DCPLSEAug 16, 2019

Path-Sensitive Atomic Commit: Local Coordination Avoidance for Distributed Transactions

arXiv:1908.05940v20.00
AI Analysis50

This addresses performance issues in distributed systems like banking infrastructure where high contention reduces throughput, though it is an incremental improvement over existing methods.

The paper tackles the bottleneck of Two-Phase Locking (2PL) in distributed transactions for high-throughput systems by introducing Path-Sensitive Atomic Commit (PSAC), which avoids locking when message effects are independent, resulting in up to 1.8 times higher median throughput in congested scenarios.

Context: Concurrent objects with asynchronous messaging are an increasingly popular way to structure highly available, high performance, large-scale software systems. To ensure data-consistency and support synchronization between objects such systems often use distributed transactions with Two-Phase Locking (2PL) for concurrency control and Two-Phase commit (2PC) as atomic commitment protocol. Inquiry In highly available, high-throughput systems, such as large banking infrastructure, however, 2PL becomes a bottleneck when objects are highly contended, when an object is queuing a lot of messages because of locking. Approach: In this paper we introduce Path-Sensitive Atomic Commit (PSAC) to address this situation. We start from message handlers (or methods), which are decorated with pre- and post-conditions, describing their guards and effect. Knowledge: This allows the PSAC lock mechanism to check whether the effect of two incoming messages at the same time are independent, and to avoid locking if this is the case. As a result, more messages are directly accepted or rejected, and higher overall throughput is obtained. Grounding: We have implemented PSAC for a state machine-based DSL called Rebel, on top of a runtime based on the Akka actor framework. Our performance evaluation shows that PSAC exhibits the same scalability and latency characteristics as standard 2PL/2PC, and obtains up to 1.8 times median higher throughput in congested scenarios. Importance: We believe PSAC is a step towards enabling organizations to build scalable distributed applications, even if their consistency requirements are not embarrassingly parallel.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

Your Notes