Safe replication through bounded concurrency verification

Author:

Kaki Gowtham1,Earanky Kapil1,Sivaramakrishnan KC2,Jagannathan Suresh1

Affiliation:

1. Purdue University, USA

2. Cambridge University, UK

Abstract

High-level data types are often associated with semantic invariants that must be preserved by any correct implementation. While having implementations enforce strong guarantees such as linearizability or serializability can often be used to prevent invariant violations in concurrent settings, such mechanisms are impractical in geo-distributed replicated environments, the platform of choice for many scalable Web services. To achieve high-availability essential to this domain, these environments admit various forms of weak consistency that do not guarantee all replicas have a consistent view of an application's state. Consequently, they often admit difficult-to-understand anomalous behaviors that violate a data type's invariants, but which are extremely challenging, even for experts, to understand and debug. In this paper, we propose a novel programming framework for replicated data types (RDTs) equipped with an automatic (bounded) verification technique that discovers and fixes weak consistency anomalies. Our approach, implemented in a tool called Q9, involves systematically exploring the state space of an application executing on top of an eventually consistent data store, under an unrestricted consistency model but with a finite concurrency bound. Q9 uncovers anomalies (i.e., invariant violations) that manifest as finite counterexamples, and automatically generates repairs for such anamolies by selectively strengthening consistency guarantees for specific operations. Using Q9, we have uncovered a range of subtle anomalies in implementations of well-known benchmarks, and have been able to apply the repairs it mandates to effectively eliminate them. Notably, these benchmarks were written adopting best practices suggested to manage distributed replicated state (e.g., they are composed of provably convergent RDTs (CRDTs), avoid mutable state, etc.). While the safety guarantees offered by our technique are constrained by the concurrency bound, we show that in practice, proving bounded safety guarantees typically generalize to the unbounded case.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Air Force Research Laboratory

Publisher

Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)

Subject

Safety, Risk, Reliability and Quality,Software

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1. IsoPredict: Dynamic Predictive Analysis for Detecting Unserializable Behaviors in Weakly Isolated Data Store Applications;Proceedings of the ACM on Programming Languages;2024-06-20

2. LoRe: A Programming Model for Verifiably Safe Local-first Software;ACM Transactions on Programming Languages and Systems;2024-01-15

3. Dynamic Partial Order Reduction for Checking Correctness against Transaction Isolation Levels;Proceedings of the ACM on Programming Languages;2023-06-06

4. Automated replication of tuple spaces via static analysis;Science of Computer Programming;2022-11

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