TY - GEN
T1 - EMFS
T2 - 6th IEEE International Conference on Networking, Architecture, and Storage, NAS 2011
AU - Srinivasan, Jagan
AU - Wei, Wei
AU - Ma, Xiaosong
AU - Yu, Ting
PY - 2011
Y1 - 2011
N2 - Though a variety of cloud storage services have been offered recently, they have not yet provided users with transparent and cost-effective personal data storage. Services like Google Docs offer easy file access and sharing, but tie storage with internal data formats and specific applications. Meanwhile, services like Dropbox offer general-purpose storage. Yet they have not been widely utilized, partly due to their fee-charging nature and long-term service availability concerns. Web-based email services, on the other hand, have been offering growing email storage capacity, reliable service, and powerful search capability, making them appealing as storage resources. In this paper, we examine the efficacy of leveraging web-based email services to build a personal storage cloud. We present EMFS, which aggregates back-end storage by establishing a RAID-like system on top of virtual email disks formed by email accounts. In particular, by replicating data across accounts from different service providers, highly available storage services can be constructed based on already reliable, cloud-based email storage. This paper discusses the design and implementation of EMFS, focusing on unique challenges and opportunities associated with utilizing email services for file transfer and storage, such as email-based data organization, metadata format and management, and handling provider-imposed anti-spam usage restrictions. We evaluated EMFS extensively with multiple benchmarks, and compared its performance with NFS, AFS, and a non-free cloud storage service built upon Amazon S3. Our results indicate that while EMFS cannot match the performance of highly optimized distributed file systems with dedicated servers, it performs quite closely to the commercial cloud storage solution.
AB - Though a variety of cloud storage services have been offered recently, they have not yet provided users with transparent and cost-effective personal data storage. Services like Google Docs offer easy file access and sharing, but tie storage with internal data formats and specific applications. Meanwhile, services like Dropbox offer general-purpose storage. Yet they have not been widely utilized, partly due to their fee-charging nature and long-term service availability concerns. Web-based email services, on the other hand, have been offering growing email storage capacity, reliable service, and powerful search capability, making them appealing as storage resources. In this paper, we examine the efficacy of leveraging web-based email services to build a personal storage cloud. We present EMFS, which aggregates back-end storage by establishing a RAID-like system on top of virtual email disks formed by email accounts. In particular, by replicating data across accounts from different service providers, highly available storage services can be constructed based on already reliable, cloud-based email storage. This paper discusses the design and implementation of EMFS, focusing on unique challenges and opportunities associated with utilizing email services for file transfer and storage, such as email-based data organization, metadata format and management, and handling provider-imposed anti-spam usage restrictions. We evaluated EMFS extensively with multiple benchmarks, and compared its performance with NFS, AFS, and a non-free cloud storage service built upon Amazon S3. Our results indicate that while EMFS cannot match the performance of highly optimized distributed file systems with dedicated servers, it performs quite closely to the commercial cloud storage solution.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/80052904180
U2 - 10.1109/NAS.2011.55
DO - 10.1109/NAS.2011.55
M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:80052904180
SN - 9780769545097
T3 - Proceedings - 6th IEEE International Conference on Networking, Architecture, and Storage, NAS 2011
SP - 248
EP - 257
BT - Proceedings - 6th IEEE International Conference on Networking, Architecture, and Storage, NAS 2011
Y2 - 28 July 2011 through 30 July 2011
ER -