State-machine replication for planet-scale systems

Online applications now routinely replicate their data at multiple sites around the world. In this paper we present Atlas, the first state-machine replication protocol tailored for such planet-scale systems. Atlas does not rely on a distinguished leader, so clients enjoy the same quality of service...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Enes, Vitor (author)
Other Authors: Baquero, Carlos (author), Rezende, Tuanir França (author), Gotsman, Alexey (author), Perrin, Matthieu (author), Sutra, Pierre (author)
Format: conferencePaper
Language:eng
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1822/71106
Country:Portugal
Oai:oai:repositorium.sdum.uminho.pt:1822/71106
Description
Summary:Online applications now routinely replicate their data at multiple sites around the world. In this paper we present Atlas, the first state-machine replication protocol tailored for such planet-scale systems. Atlas does not rely on a distinguished leader, so clients enjoy the same quality of service independently of their geographical locations. Furthermore, client-perceived latency improves as we add sites closer to clients. To achieve this, Atlas minimizes the size of its quorums using an observation that concurrent data center failures are rare. It also processes a high percentage of accesses in a single round trip, even when these conflict. We experimentally demonstrate that Atlas consistently outperforms state-of-The-Art protocols in planet-scale scenarios. In particular, Atlas is up to two times faster than Flexible Paxos with identical failure assumptions, and more than doubles the performance of Egalitarian Paxos in the YCSB benchmark.