Evaluating Certification Protocols in the Partial Database State Machine

  • Authors:
  • A. Sousa;A. Jr. Correia;F. Moura;J. Pereira;R. Oliveira

  • Affiliations:
  • A. Sousa;A. Correia Jr.;F. Moura;J. Pereira;R. Oliveira

  • Venue:
  • ARES '06 Proceedings of the First International Conference on Availability, Reliability and Security
  • Year:
  • 2006

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Abstract

Partial replication is an alluring technique to ensure the reliability of very large and geographically distributed databases while, at the same time, offering good performance. By correctly exploiting access locality most transactions become confined to a small subset of the database replicas thus reducing processing, storage access and communication overhead associated with replication. The advantages of partial replication have however to be weighted against the added complexity that is required to manage it. In fact, if the chosen replica configuration prevents the local execution of transactions or if the overhead of consistency protocols offsets the savings of locality, potential gains cannot be realized. These issues are heavily dependent on the application used for evaluation and render simplistic benchmarks useless. In this paper, we present a detailed analysis of Partial Database State Machine (PDBSM) replication by comparing alternative partial replication protocols with full replication. This is done using a realistic scenario based on a detailed network simulator and access patterns from an industry standard database benchmark. The results obtained allow us to identify the best configuration for typical on-line transaction processing applications.