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CrystalBall: Predicting and Preventing Inconsistencies in Deployed Distributed Systems

Vreme 24. decembar 2009. 14:00
Predavač Dejan Kostić
Mesto Učionica na spratu u Računskom centru

Abstract:

Distributed systems form the foundation of our society's infrastructure. Complex distributed protocols and algorithms are used in enterprise storage systems, distributed databases, large-scale planetary systems, and sensor networks. Errors in these protocols translate to denial of service to some clients, potential loss of data, and even monetary losses. Unfortunately, it is notoriously difficult to develop reliable high-performance distributed systems that run over asynchronous networks, such as the Internet. Even if a distributed system is based on a well-understood distributed algorithm, its implementation can contain coding bugs and errors arising from complexities of realistic distributed environments.

This talk describes CrystalBall, a new approach for developing and deploying distributed systems. In CrystalBall, nodes predict distributed consequences of their actions, and use this information to detect and avoid errors. Each node continuously runs a state exploration algorithm on a recent consistent snapshot of its neighborhood and predicts possible future violations of specified safety properties. We describe a new state exploration algorithm, consequence prediction, which explores causally related chains of events that lead to property violation. Using CrystalBall, we identified new bugs in mature Mace implementations of a random overlay tree, BulletPrime content distribution system, and the Chord distributed hash table. Furthermore, we show that if the bug is not corrected during system development, CrystalBall is effective in steering the execution away from inconsistent states at run- time, with low false negative rates.

This is joint work with Maysam Yabandeh, Nikola Knezevic, and Viktor Kuncak