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Relaxing Concurrency Control in Transactional Memory

Transactional memory (TM) systems have gained considerable popularity in the last decade driven by the increased demand for tools that ease parallel programming. TM eliminates the need for user-locks that protect accesses to shared data. It offers performance close to that of fine-grain locking with the programming simplicity of coarse-grain locking. Today’s TM systems implement the two-phase-locking (2PL) algorithm which aborts transactions every
time a conflict occurs. 2PL is a simple algorithm that provides fast transactional operations. However, it limits concurrency in applications with high contention because it increases the rate of aborts. We propose the use of a more relaxed concurrency control algorithm to provide better concurrency. This algorithm is based on the conflict-serializability (CS) model. Unlike 2PL, it allows some transactions to commit successfully even when they make conflicting accesses. We implement this algorithm both in a software TM system as well as in a simulator of a hardware TM system. Our evaluation using TM benchmarks shows that the algorithm improves the performance of applications with long transactions and high abort rates. Performance is improved by up to 299% in the software TM, and up to 66% in the hardware simulator. We argue that these improvements come with little additional complexity and require no changes to the transactional programming model. This makes our implementation feasible

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:TORONTO/oai:tspace.library.utoronto.ca:1807/31683
Date05 January 2012
CreatorsAydonat, Utku
ContributorsAbdelrahman, Tarek S.
Source SetsUniversity of Toronto
Languageen_ca
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis

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