Defining and verifying durable opacity: correctness for persistent software transactional memory
- Non-volatile memory (NVM), aka persistent memory, is a new paradigm for memory that preserves its contents even after power loss. The expected ubiquity of NVM has stimulated interest in the design of novel concepts ensuring correctness of concurrent programming abstractions in the face of persistency. So far, this has lead to the design of a number of persistent concurrent data structures, built to satisfy an associated notion of correctness: durable linearizability.
In this paper, we transfer the principle of durable concurrent correctness to the area of software transactional memory (STM). Software transactional memory algorithms allow for concurrent access to shared state. Like linearizability for concurrent data structures, opacity is the established notion of correctness for STMs. First, we provide a novel definition of durable opacity extending opacity to handle crashes and recovery in the context of NVM. Second, we develop a durably opaque version of an existing STM algorithm,Non-volatile memory (NVM), aka persistent memory, is a new paradigm for memory that preserves its contents even after power loss. The expected ubiquity of NVM has stimulated interest in the design of novel concepts ensuring correctness of concurrent programming abstractions in the face of persistency. So far, this has lead to the design of a number of persistent concurrent data structures, built to satisfy an associated notion of correctness: durable linearizability.
In this paper, we transfer the principle of durable concurrent correctness to the area of software transactional memory (STM). Software transactional memory algorithms allow for concurrent access to shared state. Like linearizability for concurrent data structures, opacity is the established notion of correctness for STMs. First, we provide a novel definition of durable opacity extending opacity to handle crashes and recovery in the context of NVM. Second, we develop a durably opaque version of an existing STM algorithm, namely the Transactional Mutex Lock (TML). Third, we design a proof technique for durable opacity based on refinement between TML and an operational characterisation of durable opacity by adapting the TMS2 specification. Finally, we apply this proof technique to show that the durable version of TML is indeed durably opaque. The correctness proof is mechanized within Isabelle.…
Author: | Eleni Bila, Simon Doherty, Brijesh Dongol, John Derrick, Gerhard SchellhornORCiDGND, Heike Wehrheim |
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Frontdoor URL | https://opus.bibliothek.uni-augsburg.de/opus4/79694 |
ISBN: | 978-3-030-50085-6OPAC |
Parent Title (English): | Lecture Notes in Computer Science |
Publisher: | Springer |
Place of publication: | Cham |
Type: | Article |
Language: | English |
Date of Publication (online): | 2020/09/22 |
Year of first Publication: | 2020 |
Publishing Institution: | Universität Augsburg |
Release Date: | 2020/09/22 |
Volume: | 12136 |
First Page: | 39 |
Last Page: | 58 |
Note: | Formal Techniques for Distributed Objects, Components, and Systems - 40th IFIP WG 6.1 International Conference, FORTE 2020, Held as Part of the 15th International Federated Conference on Distributed Computing Techniques, DisCoTec 2020, Valletta, Malta, June 15–19, 2020, Proceedings |
Series: | Programming and Software Engineering book sub series - LNPSE ; 12136 |
DOI: | https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-50086-3_3 |
Institutes: | Fakultät für Angewandte Informatik |
Fakultät für Angewandte Informatik / Institut für Informatik | |
Fakultät für Angewandte Informatik / Institut für Software & Systems Engineering | |
Fakultät für Angewandte Informatik / Institut für Informatik / Lehrstuhl für Softwaretechnik | |
Fakultät für Angewandte Informatik / Institut für Informatik / Lehrstuhl für Softwaretechnik / Lehrstuhl für Softwaretechnik | |
Dewey Decimal Classification: | 0 Informatik, Informationswissenschaft, allgemeine Werke / 00 Informatik, Wissen, Systeme / 004 Datenverarbeitung; Informatik |