Are quorums an alternative for data replication?
Data replication is playing an increasingly important role in the design of parallel information systems. In particular, the widespread use of cluster architectures often requires to replicate data for performance and availability reasons. However, maintaining the consistency of the different replic...
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Veröffentlicht in: | ACM transactions on database systems 2003-09, Vol.28 (3), p.257-294 |
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creator | Jimenez-Peris, Ricardo Patino-Martinez, M Alonso, Gustavo Kemme, Bettina |
description | Data replication is playing an increasingly important role in the design of parallel information systems. In particular, the widespread use of cluster architectures often requires to replicate data for performance and availability reasons. However, maintaining the consistency of the different replicas is known to cause severe scalability problems. To address this limitation, quorums are often suggested as a way to reduce the overall overhead of replication. In this article, we analyze several quorum types in order to better understand their behavior in practice. The results obtained challenge many of the assumptions behind quorum based replication. Our evaluation indicates that the conventional read-one/write-all-available approach is the best choice for a large range of applications requiring data replication. We believe this is an important result for anybody developing code for computing clusters as the read-one/write-all-available strategy is much simpler to implement and more flexible than quorum-based approaches. In this article, we show that, in addition, it is also the best choice using a number of other selection criteria. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1145/937598.937601 |
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subjects | Data processing Data replication Information systems |
title | Are quorums an alternative for data replication? |
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