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Efficient System-Enforced Deterministic Parallelism

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Uploaded by on Oct 8, 2010

Presented at the 9th USENIX Symposium on Operating Systems Design and Implementation (OSDI '10) held in Vancouver, BC, Canada, October 4-6, 2010.

Paper authors: Amittai Aviram, Shu-Chun Weng, Sen Hu, and Bryan Ford, Yale University

Abstract: Deterministic execution offers many benefits for debugging, fault tolerance, and security. Current methods of executing parallel programs deterministically, however, often incur high costs, allow misbehaved software to defeat repeatability, and transform time-dependent races into input- or path-dependent races without eliminating them. We introduce a new parallel programming model addressing these issues, and use Determinator, a proof-of-concept OS, to demonstrate the model's practicality. Determinator's microkernel API provides only "shared-nothing" address spaces and deterministic interprocess communication primitives to make execution of all unprivileged code—well-behaved or not—precisely repeatable. Atop this microkernel, Determinator's user-level runtime adapts optimistic replication techniques to offer a private workspace model for both thread-level and process-level parallel programing. This model avoids the introduction of read/write data races, and converts write/write races into reliably-detected conflicts. Coarse-grained parallel benchmarks perform and scale comparably to nondeterministic systems, on both multicore PCs and across nodes in a distributed cluster.

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