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8:30-10:50 AM
ARCH-101-1: Open-Channel SSDs for Host-Based Optimization (Architectures Track)
Paper Title: The Denali Open-Channel Standard: Its Impact and Its Future

Paper Abstract: Open-Channel SSD architectures have successfully made their way into the data center. The open-source spirit behind the Open-Channel community made it possible to drive a public specification and allow for rapid incorporation of industry feedback by early adopters. While this has enabled a strong ecosystem in Linux, it has also facilitated fragmentation. To address this problem, Project Denali was created, as an effort for the industry to converge in a standard. In this talk, we will (i) give an overview on how the concepts behind Open-Channel have evolved through time, (ii) describe the role that Project Denali has played in the Open-Channel SSD standardization, and (iii) provide an insight on how these Open-Channel concepts are now being standardized in NVMe. Learning Objective: Understand the main concepts Open-Channel, the problem that fragmentation poses, and the benefits of standardization. Learning Objective: Understand where the industry is going for Open-Channel adoption. Learning Objective: Understand the history of Open-Channel by one of the founding members of the community.

Paper Author: Javier Gonzalez, Principal Software Engineer, Samsung Electronics

Author Bio: Javier is a Principal Software Engineer at Samsung Memory Solutions. He is a founding member of the Open-Channel SSD community and has worked on all the available specifications (1.2, 2.0 and Denali) as well as in the Linux ecosystem. In this context, he is main architect and developer of pblk - the Linux Kernel FTL used by LightNVM. At Samsung, he works on the different Open-Channel SSD flavors and maintains the internal development in Linux.