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Titel: Blurring the Lines between Blockchains and Database Systems: the Case of Hyperledger Fabric
VerfasserIn: Sharma, Ankur
Schuhknecht, Felix Martin
Agrawal, Divya
Dittrich, Jens
Sprache: Englisch
Titel: Proceedings of the 2019 International Conference on Management of Data
Startseite: 105
Endseite: 122
Verlag/Plattform: ACM
Erscheinungsjahr: 2019
Erscheinungsort: New York
Titel der Konferenz: SIGMOD/PODS '19: International Conference on Management of Data
Konferenzort: Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Dokumenttyp: Konferenzbeitrag (in einem Konferenzband / InProceedings erschienener Beitrag)
Abstract: Within the last few years, a countless number of blockchain systems have emerged on the market, each one claiming to revolutionize the way of distributed transaction processing in one way or the other. Many blockchain features, such as byzantine fault tolerance, are indeed valuable additions in modern environments. However, despite all the hype around the technology, many of the challenges that blockchain systems have to face are fundamental transaction management problems. These are largely shared with traditional database systems, which have been around for decades already. These similarities become especially visible for systems, that blur the lines between blockchain systems and classical database systems. A great example of this is Hyperledger Fabric, an open-source permissioned blockchain system under development by IBM. By implementing parallel transaction processing, Fabric's workflow is highly motivated by optimistic concurrency control mechanisms in classical database systems. This raises two questions: (1)~Which conceptual similarities and differences do actually exist between a system such as Fabric and a classical distributed database system? (2)~Is it possible to improve on the performance of Fabric by transitioning technology from the database world to blockchains and thus blurring the lines between these two types of systems even further? To tackle these questions, we first explore Fabric from the perspective of database research, where we observe weaknesses in the transaction pipeline. We then solve these issues by transitioning well-understood database concepts to Fabric, namely transaction reordering as well as early transaction abort. Our experimental evaluation under the Smallbank benchmark as well as under a custom workload shows that our improved version Fabric++ significantly increases the throughput of successful transactions over the vanilla version by up to a factor of 12x, while decreasing the average latency to almost half.
DOI der Erstveröffentlichung: 10.1145/3299869.3319883
URL der Erstveröffentlichung: https://dl.acm.org/doi/10.1145/3299869.3319883
Link zu diesem Datensatz: hdl:20.500.11880/28510
http://dx.doi.org/10.22028/D291-29284
ISBN: 978-1-4503-5643-5
Datum des Eintrags: 19-Dez-2019
Fakultät: MI - Fakultät für Mathematik und Informatik
Fachrichtung: MI - Informatik
Professur: MI - Prof. Dr. Jens Dittrich
Sammlung:SciDok - Der Wissenschaftsserver der Universität des Saarlandes

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