Repository logo

Infoscience

  • English
  • French
Log In
Logo EPFL, École polytechnique fédérale de Lausanne

Infoscience

  • English
  • French
Log In
  1. Home
  2. Academic and Research Output
  3. Journal articles
  4. Eliminating unscalable communication in transaction processing
 
research article

Eliminating unscalable communication in transaction processing

Johnson, Ryan
•
Pandis, Ippokratis
•
Ailamaki, Anastasia  
2014
Vldb Journal

Multicore hardware demands software parallelism. Transaction processing workloads typically exhibit high concurrency, and, thus, provide ample opportunities for parallel execution. Unfortunately, because of the characteristics of the application, transaction processing systems must moderate and coordinate communication between independent agents; since it is notoriously difficult to implement high performing transaction processing systems that incur no communication whatsoever. As a result, transaction processing systems cannot always convert abundant, even embarrassing, request-level parallelism into execution parallelism due to communication bottlenecks. Transaction processing system designers must therefore find ways to achieve scalability while still allowing communication to occur. To this end, we identify three forms of communication in the system—unbounded, fixed, and cooperative—and argue that only the first type poses a fundamental threat to scalability. The other two types tend not impose obstacles to scalability, though they may reduce single-thread performance. We argue that proper analysis of communication patterns in any software system is a powerful tool for improving the system’s scalability. Then, we present and evaluate under a common framework techniques that attack significant sources of unbounded communication during transaction processing and sketch a solution for those that remain. The solutions we present affect fundamental services of any transaction processing engine, such as locking, logging, physical page accesses, and buffer pool frame accesses. They either reduce such communication through caching, downgrade it to a less-threatening type, or eliminate it completely through system design. We find that the later technique, revisiting the transaction processing architecture, is the most effective. The final design cuts unbounded communication by roughly an order of magnitude compared with the baseline, while exhibiting better scalability on multicore machines.

  • Details
  • Metrics
Logo EPFL, École polytechnique fédérale de Lausanne
  • Contact
  • infoscience@epfl.ch

  • Follow us on Facebook
  • Follow us on Instagram
  • Follow us on LinkedIn
  • Follow us on X
  • Follow us on Youtube
AccessibilityLegal noticePrivacy policyCookie settingsEnd User AgreementGet helpFeedback

Infoscience is a service managed and provided by the Library and IT Services of EPFL. © EPFL, tous droits réservés