Dragojevic, AleksandarSingh, AnmolGuerraoui, RachidSingh, Vasu2009-04-272009-04-272009-04-27200910.1145/1582716.1582725https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/38137WOS:000271790300001Transactional memories are typically speculative and rely on contention managers to cure conflicts. This paper explores a complementary approach that prevents conflicts by scheduling transactions according to predictions on their access sets. We first explore the theoretical boundaries of this approach and prove that (1) a TM scheduler with an accurate prediction can be 2- competitive with an optimal TM scheduler, but (2) even a slight inaccuracy in prediction makes the competitive ratio of the TM scheduler of the order of the number of transactions. We then show that, in practice, there is room for a pragmatic approach with good average case performance. We present Shrink, a scheduler that (a) bases its prediction on the access patterns of the past transactions from the same threads, and (b) uses a novel heuristic, which we call serialization affinity, to schedule transactions with a probability proportional to the current amount of contention. Shrink obtains roughly 70% accurate predictions on STMBench7 and STAMP. For SwissTM, Shrink improves the performance by up to 55% on STMBench7, and up to 120% on STAMP. For TinySTM, Shrink improves the performance by up to 30 times on STMBench7 and 100 times on STAMP.Software Transactional MemoryContention ManagementSchedulingPreventing versus Curing: Avoiding Conflicts in Transactional Memoriestext::conference output::conference proceedings::conference paper