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Two-phase commit protocol

In transaction processing, databases, and computer networking, the two-phase commit protocol (2PC, tupac) is a type of atomic commitment protocol (ACP). It is a distributed algorithm that coordinates all the processes that participate in a distributed atomic transaction on whether to commit or abort (roll back) the transaction. This protocol (a specialised type of consensus protocol) achieves its goal even in many cases of temporary system failure (involving either process, network node, communication, etc. failures), and is thus widely used.[1][2][3] However, it is not resilient to all possible failure configurations, and in rare cases, manual intervention is needed to remedy an outcome. To accommodate recovery from failure (automatic in most cases) the protocol's participants use logging of the protocol's states. Log records, which are typically slow to generate but survive failures, are used by the protocol's recovery procedures. Many protocol variants exist that primarily differ in logging strategies and recovery mechanisms. Though usually intended to be used infrequently, recovery procedures compose a substantial portion of the protocol, due to many possible failure scenarios to be considered and supported by the protocol.

In a "normal execution" of any single distributed transaction (i.e., when no failure occurs, which is typically the most frequent situation), the protocol consists of two phases:

  1. The commit-request phase (or voting phase), in which a coordinator process attempts to prepare all the transaction's participating processes (named participants, cohorts, or workers) to take the necessary steps for either committing or aborting the transaction and to vote, either "Yes": commit (if the transaction participant's local portion execution has ended properly), or "No": abort (if a problem has been detected with the local portion), and
  2. The commit phase, in which, based on voting of the participants, the coordinator decides whether to commit (only if all have voted "Yes") or abort the transaction (otherwise), and notifies the result to all the participants. The participants then follow with the needed actions (commit or abort) with their local transactional resources (also called recoverable resources; e.g., database data) and their respective portions in the transaction's other output (if applicable).

The two-phase commit (2PC) protocol should not be confused with the two-phase locking (2PL) protocol, a concurrency control protocol.

Assumptions edit

The protocol works in the following manner: one node is a designated coordinator, which is the master site, and the rest of the nodes in the network are designated the participants. The protocol assumes that:

  1. there is stable storage at each node with a write-ahead log,
  2. no node crashes forever,
  3. the data in the write-ahead log is never lost or corrupted in a crash, and
  4. any two nodes can communicate with each other.

The last assumption is not too restrictive, as network communication can typically be rerouted. The first two assumptions are much stronger; if a node is totally destroyed then data can be lost.

The protocol is initiated by the coordinator after the last step of the transaction has been reached. The participants then respond with an agreement message or an abort message depending on whether the transaction has been processed successfully at the participant.

Basic algorithm edit

Commit request (or voting) phase edit

  1. The coordinator sends a query to commit message to all participants and waits until it has received a reply from all participants.
  2. The participants execute the transaction up to the point where they will be asked to commit. They each write an entry to their undo log and an entry to their redo log.
  3. Each participant replies with an agreement message (participant votes Yes to commit), if the participant's actions succeeded, or an abort message (participant votes No to commit), if the participant experiences a failure that will make it impossible to commit.

Commit (or completion) phase edit

Success edit

If the coordinator received an agreement message from all participants during the commit-request phase:

  1. The coordinator sends a commit message to all the participants.
  2. Each participant completes the operation, and releases all the locks and resources held during the transaction.
  3. Each participant sends an acknowledgement to the coordinator.
  4. The coordinator completes the transaction when all acknowledgements have been received.

Failure edit

If any participant votes No during the commit-request phase (or the coordinator's timeout expires):

  1. The coordinator sends a rollback message to all the participants.
  2. Each participant undoes the transaction using the undo log, and releases the resources and locks held during the transaction.
  3. Each participant sends an acknowledgement to the coordinator.
  4. The coordinator undoes the transaction when all acknowledgements have been received.

Message flow edit

Coordinator Participant QUERY TO COMMIT --------------------------------> VOTE YES/NO prepare*/abort* <------------------------------- commit*/abort* COMMIT/ROLLBACK --------------------------------> ACKNOWLEDGEMENT commit*/abort* <-------------------------------- end 

An * next to the record type means that the record is forced to stable storage.[4]

Disadvantages edit

  1. The greatest disadvantage of the two-phase commit protocol is that it is a blocking protocol.
  2. If the coordinator fails permanently, some participants will never resolve their transactions: After a participant has sent an agreement message as a response to the commit-request message from the coordinator, it will block until a commit or rollback is received.
  3. A two-phase commit protocol cannot dependably recover from a failure of both the coordinator and a cohort member during the commit phase. If only the coordinator had failed, and no cohort members had received a commit message, it could safely be inferred that no commit had happened. If, however, both the coordinator and a cohort member failed, it is possible that the failed cohort member was the first to be notified, and had actually done the commit. Even if a new coordinator is selected, it cannot confidently proceed with the operation until it has received an agreement from all cohort members, and hence must block until all cohort members respond.

Implementing the two-phase commit protocol edit

Common architecture edit

In many cases the 2PC protocol is distributed in a computer network. It is easily distributed by implementing multiple dedicated 2PC components similar to each other, typically named transaction managers (TMs; also referred to as 2PC agents or Transaction Processing Monitors), that carry out the protocol's execution for each transaction (e.g., The Open Group's X/Open XA). The databases involved with a distributed transaction, the participants, both the coordinator and participants, register to close TMs (typically residing on respective same network nodes as the participants) for terminating that transaction using 2PC. Each distributed transaction has an ad hoc set of TMs, the TMs to which the transaction participants register. A leader, the coordinator TM, exists for each transaction to coordinate 2PC for it, typically the TM of the coordinator database. However, the coordinator role can be transferred to another TM for performance or reliability reasons. Rather than exchanging 2PC messages among themselves, the participants exchange the messages with their respective TMs. The relevant TMs communicate among themselves to execute the 2PC protocol schema above, "representing" the respective participants, for terminating that transaction. With this architecture the protocol is fully distributed (does not need any central processing component or data structure), and scales up with number of network nodes (network size) effectively.

This common architecture is also effective for the distribution of other atomic commitment protocols besides 2PC, since all such protocols use the same voting mechanism and outcome propagation to protocol participants.[1][2]

Protocol optimizations edit

Database research has been done on ways to get most of the benefits of the two-phase commit protocol while reducing costs by protocol optimizations[1][2][3] and protocol operations saving under certain system's behavior assumptions.

Presumed abort and presumed commit edit

Presumed abort or Presumed commit are common such optimizations.[2][3][5] An assumption about the outcome of transactions, either commit, or abort, can save both messages and logging operations by the participants during the 2PC protocol's execution. For example, when presumed abort, if during system recovery from failure no logged evidence for commit of some transaction is found by the recovery procedure, then it assumes that the transaction has been aborted, and acts accordingly. This means that it does not matter if aborts are logged at all, and such logging can be saved under this assumption. Typically a penalty of additional operations is paid during recovery from failure, depending on optimization type. Thus the best variant of optimization, if any, is chosen according to failure and transaction outcome statistics.

Tree two-phase commit protocol edit

The Tree 2PC protocol[2] (also called Nested 2PC, or Recursive 2PC) is a common variant of 2PC in a computer network, which better utilizes the underlying communication infrastructure. The participants in a distributed transaction are typically invoked in an order which defines a tree structure, the invocation tree, where the participants are the nodes and the edges are the invocations (communication links). The same tree is commonly utilized to complete the transaction by a 2PC protocol, but also another communication tree can be utilized for this, in principle. In a tree 2PC the coordinator is considered the root ("top") of a communication tree (inverted tree), while the participants are the other nodes. The coordinator can be the node that originated the transaction (invoked recursively (transitively) the other participants), but also another node in the same tree can take the coordinator role instead. 2PC messages from the coordinator are propagated "down" the tree, while messages to the coordinator are "collected" by a participant from all the participants below it, before it sends the appropriate message "up" the tree (except an abort message, which is propagated "up" immediately upon receiving it or if the current participant initiates the abort).

The Dynamic two-phase commit (Dynamic two-phase commitment, D2PC) protocol[2][6] is a variant of Tree 2PC with no predetermined coordinator. It subsumes several optimizations that have been proposed earlier. Agreement messages (Yes votes) start to propagate from all the leaves, each leaf when completing its tasks on behalf of the transaction (becoming ready). An intermediate (non leaf) node sends ready when an agreement message to the last (single) neighboring node from which agreement message has not yet been received. The coordinator is determined dynamically by racing agreement messages over the transaction tree, at the place where they collide. They collide either at a transaction tree node, to be the coordinator, or on a tree edge. In the latter case one of the two edge's nodes is elected as a coordinator (any node). D2PC is time optimal (among all the instances of a specific transaction tree, and any specific Tree 2PC protocol implementation; all instances have the same tree; each instance has a different node as coordinator): By choosing an optimal coordinator D2PC commits both the coordinator and each participant in minimum possible time, allowing the earliest possible release of locked resources in each transaction participant (tree node).

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Philip A. Bernstein, Vassos Hadzilacos, Nathan Goodman (1987): Concurrency Control and Recovery in Database Systems, Chapter 7, Addison Wesley Publishing Company, ISBN 0-201-10715-5
  2. ^ a b c d e f Gerhard Weikum, Gottfried Vossen (2001): Transactional Information Systems, Chapter 19, Elsevier, ISBN 1-55860-508-8
  3. ^ a b c Philip A. Bernstein, Eric Newcomer (2009): Principles of Transaction Processing, 2nd Edition 2010-08-07 at the Wayback Machine, Chapter 8, Morgan Kaufmann (Elsevier), ISBN 978-1-55860-623-4
  4. ^ C. Mohan, Bruce Lindsay and R. Obermarck (1986): "Transaction management in the R* distributed database management system",ACM Transactions on Database Systems (TODS), Volume 11 Issue 4, Dec. 1986, Pages 378 - 396
  5. ^ C. Mohan, Bruce Lindsay (1985): "Efficient commit protocols for the tree of processes model of distributed transactions",ACM SIGOPS Operating Systems Review, 19(2),pp. 40-52 (April 1985)
  6. ^ Yoav Raz (1995): "The Dynamic Two Phase Commitment (D2PC) protocol ",Database Theory — ICDT '95, Lecture Notes in Computer Science, Volume 893/1995, pp. 162-176, Springer, ISBN 978-3-540-58907-5

phase, commit, protocol, redirects, here, play, american, canadian, football, point, conversion, cryptographic, protocol, commitment, scheme, concurrency, control, phase, locking, transaction, processing, databases, computer, networking, phase, commit, protoco. 2PC redirects here For the play in American and Canadian football see Two point conversion For the cryptographic protocol see Commitment scheme For the concurrency control see Two phase locking In transaction processing databases and computer networking the two phase commit protocol 2PC tupac is a type of atomic commitment protocol ACP It is a distributed algorithm that coordinates all the processes that participate in a distributed atomic transaction on whether to commit or abort roll back the transaction This protocol a specialised type of consensus protocol achieves its goal even in many cases of temporary system failure involving either process network node communication etc failures and is thus widely used 1 2 3 However it is not resilient to all possible failure configurations and in rare cases manual intervention is needed to remedy an outcome To accommodate recovery from failure automatic in most cases the protocol s participants use logging of the protocol s states Log records which are typically slow to generate but survive failures are used by the protocol s recovery procedures Many protocol variants exist that primarily differ in logging strategies and recovery mechanisms Though usually intended to be used infrequently recovery procedures compose a substantial portion of the protocol due to many possible failure scenarios to be considered and supported by the protocol In a normal execution of any single distributed transaction i e when no failure occurs which is typically the most frequent situation the protocol consists of two phases The commit request phase or voting phase in which a coordinator process attempts to prepare all the transaction s participating processes named participants cohorts or workers to take the necessary steps for either committing or aborting the transaction and to vote either Yes commit if the transaction participant s local portion execution has ended properly or No abort if a problem has been detected with the local portion and The commit phase in which based on voting of the participants the coordinator decides whether to commit only if all have voted Yes or abort the transaction otherwise and notifies the result to all the participants The participants then follow with the needed actions commit or abort with their local transactional resources also called recoverable resources e g database data and their respective portions in the transaction s other output if applicable The two phase commit 2PC protocol should not be confused with the two phase locking 2PL protocol a concurrency control protocol Contents 1 Assumptions 2 Basic algorithm 2 1 Commit request or voting phase 2 2 Commit or completion phase 2 2 1 Success 2 2 2 Failure 2 2 3 Message flow 3 Disadvantages 4 Implementing the two phase commit protocol 4 1 Common architecture 4 2 Protocol optimizations 4 2 1 Presumed abort and presumed commit 4 2 2 Tree two phase commit protocol 5 See also 6 ReferencesAssumptions editThe protocol works in the following manner one node is a designated coordinator which is the master site and the rest of the nodes in the network are designated the participants The protocol assumes that there is stable storage at each node with a write ahead log no node crashes forever the data in the write ahead log is never lost or corrupted in a crash and any two nodes can communicate with each other The last assumption is not too restrictive as network communication can typically be rerouted The first two assumptions are much stronger if a node is totally destroyed then data can be lost The protocol is initiated by the coordinator after the last step of the transaction has been reached The participants then respond with an agreement message or an abort message depending on whether the transaction has been processed successfully at the participant Basic algorithm editCommit request or voting phase edit The coordinator sends a query to commit message to all participants and waits until it has received a reply from all participants The participants execute the transaction up to the point where they will be asked to commit They each write an entry to their undo log and an entry to their redo log Each participant replies with an agreement message participant votes Yes to commit if the participant s actions succeeded or an abort message participant votes No to commit if the participant experiences a failure that will make it impossible to commit Commit or completion phase edit Success edit If the coordinator received an agreement message from all participants during the commit request phase The coordinator sends a commit message to all the participants Each participant completes the operation and releases all the locks and resources held during the transaction Each participant sends an acknowledgement to the coordinator The coordinator completes the transaction when all acknowledgements have been received Failure edit If any participant votes No during the commit request phase or the coordinator s timeout expires The coordinator sends a rollback message to all the participants Each participant undoes the transaction using the undo log and releases the resources and locks held during the transaction Each participant sends an acknowledgement to the coordinator The coordinator undoes the transaction when all acknowledgements have been received Message flow edit Coordinator Participant QUERY TO COMMIT gt VOTE YES NO prepare abort lt commit abort COMMIT ROLLBACK gt ACKNOWLEDGEMENT commit abort lt end An next to the record type means that the record is forced to stable storage 4 Disadvantages editThe greatest disadvantage of the two phase commit protocol is that it is a blocking protocol If the coordinator fails permanently some participants will never resolve their transactions After a participant has sent an agreement message as a response to the commit request message from the coordinator it will block until a commit or rollback is received A two phase commit protocol cannot dependably recover from a failure of both the coordinator and a cohort member during the commit phase If only the coordinator had failed and no cohort members had received a commit message it could safely be inferred that no commit had happened If however both the coordinator and a cohort member failed it is possible that the failed cohort member was the first to be notified and had actually done the commit Even if a new coordinator is selected it cannot confidently proceed with the operation until it has received an agreement from all cohort members and hence must block until all cohort members respond Implementing the two phase commit protocol editCommon architecture edit In many cases the 2PC protocol is distributed in a computer network It is easily distributed by implementing multiple dedicated 2PC components similar to each other typically named transaction managers TMs also referred to as 2PC agents or Transaction Processing Monitors that carry out the protocol s execution for each transaction e g The Open Group s X Open XA The databases involved with a distributed transaction the participants both the coordinator and participants register to close TMs typically residing on respective same network nodes as the participants for terminating that transaction using 2PC Each distributed transaction has an ad hoc set of TMs the TMs to which the transaction participants register A leader the coordinator TM exists for each transaction to coordinate 2PC for it typically the TM of the coordinator database However the coordinator role can be transferred to another TM for performance or reliability reasons Rather than exchanging 2PC messages among themselves the participants exchange the messages with their respective TMs The relevant TMs communicate among themselves to execute the 2PC protocol schema above representing the respective participants for terminating that transaction With this architecture the protocol is fully distributed does not need any central processing component or data structure and scales up with number of network nodes network size effectively This common architecture is also effective for the distribution of other atomic commitment protocols besides 2PC since all such protocols use the same voting mechanism and outcome propagation to protocol participants 1 2 Protocol optimizations edit Database research has been done on ways to get most of the benefits of the two phase commit protocol while reducing costs by protocol optimizations 1 2 3 and protocol operations saving under certain system s behavior assumptions Presumed abort and presumed commit edit Presumed abort or Presumed commit are common such optimizations 2 3 5 An assumption about the outcome of transactions either commit or abort can save both messages and logging operations by the participants during the 2PC protocol s execution For example when presumed abort if during system recovery from failure no logged evidence for commit of some transaction is found by the recovery procedure then it assumes that the transaction has been aborted and acts accordingly This means that it does not matter if aborts are logged at all and such logging can be saved under this assumption Typically a penalty of additional operations is paid during recovery from failure depending on optimization type Thus the best variant of optimization if any is chosen according to failure and transaction outcome statistics Tree two phase commit protocol edit The Tree 2PC protocol 2 also called Nested 2PC or Recursive 2PC is a common variant of 2PC in a computer network which better utilizes the underlying communication infrastructure The participants in a distributed transaction are typically invoked in an order which defines a tree structure the invocation tree where the participants are the nodes and the edges are the invocations communication links The same tree is commonly utilized to complete the transaction by a 2PC protocol but also another communication tree can be utilized for this in principle In a tree 2PC the coordinator is considered the root top of a communication tree inverted tree while the participants are the other nodes The coordinator can be the node that originated the transaction invoked recursively transitively the other participants but also another node in the same tree can take the coordinator role instead 2PC messages from the coordinator are propagated down the tree while messages to the coordinator are collected by a participant from all the participants below it before it sends the appropriate message up the tree except an abort message which is propagated up immediately upon receiving it or if the current participant initiates the abort The Dynamic two phase commit Dynamic two phase commitment D2PC protocol 2 6 is a variant of Tree 2PC with no predetermined coordinator It subsumes several optimizations that have been proposed earlier Agreement messages Yes votes start to propagate from all the leaves each leaf when completing its tasks on behalf of the transaction becoming ready An intermediate non leaf node sends ready when an agreement message to the last single neighboring node from which agreement message has not yet been received The coordinator is determined dynamically by racing agreement messages over the transaction tree at the place where they collide They collide either at a transaction tree node to be the coordinator or on a tree edge In the latter case one of the two edge s nodes is elected as a coordinator any node D2PC is time optimal among all the instances of a specific transaction tree and any specific Tree 2PC protocol implementation all instances have the same tree each instance has a different node as coordinator By choosing an optimal coordinator D2PC commits both the coordinator and each participant in minimum possible time allowing the earliest possible release of locked resources in each transaction participant tree node See also editThree phase commit protocol Paxos algorithm Raft algorithm Two Generals ProblemReferences edit a b c Philip A Bernstein Vassos Hadzilacos Nathan Goodman 1987 Concurrency Control and Recovery in Database Systems Chapter 7 Addison Wesley Publishing Company ISBN 0 201 10715 5 a b c d e f Gerhard Weikum Gottfried Vossen 2001 Transactional Information Systems Chapter 19 Elsevier ISBN 1 55860 508 8 a b c Philip A Bernstein Eric Newcomer 2009 Principles of Transaction Processing 2nd Edition Archived 2010 08 07 at the Wayback Machine Chapter 8 Morgan Kaufmann Elsevier ISBN 978 1 55860 623 4 C Mohan Bruce Lindsay and R Obermarck 1986 Transaction management in the R distributed database management system ACM Transactions on Database Systems TODS Volume 11 Issue 4 Dec 1986 Pages 378 396 C Mohan Bruce Lindsay 1985 Efficient commit protocols for the tree of processes model of distributed transactions ACM SIGOPS Operating Systems Review 19 2 pp 40 52 April 1985 Yoav Raz 1995 The Dynamic Two Phase Commitment D2PC protocol Database Theory ICDT 95 Lecture Notes in Computer Science Volume 893 1995 pp 162 176 Springer ISBN 978 3 540 58907 5 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Two phase commit protocol amp oldid 1204181724, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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