Title
Scalable and topology-aware reconciliation on P2P networks
Abstract
Collaborative applications are characterized by high levels of data sharing. Optimistic replication has been suggested as a mechanism to enable highly concurrent access to the shared data, whilst providing full application-defined consistency guarantees. Nowadays, there are a growing number of emerging cooperative applications adequate for Peer-to-Peer (P2P) networks. However, to enable the deployment of such applications in P2P networks, it is required a mechanism to deal with their high data sharing in dynamic, scalable and available way. Previous work on optimistic replication has mainly concentrated on centralized systems. Centralized approaches are inappropriate for a P2P setting due to their limited availability and vulnerability to failures and partitions from the network. In this paper, we focus on the design of a reconciliation algorithm designed to be deployed in large scale cooperative applications, such as P2P Wiki. The main contribution of this paper is a distributed reconciliation algorithm designed for P2P networks (P2P-reconciler). Other important contributions are: a basic cost model for computing communication costs in a DHT overlay network; a strategy for computing the cost of each reconciliation step taking into account the cost model; and an algorithm that dynamically selects the best nodes for each reconciliation step. Furthermore, since P2P networks are built independently of the underlying topology, which may cause high latencies and large overheads degrading performance, we also propose a topology-aware variant of our P2P-reconciler algorithm and show the important gains on using it. Our P2P-reconciler solution enables high levels of concurrency thanks to semantic reconciliation and yields high availability, excellent scalability, with acceptable performance and limited overhead.
Year
DOI
Venue
2008
10.1007/s10619-008-7029-0
Distributed and Parallel Databases
Keywords
Field
DocType
Data replication,Semantic reconciliation,Eventual consistency,Peer-to-peer
Optimistic replication,Topology,Eventual consistency,Replication (computing),Peer-to-peer,Computer science,Data sharing,Real-time computing,High availability,Overlay network,Distributed computing,Scalability
Journal
Volume
Issue
ISSN
24
1-3
0926-8782
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
1
0.35
22
Authors
4
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Vidal Martins1292.99
Esther Pacitti275793.78
Manal El Dick3222.94
Ricardo Jimenez-Peris429916.43