pith. sign in

arxiv: 0910.2005 · v1 · submitted 2009-10-12 · 💻 cs.IT · math.IT

Modulation Codes for Flash Memory Based on Load-Balancing Theory

classification 💻 cs.IT math.IT
keywords modulationload-balancingstorageflashmemorypracticalsystemscode
0
0 comments X
read the original abstract

In this paper, we consider modulation codes for practical multilevel flash memory storage systems with cell levels. Instead of maximizing the lifetime of the device [Ajiang-isit07-01, Ajiang-isit07-02, Yaakobi_verdy_siegel_wolf_allerton08, Finucane_Liu_Mitzenmacher_aller08], we maximize the average amount of information stored per cell-level, which is defined as storage efficiency. Using this framework, we show that the worst-case criterion [Ajiang-isit07-01, Ajiang-isit07-02, Yaakobi_verdy_siegel_wolf_allerton08] and the average-case criterion [Finucane_Liu_Mitzenmacher_aller08] are two extreme cases of our objective function. A self-randomized modulation code is proposed which is asymptotically optimal, as, for an arbitrary input alphabet and i.i.d. input distribution. In practical flash memory systems, the number of cell-levels is only moderately large. So the asymptotic performance as may not tell the whole story. Using the tools from load-balancing theory, we analyze the storage efficiency of the self-randomized modulation code. The result shows that only a fraction of the cells are utilized when the number of cell-levels is only moderately large. We also propose a load-balancing modulation code, based on a phenomenon known as "the power of two random choices" [Mitzenmacher96thepower], to improve the storage efficiency of practical systems. Theoretical analysis and simulation results show that our load-balancing modulation codes can provide significant gain to practical flash memory storage systems. Though pseudo-random, our approach achieves the same load-balancing performance, for i.i.d. inputs, as a purely random approach based on the power of two random choices.

This paper has not been read by Pith yet.

discussion (0)

Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.