Specifying and using a partitionable group communication service
PODC '97 Proceedings of the sixteenth annual ACM symposium on Principles of distributed computing
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Abstract: A membership service is used in a distributed system to maintain information about which sites are functioning and which have failed at any given time. Such services have proven to be fundamental for constructing distributed applications, with many example services and algorithms defined in the literature. Despite these efforts, however, little has been done on examining the abstract properties important to membership independent of a given service. Here, these properties are identified and characterized. Message ordering graphs are used to specify the effect of each property on the message flow as seen by the application, and dependency graphs are used to characterize the relationship between properties. These graphs help differentiate existing services, as well as facilitate the design of new services in which only those properties actually required by an application are included.