-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 12
Consus is a geo-replicated transactional key-value store.
License
rescrv/Consus
Folders and files
Name | Name | Last commit message | Last commit date | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Repository files navigation
What is Consus? =============== Consus is a geo-replicated transactional key-value store that upholds strong consistency and fault tolerance guarantees across multiple data centers. By geo-replicating data, Consus can can withstand correlated failures up to and including entire data centers, and reduce latency for clients by directing them to nearby replicas. The latency between geographically distinct locations forces storage systems to navigate the inherent tradeoff between latency and fault tolerance. Systems may make an operation withstand a complete data center failure by incurring the latency cost to propagate it to other data centers before reporting that the operation has finished. On the other side of the tradeoff systems, may avoid the latency cost by reporting that an operation is complete before it propagates to other data centers---at the risk that the operation is lost in a failure and never takes effect in other data centers. In essence, the tradeoff is entirely a matter of minimizing latency while upholding desirable degree of fault tolerance. Consus chooses to maintain fault tolerance at all times. What makes Consus unique? ========================= For systems that make cross-data center fault tolerance guarantees, wide-area latency is often the dominating cost. An operation's overall execution time is heavily dependent upon the number of messages sent via the wide area and the latency of each message; consequently, reducing the number of messages on the critical path is an important aspect of optimizing the overall performance of geo-replicated systems. Consus can commit a transaction across multiple data centers in three wide-area message delays during regular execution. Simply sending a message to a remote data center and receiving acknowledgement of its receipt---the bare minimum necessary to tolerate a data center failure---requires two message delays. Protocols such as 2-phase commit or Paxos require two round trips, or four message delays. What is the state of Consus? ============================ Consus was the capstone of my Ph.D. thesis. I have since graduated and have other commitments that take me away from maintaining the project. Anyone trying to use the code should beware the following: - There is a deadlock bug that shows up under contending concurrency that I never got a chance to track down fully. The remedy will likely involve changing both the key-value store and the transaction manager to make sure the wound-wait protocol works correctly. - I probably would not want to run this system in production without significant further testing. The generalized paxos pieces are the most compex and, despite being the focus of most of my testing, probably not something anybody would want to debug at 3am. More Resources ============== - http://consus.io The consus homepage - http://github.com/rescrv/consus-releng Repository for building and testing Consus on a variety of platforms - http://github.com/rescrv/consus.io Source for the consus.io homepage
About
Consus is a geo-replicated transactional key-value store.
Resources
License
Stars
Watchers
Forks
Releases
No releases published
Packages 0
No packages published