Chiller: Contention-centric Transaction Execution and Data Partitioning for Modern Networks

© 2020 Association for Computing Machinery. Distributed transactions on high-overhead TCP/IP-based networks were conventionally considered to be prohibitively expensive and thus were avoided at all costs. To that end, the primary goal of almost any existing partitioning scheme is to minimize the num...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Zamanian, Erfan (Author), Shun, Julian (Author), Binnig, Carsten (Author), Kraska, Tim (Author)
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: ACM, 2022-07-14T13:47:21Z.
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Online Access:Get fulltext
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100 1 0 |a Zamanian, Erfan  |e author 
700 1 0 |a Shun, Julian  |e author 
700 1 0 |a Binnig, Carsten  |e author 
700 1 0 |a Kraska, Tim  |e author 
245 0 0 |a Chiller: Contention-centric Transaction Execution and Data Partitioning for Modern Networks 
260 |b ACM,   |c 2022-07-14T13:47:21Z. 
856 |z Get fulltext  |u https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/143728 
520 |a © 2020 Association for Computing Machinery. Distributed transactions on high-overhead TCP/IP-based networks were conventionally considered to be prohibitively expensive and thus were avoided at all costs. To that end, the primary goal of almost any existing partitioning scheme is to minimize the number of cross-partition transactions. However, with the new generation of fast RDMA-enabled networks, this assumption is no longer valid. In fact, recent work has shown that distributed databases can scale even when the majority of transactions are cross-partition. In this paper, we first make the case that the new bottleneck which hinders truly scalable transaction processing in modern RDMA-enabled databases is data contention, and that optimizing for data contention leads to different partitioning layouts than optimizing for the number of distributed transactions. We then present Chiller, a new approach to data partitioning and transaction execution, which aims to minimize data contention for both local and distributed transactions. Finally, we evaluate Chiller using various workloads, and show that our partitioning and execution strategy outperforms traditional partitioning techniques which try to avoid distributed transactions, by up to a factor of 2. 
546 |a en 
655 7 |a Article 
773 |t 10.1145/3318464.3389724 
773 |t Proceedings of the ACM SIGMOD International Conference on Management of Data