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5th IEEE Workshop on Future Trends of Distributed Computing Systems
How to Commit Concurrent, Non-Isolated Computations
Chenju, Korea
August 28-August 30
ISBN: 0-8186-7125-4
Edgar Nett, German National Research Center for Information Technology
Michael Mock, German National Research Center for Information Technology
We face today the situation that although distributed system are potentially more dependable than centralized systems, they actually confront the users, programmers, and system administrators with more complex and hard to manage failure situations than centralized systems. Fault tolerance in distributed systems is still a promising and not yet mastered area of research. One key feature of every (software) fault tolerance mechanism is the ability to commit system progress, i.e., to guarantee that some reached state will no longer be subject to any considered fault. The paper focuses on a formal model extending the notion of commit, which is originally established in classical transaction theory for isolated transactions, to the notion commit-correctness, reflecting the possibility of interactions between different computations. The problem of the domino-effect, originally established in the context of a process oriented, message based paradigm, is inherently solved by this approach.
Index Terms:
Distributed Systems, Fault-Tolerance, Concurrency, Formal Computational Model, Cooparation
Citation:
Edgar Nett, Michael Mock, "How to Commit Concurrent, Non-Isolated Computations," ftdcs, pp.0343, 5th IEEE Workshop on Future Trends of Distributed Computing Systems, 1995
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