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10.1109/ICDCS.2013.57guideproceedingsArticle/Chapter ViewAbstractPublication PagesConference Proceedingsacm-pubtype
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Safety of Deferred Update in Transactional Memory

Published: 08 July 2013 Publication History

Abstract

Transactional memory allows the user to declare sequences of instructions as speculative transactions that can either commit or abort. If a transaction commits, it appears to be executed sequentially, so that the committed transactions constitute a correct sequential execution. If a transaction aborts, none of its instructions can affect other transactions. The popular criterion of opacity requires that the views of aborted transactions must also be consistent with the global sequential order constituted by committed ones. This is believed to be important, since inconsistencies observed by an aborted transaction may cause a fatal irrecoverable error or waste of the system in an infinite loop. Intuitively, an opaque implementation must ensure that no intermediate view a transaction obtains before it commits or aborts can be affected by a transaction that has not started committing yet, so called deferred-update semantics. In this paper, we intend to grasp this intuition formally. We propose a variant of opacity that explicitly requires the sequential order to respect the deferred-update semantics. %We show that our criterion is a safety property, i.e., it is prefix- %and limit-closed. Unlike opacity, our property also ensures that a serialization of a history implies serializations of its prefixes. Finally, we show that our property is equivalent to opacity if we assume that no two transactions commit identical values on the same variable, and present a counter-example for scenarios when the ``unique-write'' assumption does not hold.

Cited By

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  • (2018)Inherent limitations of hybrid transactional memoryDistributed Computing10.1007/s00446-017-0305-331:3(167-185)Online publication date: 1-Jun-2018
  • (2017)Characterizing Transactional Memory Consistency Conditions Using Observational RefinementJournal of the ACM10.1145/313136065:1(1-44)Online publication date: 18-Dec-2017
  • (2013)A programming language perspective on transactional memory consistencyProceedings of the 2013 ACM symposium on Principles of distributed computing10.1145/2484239.2484267(309-318)Online publication date: 22-Jul-2013

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Published In

cover image Guide Proceedings
ICDCS '13: Proceedings of the 2013 IEEE 33rd International Conference on Distributed Computing Systems
July 2013
623 pages
ISBN:9780769550008

Publisher

IEEE Computer Society

United States

Publication History

Published: 08 July 2013

Author Tags

  1. Limit-closure
  2. Safety
  3. Transactional Memory

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Cited By

View all
  • (2018)Inherent limitations of hybrid transactional memoryDistributed Computing10.1007/s00446-017-0305-331:3(167-185)Online publication date: 1-Jun-2018
  • (2017)Characterizing Transactional Memory Consistency Conditions Using Observational RefinementJournal of the ACM10.1145/313136065:1(1-44)Online publication date: 18-Dec-2017
  • (2013)A programming language perspective on transactional memory consistencyProceedings of the 2013 ACM symposium on Principles of distributed computing10.1145/2484239.2484267(309-318)Online publication date: 22-Jul-2013

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