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Practical Evaluation of the Lasp Programming Mo...

Practical Evaluation of the Lasp Programming Model at Scale

PPDP 2017
Namur, Belgium

Christopher Meiklejohn

October 10, 2017
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  1. PRACTICAL EVALUATION OF THE LASP PROGRAMMING MODEL AT LARGE SCALE

    Christopher S. Meiklejohn, Vitor Enes, Junghun Yoo, Carlos Baquero, Peter Van Roy, Annette Bieniusa Université catholique de Louvain, Instituto Superior Técnico, Universidade do Minho, University of Oxford, Technische Universität Kaiserslautern
  2. DISTRIBUTED APPLICATIONS EVERYWHERE! Example applications: rich-web and mobile  Store

    state to operate quickly, refresh state with the server periodically  Typically “throw” concurrent updates away when conflicting updates occur (last-writer-wins)  Few provide the ability to operate offline Nowadays, application developers must reason about:  Concurrent updates to shared state and conflict resolution  Consistency of replicas  Ordering of events  Update visibility
  3. TRADITIONAL ARCHITECTURE • Communication through data center • Application servers

    run business logic • Clients must be online to operate Analysis • Application is easy to program • Exhibits strong consistency • Exhibits high latency (non-native) • Exhibits low availability (DC-focused)
  4. IDEAL ARCHITECTURE • State replicated at the client • Clients

    can communicate with other peers • Clients can operate offline Analysis • Application is hard to program • Exhibits weak consistency • Exhibits low latency • Exhibits high availability
  5. PREVIOUS APPROACHES Many systems and languages designed with scalability in

    mind  Bayou (Terry et al. 1995)  Bloom, Bloom_L (Alvaro et al. 2011, Conway et al. 2012)  Cloud Types (Burckhardt et al. 2012), Global Sequence Protocol (Burckhardt et al. 2015) Most, do not have evaluations demonstrating scalability in real world environments! Demonstrating scalability of languages designed for scalability  Non-trivial  Rely on existing tooling, infrastructure which may be limited in scalability
  6. LASP (PPDP ‘15) Declarative programming system that allows for distributed

    programming with co- designed runtime system CRDTs: ADTs for distributed programming  Data types containing a binary merge function for joining two replicas  Used for value convergence under divergence introduced by concurrency Functional programming model where CRDT is core data abstraction
  7. LASP EXAMPLE %% Create a set A = declare(set) %%

    Derive a new set B = product(A, filter(P, A)) %% Create concurrent process %% to insert into set process do insert(A, random()) end Creates a join-semilattice representation of a set (formalized as CRDT) Creates a homomorphism to a join- semilattice B under image of product/filter Concurrent additions produce a ‘join’ with A’s state; triggers update of B
  8. ADVERTISEMENT COUNTER Industry use case from Rovio Entertainment  Partner

    in SyncFree EU FP7 on coordination-free computation Display advertisements while offline and track impressions Disable advertisements when a threshold is reached Interesting application requirements  Replicated data, high contention  Desire to scale to millions of clients  Operation while client is disconnected
  9. APPLICATION OUTLINE 1. Initialization Create counters for each ad 2.

    Selection of displayable ads Filter set of ads into a set of advertisements that haven’t met the threshold 3. Enforce invariant When a counter hits a threshold, remove it from the set of ads
  10. Server: creates objects and inserts into collections Ad CREATION OF

    ADS AND CONTRACTS Ads Ad Ad Ad Contracts Contract Contract Contract Collection CRDT Object CRDT Process
  11. Server: constructs server dataflow SELECTION OF DISPLAYABLE ADS Ads Contracts

    Product Ads Contracts Filter Ads with Contracts Map Ads to Display SELECT ads.id FROM ads INNER JOIN contracts WHERE ads.id = contracts.ad_id Collection CRDT Object CRDT Process
  12. Ad ENFORCEMENT OF INVARIANTS Ads Read > 50 Ad Read

    > 50 Ad Read > 50 Server: removes from collection on threshold reached Collection CRDT Object CRDT Process
  13. IMPLEMENTATION Lasp prototype written in Erlang  Automatically propagates updates

    for replicated, shared data [333 LOC] Server processes  Create advertisement counters  Disable advertisements at threshold [276 LOC] Client processes  Increment advertisement counters 50% of code is instrumentation  Tracking state, logging updates, controlling experiment execution Implementation was done using Distributed Erlang, a state-of-the-art production distributed runtime for the Erlang programming language
  14. ARCHITECTURE Shared state for Lasp stored in KVS per node

     Variable identifiers point to locations in full replicated storage Two cluster topologies  Datacenter Lasp (Traditional)  One-hop DHT; structured overlay network  Clients communicate through server nodes  Hybrid Gossip Lasp (Ideal)  Unstructured overlay network; partial membership  Inspired by the HyParView protocol Two dissemination strategies  State-based  Periodic, full state synchronization between peers via gossip  Delta-based  Minimization of changes, sent to local peers in causal order  Not evaluated for DHT approach because of scalability in buffering updates for all local peers We evaluate two architectures with two different runtime dissemination techniques for Lasp to see which yields the best scalability
  15. EXPERIMENT CONFIGURATION Amazon EC2  70 m3.2xlarge instances  Subdivided

    using Apache Mesos via containers  Servers: 4 GB, 2 vCPU  Clients: 1 GB, 0.5 vCPU  Experiment varied number of tasks launched by Mesos  1 Erlang VM  1 Lasp instance  1 Unix Process Environmental perturbations  Tasks may be co-located  Nodes communicate with each other through TCP  Varying communication latencies between nodes  Noisy-neighbors: might see effects from co-location Conservative approximation to scalability  Each task underapproximates the ability of modern mobile phones Experiments were run in the Amazon Cloud Computing environment; 2 experiments (at 30 minutes each) for each of the topologies and cluster sizes.
  16. EXPERIMENTAL WORKFLOW 1. Bootstrapping a) Cluster created b) Ensure single

    connected component c) Create advertisements 2. Simulation a) Each node begins generating its own workflow b) Periodically gossip state to local peers 3. Convergence a) Wait for all nodes to complete workload generation b) Wait for all nodes to see effect of the workload on all other nodes 4. Metrics Aggregation a) Perform metrics aggregation at all nodes b) Tear down cluster at end of the experiment Nondeterminism introduced from running on a production, industrial cloud environment was reduced by principled experimental workflow Each node generates its own workflow, because a central task for workload generation slows down the system to the performance of the central task
  17. EXPERIMENTAL INFRASTRUCTURE Apache Mesos  Limited to 1,024 tasks 

    Slow scaleup to 140 physical nodes  Fast scaleup, for cost savings, triggered Mesos heartbeat lapses, disconnection, orphaned tasks Sprinter (our contribution)  Service discovery mechanism for task discovery  Perform orchestration and experiment control a) Graph analysis for connectivity b) Delay experiment until single connected component c) Isolation reconnection  Visual cluster debugger Partisan (our contribution)  Scalable replacement for Distributed Erlang  Pluggable backends for different topologies  Industry adoption  Allow topology variation without application code change Technologies we built on top of, invented, or replaced to assist in the scalability of the Lasp runtime system
  18. WORKFLOW CRDT Central orchestration of experiment problematic  System only

    runs as fast as coordinator Must have a barrier synchronization technique to prevent experiment running at different speeds at different nodes  Workload generation  Blocking for event propagation and value convergence  Log aggregation  Shutdown Uninstrumented workflow management CRDT  Pairs of map lattices from node ids to boolean lattices  Progress proceeds recursively as Booleans become true Designing a coordination-free workflow management system for experiments using Lasp itself
  19. WORKFLOW CRDT Event Generation Converging Pushing Logs Shutdown Nodes spin

    on a stage until all nodes mark complete. Nodes advance to the next stage when previous stage is complete.
  20. TOPOLOGIES No delta evaluation for DC Lasp due to buffer

    overhead. DC Lasp performs the best because lack of redundancy in communication. HG/D best, only changes propagated to local peers.
  21. SCALE DC/S fails to scale above 256 nodes given experiment

    configuration. HG/S most expensive because of object transmission. Quadratic growth in lattice because of data structure – known solutions to reduce size.
  22. TAKEAWAYS Existing tooling can be problematic  Existing frameworks and

    tolling can arbitrarily alter performance, skew scalability to least scalable component Visualizations are invaluable  Assists in debugging, understanding behavior Achieving reproducibility is non-trivial  High-level abstractions provided by cloud are opaque Performance can fluctuate  VM placement, multiple levels of virtualization Evaluations are expensive  Real world evaluations take time, expensive in terms of resources, 9,900 EUR spend for few experiments Evaluating new designs for scalable systems will always be somewhat limited by the existing languages and tools we build on and be susceptible to problems in real world environments.