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    Fast transactions for multicore in-memory databases

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    Thesis (S.M.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, 2013.Cataloged from PDF version of thesis.Includes bibliographical references (p. 55-57).Though modern multicore machines have sufficient RAM and processors to manage very large in-memory databases, it is not clear what the best strategy for dividing work among cores is. Should each core handle a data partition, avoiding the overhead of concurrency control for most transactions (at the cost of increasing it for cross-partition transactions)? Or should cores access a shared data structure instead? We investigate this question in the context of a fast in-memory database. We describe a new transactionally consistent database storage engine called MAFLINGO. Its cache-centered data structure design provides excellent base key-value store performance, to which we add a new, cache-friendly serializable protocol and support for running large, read-only transactions on a recent snapshot. On a key-value workload, the resulting system introduces negligible performance overhead as compared to a version of our system with transactional support stripped out, while achieving linear scalability versus the number of cores. It also exhibits linear scalability on TPC-C, a popular transactional benchmark. In addition, we show that a partitioning-based approach ceases to be beneficial if the database cannot be partitioned such that only a small fraction of transactions access multiple partitions, making our shared-everything approach more relevant. Finally, based on a survey of results from the literature, we argue that our implementation substantially outperforms previous main-memory databases on TPC-C benchmarks.by Stephen Lyle Tu.S.M
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