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Homomorphic Self-repairing Codes for Agile Maintenance of Distributed Storage Systems

Distributed data storage systems are essential to deal with the need to store massive volumes of data. In order to make such a system fault-tolerant, some form of redundancy becomes crucial, incurring various overheads - most prominently in terms of storage space and maintenance bandwidth requirements. Erasure codes, originally designed for communication over lossy channels, provide a storage efficient alternative to replication based redundancy, however entailing high communication overhead for maintenance, when some of the encoded fragments need to be replenished in news ones after failure of some storage devices. We propose as an alternative a new family of erasure codes called self-repairing codes (SRC) taking into account the peculiarities of distributed storage systems, specifically the maintenance process. SRC has the following salient features: (a) encoded fragments can be repaired directly from other subsets of encoded fragments by downloading less data than the size of the complete object, ensuring that (b) a fragment is repaired from a fixed number of encoded fragments, the number depending only on how many encoded blocks are missing and independent of which specific blocks are missing. This paper lays the foundations by defining the novel self-repairing codes, elaborating why the defined characteristics are desirable for distributed storage systems. Then homomorphic self-repairing codes (HSRC) are proposed as a concrete instance, whose various aspects and properties are studied and compared - quantitatively or qualitatively with respect to other codes including traditional erasure codes as well as other recent codes designed specifically for storage applications.

preprint2011arXivOpen access

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