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OSDI
2002
ACM

FARSITE: Federated, Available, and Reliable Storage for an Incompletely Trusted Environment

14 years 12 months ago
FARSITE: Federated, Available, and Reliable Storage for an Incompletely Trusted Environment
Farsite is a secure, scalable file system that logically functions as a centralized file server but is physically distributed among a set of untrusted computers. Farsite provides file availability and reliability through randomized replicated storage; it ensures the secrecy of file contents with cryptographic techniques; it maintains the integrity of file and directory data with a Byzantine-fault-tolerant protocol; it is designed to be scalable by using a distributed hint mechanism and delegation certificates for pathname translations; and it achieves good performance by locally caching file data, lazily propagating file updates, and varying the duration and granularity of content leases. We report on the design of Farsite and the lessons we have learned by implementing much of that design.
Atul Adya, William J. Bolosky, Miguel Castro, Gera
Added 03 Dec 2009
Updated 03 Dec 2009
Type Conference
Year 2002
Where OSDI
Authors Atul Adya, William J. Bolosky, Miguel Castro, Gerald Cermak, Ronnie Chaiken, John R. Douceur, Jon Howell, Jacob R. Lorch, Marvin Theimer, Roger Wattenhofer
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