home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
Text File | 1991-04-20 | 50.1 KB | 1,061 lines |
-
- K. P. Birman (Cornell)
- Network Working Group T. A. Joseph (Cornell)
- Request for Comments: 992 November 1986
-
-
-
- On Communication Support for Fault Tolerant Process Groups
-
- K. P. Birman and T. A. Joseph
- Dept. of Computer Science, Cornell University
- Ithaca, N.Y. 14853
- 607-255-9199
-
-
- 1. Status of this Memo.
-
- This memo describes a collection of multicast communication primi-
- tives integrated with a mechanism for handling process failure and
- recovery. These primitives facilitate the implementation of fault-
- tolerant process groups, which can be used to provide distributed
- services in an environment subject to non-malicious crash failures.
- Unlike other process group approaches, such as Cheriton's "host
- groups" (RFC's 966, 988, [Cheriton]), our approach provides powerful
- guarantees about the behavior of the communication subsystem when
- process group membership is changing dynamically, for example due to
- process or site failures, recoveries, or migration of a process from
- one site to another. Our approach also addresses delivery ordering
- issues that arise when multiple clients communicate with a process
- group concurrently, or a single client transmits multiple multicast
- messages to a group without pausing to wait until each is received.
- Moreover, the cost of the approach is low. An implementation is be-
- ing undertaken at Cornell as part of the ISIS project.
-
- Here, we argue that the form of "best effort" reliability provided by
- host groups may not address the requirements of those researchers who
- are building fault tolerant software. Our basic premise is that re-
- liable handling of failures, recoveries, and dynamic process migra-
- tion are important aspects of programming in distributed environ-
- ments, and that communication support that provides unpredictable
- behavior in the presence of such events places an unacceptable burden
- of complexity on higher level application software. This complexity
- does not arise when using the fault-tolerant process group alterna-
- tive.
-
- This memo summarizes our approach and briefly contrasts it with other
- process group approaches. For a detailed discussion, together with
- figures that clarify the details of the approach, readers are re-
- ferred to the papers cited below.
-
- Distribution of this memo is unlimited.
-
-
-
-
- Birman & Joseph [Page 1]
-
- RFC 992 November 1986
-
-
- 2. Acknowledgments
-
- This memo was adopted from a paper presented at the Asilomar workshop
- on fault-tolerant distributed computing, March 1986, and summarizes
- material from a technical report that was issued by Cornell Universi-
- ty, Dept. of Computer Science, in August 1985, which will appear in
- ACM Transactions on Computer Systems in February 1987 [Birman-b].
- Copies of these paper, and other relevant papers, are available on
- request from the author: Dept. of Computer Science, Cornell Universi-
- ty, Ithaca, New York 14853. (birman@gvax.cs.cornell.edu). The ISIS
- project also maintains a mailing list. To be added to this list,
- contact M. Schmizzi (schiz@gvax.cs.cornell.edu).
-
- This work was supported by the Defense Advanced Research Projects
- Agency (DoD) under ARPA order 5378, Contract MDA903-85-C-0124, and by
- the National Science Foundation under grant DCR-8412582. The views,
- opinions and findings contained in this report are those of the au-
- thors and should not be construed as an official Department of De-
- fense position, policy, or decision.
-
- 3. Introduction
-
- At Cornell, we recently completed a prototype of the ISIS system,
- which transforms abstract type specifications into fault-tolerant
- distributed implementations, while insulating users from the mechan-
- isms by which fault-tolerance is achieved. This version of ISIS, re-
- ported in [Birman-a], supports transactional resilient objects as a
- basic programming abstraction. Our current work undertakes to pro-
- vide a much broader range of fault-tolerant programming mechanisms,
- including fault-tolerant distributed bulletin boards [Birman-c] and
- fault-tolerant remote procedure calls on process groups [Birman-b].
- The approach to communication that we report here arose as part of
- this new version of the ISIS system.
-
- Unreliable communication primitives, such as the multicast group com-
- munication primitives proposed in RFC's 966 and 988 and in [Cheri-
- ton], leave some uncertainty in the delivery status of a message when
- failures and other exceptional events occur during communication.
- Instead, a form of "best effort" delivery is provided, but with the
- possibility that some member of a group of processes did not receive
- the message if the group membership was changing just as communica-
- tion took place. When we tried to use this sort of primitive in our
- original work on ISIS, which must behave reliably in the presence of
- such events, we had to address this aspect at an application level.
- The resulting software was complex, difficult to reason about, and
- filled with obscure bugs, and we were eventually forced to abandon
- the entire approach as infeasible.
-
- A wide range of reliable communication primitives have been proposed
- in the literature, and we became convinced that by using them, the
- complexity of our software could be greatly reduced. These range
-
-
-
- Birman & Joseph [Page 2]
-
- RFC 992 November 1986
-
-
- from reliable and atomic broadcast [Chang] [Cristian] [Schneider] to
- Byzantine agreement [Strong]. For several reasons, however, the ex-
- isting work does not solve the problem at hand. The most obvious is
- that they do not provide a mechanism for sending a message to all the
- members of a group when the membership is changing dynamically (the
- "group addressing" problem). In addition, one can identify delivery
- ordering issues and questions regarding the detection of communica-
- tion failures that should be handled within the broadcast mechanism.
- These motivate a careful reexamination of the entire reliable broad-
- cast problem.
-
- The multicast primitives we report here are designed to respect
- several sorts of ordering constraints, and have cost and latency that
- varies depending on the nature of the constraint required [Birman-b]
- [Joseph-a] [Joseph-b]. Failure and recovery are integrated into the
- communication subsystem by treating these events as a special sort of
- multicast issued on behalf of a process that has failed or recovered.
- The primitives are presented in the context of fault tolerant process
- groups: groups of processes that cooperate to implement some distri-
- buted algorithm or service, and which need to see consistent order-
- ings of system events in order to achieve mutually consistent
- behavior. Such groups are similar to the host groups of the V system
- and the ones described in RFC's 966 and 988, but provide guarantees
- of consistency in just the situations where a host group provides a
- "best effort" delivery which may sometimes be erroneous.
-
- It is helpful to think of our primitives as providing a logical or
- "virtual" form of reliability: rather than addressing physical
- delivery issues, they ensure that a client will never observe a sys-
- tem state "inconsistent" with the assumption that reliable delivery
- has occurred. Readers familiar with serializability theory may want
- to think of this as a weaker analog: in serializability, one allows
- interleaved executions of operations provided that the resulting sys-
- tem state is consistent with the assumption that execution was
- sequential. Similarly, reliable communication primitives permit de-
- viations from the reliable delivery abstraction provided that the
- resulting system state is indistinguishable from one in which reli-
- able delivery actually did occur.
-
- Using our primitives, the ISIS system achieved both high levels of
- concurrency and suprisingly good performance. Equally important, its
- structure was made suprisingly simple, making it feasible to reason
- about the correctness of the algorithms that are needed to maintain
- high availability even when failures, recoveries, or process migra-
- tion occurs. More recently, we have applied the same approach to a
- variety of other problems in distributed computing, and even designed
- a consistent, fault tolerant, distributed bulletin board data struc-
- ture (a generalized version of the blackboards used in artificial in-
- telligence programs), with equally good results [Birman-c]. Thus, we
- feel that the approach has been shown to work in a variety of set-
- tings where unreliable primitives simply could not be used.
-
-
-
- Birman & Joseph [Page 3]
-
- RFC 992 November 1986
-
-
- In the remainder of this memo we summarize the issues and alterna-
- tives that the designer of a distributed system is presented with,
- focusing on two styles of support for fault-tolerant computing: re-
- mote procedure calls coupled with a transactional execution facility,
- such as is used in the ARGUS system [Liskov], and the fault-tolerant
- process group mechanism mentioned above. We argue that transactional
- interactions are too restrictive to support the sort of mechanism
- needed, and then show how our primitives can be used to provide such
- a mechanism. We conclude by speculating on future directions in
- which this work might be taken.
-
- 4. Issues in fault-tolerance
-
- The difficulty of constructing fault-tolerant distributed software
- can be traced to a number of interrelated issues. The list that fol-
- lows is not exhaustive, but attempts to touch on the principal con-
- siderations that must be addressed in any such system:
-
- [1]Synchronization. Distributed systems offer the potential for
- large amounts of concurrency, and it is usually desirable to
- operate at as high a level of concurrency as possible. However,
- when we move from a sequential execution environment to a con-
- current one, it becomes necessary to synchronize actions that may
- conflict in their access to shared data or entail communication
- with overlapping sets of processes. Thus, a mechanism is needed
- for ordering conflicting events. Additional problems that can
- arise in this context include deadlock avoidance or detection,
- livelock avoidance, etc.
-
- [2]Failure detection. It is usually necessary for a fault-
- tolerant application to have a consistent picture of which com-
- ponents fail, and in what order. Timeout, the most common mechan-
- ism for detecting failure, is unsatisfactory, because there are
- many situations in which a healthy component can timeout with
- respect to one component without this being detected by some
- another. Failure detection under more rigorous requirements
- requires an agreement protocol that is related to Byzantine agree-
- ment [Strong] [Hadzilacos]. Regardless of how this problem is
- solved, some sort of reliable failure detection mechanism will be
- needed in any fault-tolerant distributed system.
-
- [3] Consistency. When a group of processes cooperate in a distri-
- buted system, it is necessary to ensure that the operational
- processes have consistent views of the state of the group as a
- whole. For example, if process p believes that some property A
- holds, and on the basis of this interacts with process q, the
- state of q should not contradict the fact that p believes A to be
- true. This problem is closely related to notions of knowledge and
- consistency in distributed systems [Halpern] [Lamport]. In our
- context, A will often be the assertion that a multicast has been
- received by q, or that q saw some sequence of events occur in the
-
-
-
- Birman & Joseph [Page 4]
-
- RFC 992 November 1986
-
-
- same order as did p. Thus, it is necessary to be able to specify
- the precise consistency constraints on a distributed software sys-
- tem, and system support should be available to facilitate the
- attainment of these constraints.
-
- [4] Serializability. Many distributed systems are partitioned
- into data manager processes, which implement shared variables, and
- transaction manager processes, which issue requests to data
- managers [Bernstein]. If transaction managers can execute con-
- currently, it is desirable to ensure that transactions produce
- serializable outcomes [Eswaren] [Papadimitrou]. Serializability
- is increasingly viewed as an important property in "object-
- oriented" distributed systems that package services as abstract
- objects with which clients communicate by remote procedure calls
- (RPC). On the other hand, there are systems for which serializa-
- bility is either too strong a constraint, or simply inappropriate.
- Thus, one needs a way to achieve serializability in applications
- where it will be needed, without imposing system-wide restrictions
- that would prevent the design of software subsystems for which
- serializability is not needed.
-
- Jointly, these problems render the design of fault-tolerant distri-
- buted software daunting in the absence of adequate support. The
- correctness of any proposed design and of its implementation become
- serious, if not insurmountable, concerns. In Sec. 7, we will show
- how the primitives of Sec. 6 provide simple ways to overcome all of
- these issues.
-
- 5. Existing alternatives
-
- If one rules out "unreliable" communication mechanisms, there are
- basically two fault-tolerant alternatives that can be pursued.
-
- The first approach is to provide mechanisms for transactional
- interactions between processes that communicate using remote pro-
- cedure calls [Birrell]. This has lead to work on nested transactions
- (due to nested RPC's) [Moss], support for transactions at the
- language level [Liskov], transactions within an operating systems
- kernel [Spector] [Allchin] [Popek] [Lazowska], and transactional
- access to higher-level replicated services, such as resilient objects
- in ISIS or relations in database systems. The primitives in a tran-
- sactional system provide mechanisms for distributing the request that
- initiates the transaction, accessing data (which may be replicated),
- performing concurrency control, and implementing commit or abort.
- Additional mechanisms are normally needed for orphan termination,
- deadlock detection, etc. The issue then arises of how these mechan-
- isms should themselves be implemented.
-
- Our work in ISIS leads us to believe that whereas transactions are
- easily implemented on top of fault-tolerant process groups -- we have
- done so -- the converse is much harder. Moreover, transactions
-
-
-
- Birman & Joseph [Page 5]
-
- RFC 992 November 1986
-
-
- represent a relatively heavy-weight solution to the problems surveyed
- in the previous section, and might impose an unacceptable overhead on
- subsystems that need to run non-transactionally, for example because
- a pair of concurrent processes needs to interact on a frequent basis.
- (We are not saying that "transactional" mechanisms such as cobegins
- and toplevel actions can't solve this problem, but just that they
- yield a solution that is awkward and costly). This sort of reasoning
- has lead us to focus on non-transactional interaction mechanisms, and
- to treat transactions as a special class of mechanisms used when
- processes that have been designed to employ a transactional protocol
- interact.
-
- The second approach involves the provision of a communication primi-
- tive, such as atomic broadcast, which can be used as the framework on
- which higher level algorithms are designed. Such a primitive seeks
- to deliver messages reliably to some set of destinations, despite the
- possibility that failures might occur during the execution of the
- protocol. Above, we termed this the fault tolerant process group
- approach, since it lends itself to the organization of cooperating
- processes into groups, as described in the introduction. Process
- groups are an extremely flexible abstraction, and have been employed
- in the V Kernel [Cheriton] and in UNIX, and more recently in the ISIS
- system. A proposal to provide Internet support for host groups was
- raised in RFC's 966 and 988. However, the idea of adapting the pro-
- cess group approach to work reliably in an environment subject to the
- sorts of exception events and concurrency cited in the previous sec-
- tion seems to be new.
-
- As noted earlier, existing reliable communication protocols do not
- address the requirements of fault-tolerant process groups. For exam-
- ple, in [Schneider], an implementation of a reliable multicast primi-
- tive is described. Such a primitive ensures that a designated mes-
- sage will be transmitted from one site to all other operational sites
- in a system; if a failure occurs but any site has received the mes-
- sage, all will eventually do so. [Chang] and [Cristian] describe
- implementations for atomic broadcast, which is a reliable broadcast
- (sent to all sites in a system) with the additional property that
- messages are delivered in the same order at all overlapping destina-
- tions, and this order preserves the transmission order if messages
- originate in a single site.
-
- Atomic broadcast is a powerful abstraction, and essentially the same
- behavior is provided by one of the multicast primitives we discuss in
- the next section. However, it has several drawbacks which made us
- hesitant to adopt it as the only primitive in the system. Most seri-
- ous is the latency that is incurred in order to satisfy the delivery
- ordering property. Without delving deeply into the implementations,
- which are based on a token scheme in [Chang] and an acknowledgement
- protocol in [Schneider], we observe that the delaying of certain mes-
- sages is fundamental to the establishment of a unique global delivery
- ordering; indeed, it is easy to prove on knowledge theoretic grounds
-
-
-
- Birman & Joseph [Page 6]
-
- RFC 992 November 1986
-
-
- that this must always be the case. In [Chang] a primary goal is to
- minimize the number of messages sent, and the protocol given performs
- extremely well in this regard. However, a delay occurs while waiting
- for tokens to arrive and the delivery latency that results may be
- high. [Cristian] assumes that clocks are closely synchronized and
- that message transit times are bounded by well-known constants, and
- uses this to derive atomic broadcast protocols tolerant of increas-
- ingly severe classes of failures. The protocols explicitly delay
- delivery to achieve the desired global ordering on multicasts. For
- reasons discussed below, this tends to result in high latency in typ-
- ical local networking environments. An additional drawback of the
- atomic broadcast protocols is that no mechanism is provided for
- ensuring that all processes observe the same sequence of failures and
- recoveries, or for ensuring that failures and recoveries are ordered
- relative to ongoing multicasts. Since this problem arises in any
- setting where one process monitors another, we felt it should be
- addressed at the same level as the communication protocol. Finally,
- one wants a group oriented multicast protocol, not a site oriented
- broadcast, and this issue must be resolved too.
-
- 6. Our multicast primitives
-
- We now describe three multicast protocols - GBCAST, ABCAST, and
- CBCAST - for transmitting a message reliably from a sender process to
- some set of destination processes. Details of the protocols and
- their correctness proofs can be found in [Birman-b]. The protocols
- ensure "all or nothing" behavior: if any destination receives a mes-
- sage, then unless it fails, all destinations will receive it. Group
- addressing is discussed in Sec. 6.5.
-
- The failure model that one adopts has a considerable impact on the
- structure of the resulting system. We adopted the model of fail-stop
- processors [Schneider]: when failures occur, a processor simply stops
- (crashes), as do all the processes executing on it. We also assume
- that individual processes can crash, and that this is detected when
- it occurs by a monitoring mechanism present at each site. Further
- assumptions are sometimes made about the availability of synchronized
- realtime clocks. Here, we adopt the position that although reason-
- ably accurate elapsed-time clocks may be available, closely synchron-
- ized clocks probably will not be. For example, the 60Hz "line"
- clocks commonly used on current workstations are only accurate to
- 16ms. On the other hand, 4-8ms inter-site message transit times are
- common and 1-2ms are reported increasingly often. Thus, it is impos-
- sible to synchronize clocks to better than 32-48ms, enough time for a
- pair of sites to exchange between 4 and 50 messages. Even with
- advancing technology, it seems safe to assume that clock skew will
- remain "large" when compared to inter-site message transmission
- speed. In particular, this argues against time-based protocols such
- as the one used in [Cristian]
-
-
-
-
-
- Birman & Joseph [Page 7]
-
- RFC 992 November 1986
-
-
- 6.1 The GBCAST primitive
-
- GBCAST (group multicast) is the most constrained, and costly, of
- the three primitives. It is used to transmit information about
- failures and recoveries to members of a process group. A recov-
- ering member uses GBCAST to inform the operational ones that it
- has become available. Additionally, when a member fails, the
- system arranges for a GBCAST to be issued to group members on its
- behalf, informing them of its failure. Arguments to GBCAST are a
- message and a process group identifier, which is translated into
- a set of destinations as described below (Sec. 6.5).
-
- Our GBCAST protocol ensures that if any process receives a multi-
- cast B before receiving a GBCAST G, then all overlapping destina-
- tions will receive B before G <1> This is true regardless of the
- type of multicast involved. Moreover, when a failure occurs, the
- corresponding GBCAST message is delivered after any other multi-
- casts from the failed process. Each member can therefore main-
- tain a VIEW listing the membership of the process group, updating
- it when a GBCAST is received. Although VIEW's are not updated
- simultaneously in real time, all members observe the same
- sequence of VIEW changes. Since, GBCAST's are ordered relative
- to all other multicasts, all members receiving a given multicast
- will have the same value of VIEW when they receive it.
-
- Notice that GBCAST also provides a convenient way to change other
- global properties of a group "atomically". In our work, we have
- used GBCAST to dynamically change a ranking on the members of a
- group, to request that group members establish checkpoints for
- use if recovery is needed after all failure, and to implement
- process migration. In each case, the ordering of GBCAST relative
- to other events that makes it possible to perform the desired
- action without running any additional protocol. Other uses for
- GBCAST will no doubt emerge as our research continues.
-
- Members of a process group can also use the value of VIEW to pick
- a strategy for processing an incoming request, or to react to
- failure or recovery without having to run any special protocol
- first. Since the GBCAST ordering is the same everywhere, their
- actions will all be consistent. Notice that when all the members
- of a process group may have failed, GBCAST also provides an inex-
- pensive way to determine the last site that failed: process group
- members simply log each value of VIEW that becomes defined on
- stable storage before using it; a simplified version of the algo-
- rithm in [Skeen-a] can then be executed when recovering from
- failure.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Birman & Joseph [Page 8]
-
- RFC 992 November 1986
-
-
- 6.2 The ABCAST primitive
-
- The GBCAST primitive is too costly to be used for general commun-
- ication between process group members. This motivates the intro-
- duction of weaker (less ordered) primitives, which might be used
- in situations where a total order on multicast messages is not
- necessary. Our second primitive, ABCAST (atomic multicast),
- satisfies such a weaker constraint. Specifically, it is often
- desired that if two multicasts are received in some order at a
- common destination site, they be received in that order at all
- other common destinations, even if this order was not predeter-
- mined. For example, if a process group is being used to maintain
- a replicated queue and ABCAST is used to transmit queue opera-
- tions to all copies, the operations will be done in the same
- order everywhere, hence the copies of the queue will remain mutu-
- ally consistent. The primitive ABCAST(msg, label, dests) pro-
- vides this behavior. Two ABCAST's having the same label are
- delivered in the same order at all common destinations.
-
- 6.3 The CBCAST primitive
-
- Our third primitive, CBCAST (causal multicast), is weakest in the
- sense that it involves less distributed synchronization then
- GBCAST or ABCAST. CBCAST(msg, dests) atomically delivers msg to
- each operational dest. The CBCAST protocol ensures that if two
- multicasts are potentially causally dependent on another, then
- the former is delivered after the latter at all overlapping des-
- tinations. A multicast B' is potentially causally dependent on a
- multicast B if both multicasts originate from the same process,
- and B' is sent after B, or if there exists a chain of message
- transmissions and receptions or local events by which knowledge
- could have been transferred from the process that issued B to the
- process that issued B' [Lamport]. For causally independent mul-
- ticasts, the delivery ordering is not constrained.
-
- CBCAST is valuable in systems like ISIS, where concurrency con-
- trol algorithms are used to synchronize concurrent computations.
- In these systems, if two processes communicate concurrently with
- the same process the messages are almost always independent ones
- that can be processed in any order: otherwise, concurrency con-
- trol would have caused one to pause until the other was finished.
- On the other hand, order is clearly important within a causally
- linked series of multicasts, and it is precisely this sort of
- order that CBCAST respects.
-
- 6.4 Other multicast primitives
-
- A weaker multicast primitive is reliable multicast, which pro-
- vides all-or-nothing delivery, but no ordering properties. The
- formulation of CBCAST in [Birman-b] actually includes a mechanism
- for performing multicasts of this sort, hence no special
-
-
-
- Birman & Joseph [Page 9]
-
- RFC 992 November 1986
-
-
- primitive is needed for the purpose. Additionally, there may be
- situations in which ABCAST protocols that also satisfy a CBCAST
- ordering property would be valuable. Our ABCAST primitive could
- be changed to respect such a rule, and we made use of a multicast
- primitive that is simultaneously causal and atomic in our work on
- consistent shared bulletin boards ([Birman-c]). For simplicity,
- the presentation here assumes that ABCAST is completely orthogo-
- nal to CBCAST, but a simple way to build an efficient "causal
- atomic" multicast is described in our full-length paper. The
- cost of this protocol is only slightly higher than that of
- ABCAST.
-
- 6.5 Group addressing protocol
-
- Since group membership can change dynamically, it may be diffi-
- cult for a process to compute a list of destinations to which a
- message should be sent, for example, as is needed to perform a
- GBCAST. In [Birman-b] we report on a protocol for ensuring that
- a given multicast will be delivered to all members of a process
- group in the same view. This view is either the view that was
- operative when the message transmission was initiated, or a view
- that was defined subsequently. The algorithm is a simple itera-
- tive one that costs nothing unless the group membership changes,
- and permits the caching of possibly inaccurate membership infor-
- mation near processes that might want to communicate with a
- group. Using the protocol, a flexible message addressing scheme
- can readily be supported.
-
- Iterative addressing is only required when the process transmit-
- ting a message has an inaccurate copy of the process group view.
- In the implementation we are now building, this would rarely be
- the case, and iteration is never needed if the view is known to
- be accurate. Thus, iterated delivery should be very infrequent.
-
- 6.6 Synchronous versus asynchronous multicast abstractions
-
- Many systems employ RPC internally, as a lowest level primitive
- for interaction between processes. It should be evident that all
- of our multicast primitives can be used to implement replicated
- remote procedure calls [Cooper]: the caller would simply pause
- until replies have been received from all the participants
- (observation of a failure constitutes a reply in this case). We
- term such a use of the primitives synchronous, to distinguish it
- from from an asynchronous multicast in which no replies, or just
- one reply, suffices.
-
- In our work on ISIS, GBCAST and ABCAST are normally invoked syn-
- chronously, to implement a remote procedure call by one member of
- an object on all the members of its process group. However,
- CBCAST, which is the most frequently used overall, is almost
- never invoked synchronously. Asynchronous CBCAST's are the
-
-
-
- Birman & Joseph [Page 10]
-
- RFC 992 November 1986
-
-
- primary source of concurrency in ISIS: although the delivery ord-
- ering is assured, transmission can be delayed to enable a message
- to be piggybacked on another, or to schedule IO within the system
- as a whole. While the system cannot defer an asynchronous multi-
- cast indefinitely, the ability to defer it a little, without
- delaying some computation by doing so, permits load to be
- smoothed. Since CBCAST respects the delivery orderings on which
- a computation might depend, and is ordered with respect to
- failures, the concurrency introduced does not complicate higher
- level algorithms. Moreover, the protocol itself is extremely
- cheap.
-
- A problem is introduced by our decision to allow asynchronous
- multicasts: the atomic reception property must now be extended to
- address causally related sequences of asynchronous messages. If
- a failure were to result in some multicasts being delivered to
- all their destinations but others that precede them not being
- delivered anywhere, inconsistency might result even if the desti-
- nations do not overlap. We therefore extend the atomicity pro-
- perty as follows. If process t receives a message m from process
- s, and s subsequently fails, then unless t fails as well, all
- messages m' that s received prior to its failure must be
- delivered to their remaining operational destinations. This is
- because the state of t may now depend on the contents of any such
- m', hence the system state could become inconsistent if the
- delivery of m' were not completed. The costs of the protocols
- are not affected by this change.
-
- A second problem arises when the user-level implications of this
- atomicity rule are considered. In the event of a failure, any
- suffix of a sequence of aysnchronous multicasts could be lost and
- the system state would still be internally consistent. A process
- that is about to take some action that may leave an externally
- visible side-effect will need a way to pause until it is
- guaranteed that such multicasts have actually been delivered.
- For this purpose, a flush primitive is provided. Occasional
- calls to flush do not eliminate the benefit of using CBCAST asyn-
- chronously. Unless the system has built up a considerable back-
- log of undelivered multicast messages, which should be rare,
- flush will only pause while transmission of the last few multi-
- casts complete.
-
- 7. Using the primitives
-
- The reliable communication primitives described above lead to simple
- solutions for the problems cited in Sec. 4:
-
- [1] Synchronization. Many synchronization problems are subsumed
- into the primitives themselves. For example, consider the use of
- GBCAST to implement recovery. A recovering process would issue a
- GBCAST to the process group members, requesting that state
-
-
-
- Birman & Joseph [Page 11]
-
- RFC 992 November 1986
-
-
- information be transferred to it. In addition to sending the
- current state of the group to the recovering process, group
- members update the process group view at this time. Subsequent
- messages to the group will be delivered to the recovered process,
- with all necessary synchronization being provided by the ordering
- properties of GBCAST. In situations where other forms of syn-
- chronization are needed, ABCAST provides a simple way to ensure
- that several processes take actions in the same order, and this
- form of low-level synchronization simplifies a number of higher-
- level synchronization problems. For example, if ABCAST is used
- to do P() and V() operations on a distributed semaphore, the
- order of operations on the semaphore is set by the ABCAST, hence
- all the managers of the semaphore see these operations in a fixed
- order.
-
- [2] Failure detection. Consistent failure (and recovery) detec-
- tion are trivial using our primitives: a process simply waits for
- the appropriate process group view to change. This facilitates
- the implementation of algorithms in which one processes monitors
- the status of another process. A process that acts on the basis
- of a process group view change does so with the assurance that
- other group members will (eventually) observe the same event and
- will take consistent actions.
-
- [3] Consistency. We believe that consistency is generally
- expressible as a set of atomicity and ordering constraints on
- message delivery, particularly causal ones of the sort provided
- by CBCAST. Our primitives permit a process to specify the com-
- munication properties needed to achieve a desired form of con-
- sistency. Continued research will be needed to understand pre-
- cisely how to pick the weakest primitive in a designated situa-
- tion.
-
- [4] Serializability. To achieve serializability, one implements
- a concurrency control algorithm and then forces computations to
- respect the serialization order that this algorithm choses. The
- ABCAST primitive, as observed above, is a powerful tool for
- establishing an order between concurrent events, e.g. by lock
- acquisition. Having established such an order, CBCAST can be
- used to distribute information about the computation and also its
- termination (commit or abort). Any process that observes the
- commit or abort of a computation will only be able to interact
- with data managers that have received messages preceding the com-
- mit or abort, hence a highly asynchronous transactional execution
- results. If a process running a computation fails, this is
- detected when a failure GBCAST is received instead of the commit.
- Thus, executions are simple and quite deterministic.
-
- If commit is conditional, CBCAST would be used to first interro-
- gate participants to learn if they are prepared to commit, and
- then to transmit the commit or abort decision (the usual two-
-
-
-
- Birman & Joseph [Page 12]
-
- RFC 992 November 1986
-
-
- phase commit). On the other hand, conditional commits can often
- be avoided using our approach. A method for building transac-
- tions that will roll-forward after failure after failure is dis-
- cussed in more detail in [Birman-a] [Joseph-a] [Joseph-b]. Other
- forms of concurrency control, such as timestamp generation, can
- similarly be implemented using ABCAST and CBCAST. We view tran-
- sactional data storage as an application-level concern, which can
- be handled using a version stack approach or a multi-version
- store, or any other appropriate mechanism.
-
- 8. Implementation
-
- The communication primitives can be built in layers, starting with a
- bare network providing unreliable Internet datagrams. The software
- structure is, however, less mature and more complex than the one sug-
- gested in RFC's 966 and 988. For example, at this stage of our
- research we do not understand how to optimize our protocols to the
- same extent as for the unreliable host multicast approach described
- in those RFC's. Thus, the implementation we describe here should be
- understood to be a prototype. A particularly intriguing question,
- which we are investigating actively, concerns the use of a "best
- effort" ethernet or Internet multicast as a tool to optimize the
- implementation of our protocols.
-
- Our basic approach is to view large area networks as a set of clus-
- ters of sites interconnected by high speed LAN devices and intercon-
- nected by slower long-haul links. We first provide protocols for use
- within clusters, and then extend them to run between clusters too.
- Network partitioning can be tolerated at all levels of the hierarchy
- in the sense that no incorrect actions can result after network par-
- titioning, although our approach will sometimes block until the par-
- tition is repaired. Our protocols also tend to block within a clus-
- ter while the list of operational sites for that cluster is being
- changed. In normal LAN's, this happens infrequently (during site
- failure or recovery), and would not pose a problem. (In failure
- intensive applications, alternative protocols might be needed to
- address this issue).
-
- The lowest level of our software uses a site-to-site acknowledgement
- protocol to convert the unreliable packet transport this into a
- sequenced, error-free message abstraction, using timeouts to detect
- apparent failures. TCP can also be used for this purpose, provided
- that a "filter" is placed on the incoming message stream and certain
- types of messages are handled specially. An agreement protocol is
- then used to order the site-failures and recoveries consistently. If
- timeouts cause a failure to be detected erroneously, the protocol
- forces the affected site to undergo recovery.
-
- Built on this is a layer that supports the primitives themselves.
- CBCAST has a very light-weight implementation, based on the idea of
- flooding the system with copies of a message: Each process buffers
-
-
-
- Birman & Joseph [Page 13]
-
- RFC 992 November 1986
-
-
- copies of any messages needed to ensure the consistency of its view
- of the system. If message m is delivered to process p, and m is
- potentially causally dependent on a message m prime, then a copy of m
- prime is sent to p as well (duplicates are discarded). A garbage
- collector deletes superfluous copies after a message has reached all
- its destinations. By using extensive piggybacking and a simple
- scheduling algorithm to control message transmission, the cost of a
- CBCAST is kept low -- often, less than one packet per destination.
- ABCAST employs a two-phase protocol based on one suggested to us by
- Skeen [Skeen-b]. This protocol has higher latency than CBCAST
- because delivery can only occur during the second phase; ABCAST is
- thus inherently synchronous. In ISIS, however, ABCAST is used
- rarely; we believe that this would be the case in other systems as
- well. GBCAST is implemented using a two-phase protocol similar to
- the one for ABCAST, but with an additional mechanism that flushes
- messages from a failed process before delivering the GBCAST announc-
- ing the failure. Although GBCAST is slower than ABCAST or CBCAST, it
- is used rarely enough so that performance is probably less of an
- issue here -- and in any case, even GBCAST could be tuned to give
- very high throughput. Preliminary performance figures appear in
- [Birman-b].
-
- Although satisfactory performance should be possible using an imple-
- mentation that sits on top of a conventional Internet mechanism, it
- should be noted that to achieve really high rates of communication
- the layers of software described above must reside in the kernel,
- because they run on behalf of large numbers of clients, run fre-
- quently, and tend to execute for very brief periods before doing I/O
- and pausing. A non-kernel implementation will thus incur high
- scheduling and context switching overhead. Additionally, it is not
- at all clear how to use ethernet style broadcast mechanisms to optim-
- ize the performance of this sort of protocol, although it should be
- possible. We view this as an interesting area for research.
-
- A forthcoming paper will describe higher level software that we are
- building on top of the basic fault-tolerant process group mechanism
- described above.
-
- 9. Conclusions
-
- The experience of implementing a substantial fault-tolerant system
- left us with insights into the properties to be desired from a com-
- munication subsystem. In particular, we became convinced that to
- build a reliable distributed system, one must start with a reliable
- communication subsystem. The multicast primitives described in this
- memo present a simple interface, achieve a high level of concurrency,
- can be used in both local and wide area networks, and are applicable
- to software ranging from distributed database systems to the fault-
- tolerant objects and bulletin boards provided by ISIS. Because they
- are integrated with failure handling mechanisms and respect desired
- event orderings, they introduce a desirable form of determinism into
-
-
-
- Birman & Joseph [Page 14]
-
- RFC 992 November 1986
-
-
- distributed computation without compromising efficiency. A conse-
- quence is that high-level algorithms are greatly simplified, reducing
- the probability of error. We believe that this is a very promising
- and practical approach to building large fault-tolerant distributed
- systems, and it is the only one we know of that leads to a rigorous
- form of confidence in the resulting software.
-
- NOTES:
-
- <1> A problem arises if a process p fails without receiving some mes-
- sage after that message has already been delivered to some other pro-
- cess q: q's VIEW when it received the message would show p to be
- operational; hence, q will assume that p received the message,
- although p is physically incapable of doing so. However, the state
- of the system is now equivalent to one in which p did receive the
- message, but failed before acting on it. In effect, there exists an
- interpretation of the actual system state that is consistent with q's
- assumption. Thus, GBCAST satisfies the sort of logical delivery pro-
- perty cited in the introduction.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Birman & Joseph [Page 15]
-
- RFC 992 November 1986
-
-
- 10. References
-
- [RFC966] Deering, S. and Cheriton, D. Host groups: A multicast exten-
- sion to the internet protocol. Stanford University, December
- 1985.
-
- [RFC988] Deering, S. Host extensions for IP multicasting. Stanford
- University, July 1986.
-
- [Allchin] Allchin, J., McKendry, M. Synchronization and recovery of
- actions. Proc. 2nd ACM SIGACT/SIGOPS Principles of Distributed
- Computing, Montreal, Canada, 1983.
-
- [Babaoglu] Babaoglu, O., Drummond, R. The streets of Byzantium: Network
- architectures for fast reliable multicast. IEEE Trans. on
- Software Engineering TSE-11, 6 (June 1985).
-
- [Bernstein] Bernstein, P., Goodman, N. Concurrency control algorithms
- for replicated database systems. ACM Computing Surveys 13, 2
- (June 1981), 185-222.
-
- [Birman-a] Birman, K. Replication and fault-tolerance in the ISIS sys-
- tem. Proc. 10th ACM SIGOPS Symposium on Operating Systems Princi-
- ples. Orcas Island, Washington, Dec. 1985, 79-86.
-
- [Birman-b] Birman, K., Joseph, T. Reliable communication in the pres-
- ence of failures. Dept. of Computer Science, Cornell Univ., TR
- 85-694, Aug. 1985. To appear in ACM TOCS (Feb. 1987).
-
- [Birman-c] Birman, K., Joseph, T., Stephenson, P. Programming with
- fault tolerant bulletin boards in asynchronous distributed sys-
- tems. Dept. of Computer Science, Cornell Univ., TR 85-788, Aug.
- 1986.
-
- [Birrell] Birrell, A., Nelson, B. Implementing remote procedure calls.
- ACM Transactions on Computer Systems 2, 1 (Feb. 1984), 39-59.
-
- [Chang] Chang, J., Maxemchuck, M. Reliable multicast protocols. ACM
- TOCS 2, 3 (Aug. 1984), 251-273.
-
- [Cheriton] Cheriton, D. The V Kernel: A software base for distributed
- systems. IEEE Software 1 12, (1984), 19-43.
-
- [Cooper] Cooper, E. Replicated procedure call. Proc. 3rd ACM Symposium
- on Principles of Distributed Computing., August 1984, 220-232.
- (May 1985).
-
- [Cristian] Cristian, F. et al Atomic multicast: From simple diffusion to
- Byzantine agreement. IBM Technical Report RJ 4540 (48668), Oct.
- 1984.
-
-
-
-
- Birman & Joseph [Page 16]
-
- RFC 992 November 1986
-
-
- [Eswaren] Eswaren, K.P., et al The notion of consistency and predicate
- locks in a database system. Comm. ACM 19, 11 (Nov. 1976), 624-
- 633.
-
- [Hadzilacos] Hadzilacos, V. Byzantine agreement under restricted types
- of failures (not telling the truth is different from telling of
- lies). Tech. ARep. TR-19-83, Aiken Comp. Lab., Harvard University
- (June 1983).
-
- [Halpern] Halpern, J., and Moses, Y. Knowledge and common knowledge in
- a distributed environment. Tech. Report RJ-4421, IBM San Jose
- Research Laboratory, 1984.
-
- [Joseph-a] Joseph, T. Low cost management of replicated data. Ph.D.
- dissertation, Dept. of Computer Science, Cornell Univ., Ithaca
- (Dec. 1985).
-
- [Joseph-b] Joseph, T., Birman, K. Low cost management of replicated
- data in fault-tolerant distributed systems. ACM TOCS 4, 1 (Feb
- 1986), 54-70.
-
- [Lamport] Lamport, L. Time, clocks, and the ordering of events in a
- distributed system. CACM 21, 7, July 1978, 558-565.
-
- [Lazowska] Lazowska, E. et al The architecture of the EDEN system.
- Proc. 8th Symposium on Operating Systems Principles, Dec. 1981,
- 148-159.
-
- [Liskov] Liskov, B., Scheifler, R. Guardians and actions: Linguistic
- support for robust, distributed programs. ACM TOPLAS 5, 3 (July
- 1983), 381-404.
-
- [Moss] Moss, E. Nested transactions: An approach to reliable, distri-
- buted computing. Ph.D. thesis, MIT Dept of EECS, TR 260, April
- 1981.
-
- [Papadimitrou] Papadimitrou, C. The serializability of concurrent data-
- base updates. JACM 26, 4 (Oct. 1979), 631-653.
-
- [Popek] Popek, G. et al. Locus: A network transparent, high reliability
- distributed system. Proc. 8th Symposium on Operating Systems
- Principles, Dec. 1981, 169-177.
-
- [Schlicting] Schlicting, R, Schneider, F. Fail-stop processors: An
- approach to designing fault-tolerant distributed computing sys-
- tems. ACM TOCS 1, 3, August 1983, 222-238.
-
- [Schneider] Schneider, F., Gries, D., Schlicting, R. Reliable multicast
- protocols. Science of computer programming 3, 2 (March 1984).
-
- [Skeen-a] Skeen, D. Determining the last process to fail. ACM TOCS 3,
-
-
-
- Birman & Joseph [Page 17]
-
- RFC 992 November 1986
-
-
- 1, Feb. 1985, 15-30.
-
- [Skeen-b] Skeen, D. A reliable multicast protocol. Unpublished.
-
- [Spector] Spector, A., et al Distributed transactions for reliable sys-
- tems. Proc. 10th ACM SIGOPS Symposium on Operating Systems Prin-
- ciples, Dec. 1985, 127-146.
-
- [Strong] Strong, H.R., Dolev, D. Byzantine agreement. Digest of papers,
- Spring Compcon 83, San Francisco, CA, March 1983, 77-81.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Birman & Joseph [Page 18]
-
-