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On Liveness of Dynamic Storage

Published 25 Jul 2015 in cs.DC | (1507.07086v1)

Abstract: Dynamic distributed storage algorithms such as DynaStore, Reconfigurable Paxos, RAMBO, and RDS, do not ensure liveness (wait-freedom) in asynchronous runs with infinitely many reconfigurations. We prove that this is inherent for asynchronous dynamic storage algorithms, including ones that use $\Omega$ or $\diamond S$ oracles. Our result holds even if only one process may fail, provided that machines that were successfully removed from the system's configuration may be switched off by an administrator. Intuitively, the impossibility relies on the fact that a correct process can be suspected to have failed at any time, i.e., its failure is indistinguishable to other processes from slow delivery of its messages, and so the system should be able to reconfigure without waiting for this process to complete its pending operations. To circumvent this result, we define a dynamic eventually perfect failure detector, and present an algorithm that uses it to emulate wait-free dynamic atomic storage (with no restrictions on reconfiguration rate). Together, our results thus draw a sharp line between oracles like $\Omega$ and $\diamond S$, which allow some correct process to continue to be suspected forever, and a dynamic eventually perfect one, which does not.

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