Providing High Availability Using Lazy Replication

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Providing High Availability Using Lazy Replication Rivaka Ladin, Barbara Lis kov, Liuba Shrira, Sanjay Ghemawat Presented by Huang-Ming H uang

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Providing High Availability Using Lazy Replication. Rivaka Ladin, Barbara Liskov, Liuba Shrira, Sanjay Ghemawat Presented by Huang-Ming Huang. Outline. Model Algorithm Performance Analysis Discussion. Replication Model. RM. client. FE. RM. Service. Front ends. RM. client. FE. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Providing High Availability Using Lazy Replication

Page 1: Providing High Availability Using Lazy Replication

Providing High Availability Using Lazy Replication

Rivaka Ladin, Barbara Liskov, Liuba Shrira, Sanjay Ghemawat

Presented by Huang-Ming Huang

Page 2: Providing High Availability Using Lazy Replication

Outline

Model Algorithm Performance Analysis Discussion

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Replication Model

client

client

RM

RM

RM

FE

FE

Service

ReplicationManager

Front ends

Excerpt from “Distributed Systems – Concept and Design” by Coulouris, Dollimore and Kindberg

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System Guarantees

Each client obtains a consistent service over time

Relaxed consistency between replicas Updates are applied with ordering

guarantees that make the replicas sufficiently similar.

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Operation Classification

RM

RMRM

FE FE

Client Client

query

valupdate

Query, prev Val, newUpdate, prev Update id

gossip

Excerpt from “Distributed Systems – Concept and Design” by Coulouris, Dollimore and Kindberg

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Update operation classification

Causal update Forced update : performed in the

same order (relative to one another) at all replicas.

Immediate update : performed at all replicas in the same order relative to all other operations.

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Vector timestamp Given two timestamps

T = (t1,t2,,tn) S = (s1,s2,,sn) T ≤ S ≡ti≤si for all i merge(T,S)= (max(t1,s1),…,max(tn,sn))

Each part of the vector timestamp corresponds to each replica manager in the system.

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RM components

Replica timestamp

Update log

Value Timestamp

Value

Timestamp table

Executed operation table

FE

FE

Other replicas

GossipMessages

Updates Operatio

n prev id

Replica Timestamp

Replica log

stable

updates

Excerpt from “Distributed Systems – Concept and Design” by Coulouris, Dollimore and Kindberg

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Query

The replica manager blocks the query q operation until the condition holds: q.prev <= valueTS

The replica manger returns valueTS back to FE.

FE updates its own timestamp frontEndTS := merge(frontEndTS, new)

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(r1,r2,…,ri+1,…,rn)

Causal Update

(r1,r2,…,ri,…,rn)

Update log

FE

ValueTS

Value

Executed operation table

(p1,p2,…pn,)operation

id

ts=(p1,p2,…,pi+1,…,pn)

logRecord =(i, ts, u.op, u.prev, u.id)

ts

r.u.prev ≤ valueTS

merge(ValueTS, r.ts)

apply(value.r.u.op)

executed r.u.id

Replication Manager i

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Gossip messages Goal : bring the states of replication

managers up to date. Consists of :

Replication timestamp Update log

Upon receiving gossip Merge the arriving log with its own Apply any unexecuted stable updates Eliminate redundant log and executed

operation table entries

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Control the size of update log

Timestamp table keeps recent timestamps from messages sent by all other replicas.

A log record r can be removed from the log when r.tsr.i < timestamp_table[j] r.i , for all j

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Control the size of executed operation table

Each update carries an extra time field

FE returns an ACK Contains FE’s clock time after receiving

the response for an update from RM. RM inserts the received ACK to the log.

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Control the size of executed operation table (con’t) A message m from FE is late if

m.time + δ< replica’s clock time An update is discard if it is late An ACK is kept at least until it is late Remove an entry c in executed operation ta

ble when an ACK for c’s update is received all records for c’s update have been discarded.

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Forced Update

Use the primary to assign a global unique identifier.

The primary carries out a two phase protocol for updates.

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Two phase protocol Upon receiving an update, the

primary sends it to all other replicas.

Upon receiving responses from all most half of the backups, the primary commit the update by

insert the record to its log. Backups know the commitment

from gossip messages.

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Fail Recovery

New coordinator informs participants about the failure.

Participants inform coordinator about most recent forced updates

Coordinator assign UID with the largest it knows after the sub-majority of replicas has responded.

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Immediate Update

Primary use 3 phase protocol. Pre-prepare Prepare Commit

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3 phase protocol

FEUpdate log

primary

backupbackup backup

update

Give me your log and

timestamp

logRecordUpdate id

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Number of Messages for different operations

Query : 2 Casual : 2 + (N-1)/K Forced : 2N/2+ (N-1)/K Immediate : 2N +2(N/2-1)+(N-1)K

N : the number of replicas K : the number of update/ack pairs in a g

ossip.

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Capacity of a 3-replica system

Excerpt from “Providing high Availability Using Lazy Replication” by Ladin, Liskov, Shrira and Ghemawat

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Capacity of the Unreplicated System

Excerpt from “Providing high Availability Using Lazy Replication” by Ladin, Liskov, Shrira and Ghemawat

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Discussion No time guarantee for gossip messages

Not generally suitable for real-time application such as

realtime conference updating shared document.

Scalability Timestamp space grows as number of replicas g

row. can be increased by making most of the replicas

read-only

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Qustions?