, the effectiveness of these schemes is shown through simulation to demonstrate how these proposed techniques not only significantly cut down disk access time, but also enhance the accuracy of data prefetching. http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2007/10289
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Damon Shing-Min Liu
Shao-Shin Hung
spellingShingle Damon Shing-Min Liu
Shao-Shin Hung
Efficient Reduction of Access Latency through Object Correlations in Virtual Environments
EURASIP Journal on Advances in Signal Processing
author_facet Damon Shing-Min Liu
Shao-Shin Hung
author_sort Damon Shing-Min Liu
title Efficient Reduction of Access Latency through Object Correlations in Virtual Environments
title_short Efficient Reduction of Access Latency through Object Correlations in Virtual Environments
title_full Efficient Reduction of Access Latency through Object Correlations in Virtual Environments
title_fullStr Efficient Reduction of Access Latency through Object Correlations in Virtual Environments
title_full_unstemmed Efficient Reduction of Access Latency through Object Correlations in Virtual Environments
title_sort efficient reduction of access latency through object correlations in virtual environments
publisher SpringerOpen
series EURASIP Journal on Advances in Signal Processing
issn 1687-6172
1687-6180
publishDate 2007-01-01
description Object correlations are common semantic patterns in virtual environments. They can be exploited to improve the effectiveness of storage caching, prefetching, data layout, and disk scheduling. However, we have little approaches for discovering object correlations in VE to improve the performance of storage systems. Being an interactive feedback-driven paradigm, it is critical that the user receives responses to his navigation requests with little or no time lag. Therefore, we propose a class of view-based projection-generation method for mining various frequent sequential traversal patterns in the virtual environments. The frequent sequential traversal patterns are used to predict the user navigation behavior and, through clustering scheme, help to reduce disk access time with proper patterns placement into disk blocks. Finally, the effectiveness of these schemes is shown through simulation to demonstrate how these proposed techniques not only significantly cut down disk access time, but also enhance the accuracy of data prefetching.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2007/10289
work_keys_str_mv AT damonshingminliu efficientreductionofaccesslatencythroughobjectcorrelationsinvirtualenvironments
AT shaoshinhung efficientreductionofaccesslatencythroughobjectcorrelationsinvirtualenvironments
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