Publish/Subscribe (in short pub/sub) allows clients that share common interest communicate in an asynchronous and loosely-coupled fashion. This paradigm is adopted by many distributed event-driven applications such as social networking services, distributed business processes and cyber-physical systems. These applications cannot afford to have the underlying pub/sub substrate perform unreliably, permanently fail or behave arbitrarily as it will cause significant disturbance to stably serving many end-users. Therefore, a research effort on making pub/sub systems resilient against various failures to sustain high quality of service to the clients is imperative. In this thesis, we focus on the overlay of pub/sub brokers that are widely adopted as a popular architecture for large-scale pub/sub systems. Broker overlays can suffer from various issues such as degradation of topology quality, brokers causing transient or permanent benign failures and Byzantine brokers behaving arbitrarily. We aim to make novel research contributions by exploring fundamental techniques that can help the broker overlays maintain functional and non-functional requirements even under the presence of the aforementioned failures and necessary administrative updates. We first build a set of overlay adaptation primitives that re-configure topologies such as shifting links and replicating brokers. These primitives are designed to involve a small local group of brokers in the pub/sub overlays so that the disruption during the execution of large-scale and dynamic changes can be controlled in a fined-grained manner. For the problem of degrading topology quality, automated planning systems are developed to find a sequence of adaptations that would cause minimal disruption to running services. Also, our primitives can be executed on demand to quickly fail-over a crashed broker or off-load congested brokers. In addition, these on-demand primitives can be used to form a group of dynamically replicated brokers that enforce a novel safety measure to prevent Byzantine brokers from sabotaging the pub/sub overlays. Our contributions are evaluated with systematic consideration of various trade-offs between functional and non-functional properties.
Identifer | oai:union.ndltd.org:TORONTO/oai:tspace.library.utoronto.ca:1807/36075 |
Date | 13 August 2013 |
Creators | Yoon, Young |
Contributors | Jacobsen, Hans-Arno |
Source Sets | University of Toronto |
Language | en_ca |
Detected Language | English |
Type | Thesis |
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