Decentralized Replicated-Object Protocols
In The 18th Annual ACM SIGACT-SIGOPS Symposium on Principles of Distributed Computing (PODC), April 1999.
Pete Keleher
Abstract:
We describe a new replicated-object protocol designed for use in mobile and weakly-connected environments. The protocol differs from previous protocols in combining epidemic information propagation with voting, and in using fixed per-object currencies for voting. The advantage of epidemic protocols is that data movement only requires pairwise communication. Hence, there is no need for a majority quorum to be available and simultaneously connected at any single time. The protocols increase availability by using voting, rather than primary copy or primary commit schemes. Finally, the use of per-object voting currencies allows votes to take place in an entirely decentralized fashion, without any server having complete knowledge of group membership. We show that currency allocation can be used to implement diverse policies. For example, uniform currency distributions emulate traditional dynamic voting schemes, while allocating all currency to a single server emulates a primary-copy scheme. We present simulation results showing both schemes, as well as the performance advantages of using currency proxies to temporarily reallocate currency during planned disconnections.
@inProceedings{keleher-podc99,
title = "Decentralized Replicated-Object Protocols",
author = "Pete Keleher",
booktitle = {The 18th Annual ACM SIGACT-SIGOPS Symposium on Principles of Distributed Computing (PODC)},
month = {April},
year = {1999},
}
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