Eventually Consistent
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Eventual consistency is a consistency model used in
distributed computing A distributed system is a system whose components are located on different computer network, networked computers, which communicate and coordinate their actions by message passing, passing messages to one another from any system. Distributed com ...
to achieve high availability that informally guarantees that, if no new updates are made to a given data item, eventually all accesses to that item will return the last updated value. Eventual consistency, also called optimistic replication, is widely deployed in distributed systems and has origins in early mobile computing projects. A system that has achieved eventual consistency is often said to have converged, or achieved replica convergence. Eventual consistency is a weak guarantee – most stronger models, like linearizability, are trivially eventually consistent. Eventually-consistent services are often classified as providing BASE semantics (basically-available, soft-state, eventual consistency), in contrast to traditional ACID (atomicity, consistency, isolation, durability). In chemistry, a base is the opposite of an acid, which helps in remembering the acronym. According to the same resource, these are the rough definitions of each term in BASE: * Basically available: reading and writing operations are available as much as possible (using all nodes of a database cluster), but might not be consistent (the write might not persist after conflicts are reconciled, and the read might not get the latest write) * Soft-state: without consistency guarantees, after some amount of time, we only have some probability of knowing the state, since it might not yet have converged * Eventually consistent: If we execute some writes and then the system functions long enough, we can know the state of the data; any further reads of that data item will return the same value Eventual consistency is sometimes criticized as increasing the complexity of distributed software applications. This is partly because eventual consistency is purely a liveness guarantee (reads eventually return the same value) and does not guarantee
safety Safety is the state of being "safe", the condition of being protected from harm or other danger. Safety can also refer to risk management, the control of recognized hazards in order to achieve an acceptable level of risk. Meanings There are ...
: an eventually consistent system can return any value before it converges.


Conflict resolution

In order to ensure replica convergence, a system must reconcile differences between multiple copies of distributed data. This consists of two parts: * exchanging versions or updates of data between servers (often known as anti-entropy); and * choosing an appropriate final state when concurrent updates have occurred, called reconciliation. The most appropriate approach to reconciliation depends on the application. A widespread approach is "last writer wins". Another is to invoke a user-specified conflict handler. Timestamps and
vector clock A vector clock is a data structure used for determining the partial ordering of events in a distributed system and detecting causality violations. Just as in Lamport timestamps, inter-process messages contain the state of the sending process's lo ...
s are often used to detect concurrency between updates. Some people use "first writer wins" in situations where "last writer wins" is unacceptable. Reconciliation of concurrent writes must occur sometime before the next read, and can be scheduled at different instants: *Read repair: The correction is done when a read finds an inconsistency. This slows down the read operation. *Write repair: The correction takes place during a write operation slowing down the write operation. *Asynchronous repair: The correction is not part of a read or write operation.


Strong eventual consistency

Whereas eventual consistency is only a liveness guarantee (updates will be observed eventually), strong eventual consistency (SEC) adds the
safety Safety is the state of being "safe", the condition of being protected from harm or other danger. Safety can also refer to risk management, the control of recognized hazards in order to achieve an acceptable level of risk. Meanings There are ...
guarantee that any two nodes that have received the same (unordered) set of updates will be in the same state. If, furthermore, the system is
monotonic In mathematics, a monotonic function (or monotone function) is a function between ordered sets that preserves or reverses the given order. This concept first arose in calculus, and was later generalized to the more abstract setting of order ...
, the application will never suffer rollbacks. A common approach to ensure SEC is
conflict-free replicated data type In distributed computing, a conflict-free replicated data type (CRDT) is a data structure that is replicated across multiple computers in a network, with the following features: # The application can update any replica independently, concurrently ...
s.


See also

*
ACID In computer science, ACID ( atomicity, consistency, isolation, durability) is a set of properties of database transactions intended to guarantee data validity despite errors, power failures, and other mishaps. In the context of databases, a sequ ...
*
CAP theorem In theoretical computer science, the CAP theorem, also named Brewer's theorem after computer scientist Eric Brewer, states that any distributed data store can provide only two of the following three guarantees:Seth Gilbert and Nancy Lynch"Brewer' ...
*


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Eventual Consistency Consistency models de:Konsistenz (Datenspeicherung)#Verteilte Systeme