Abstract

Availability in Process Support Systems (PSS) can be achieved by using standby mechanisms that allow a backup server to take over in case a primary server fails. These mechanisms, resembling the process pair approach used in operating systems, require the primary to send information about state changes to the backup on a regular basis. In PSS where all relevant state information is stored in a database, there are two principal strategies for synchronizing a primary–backup pair. One is to use the replication mechanisms provided by the DBMS. Another is to implement a message mechanism to exchange state information between servers above the database level. For both approaches, several variants exist that allow to trade run-time performance for failover time. This paper discusses the possible strategies and evaluates their performance based on an implementation within the OPERA process support kernel. Moreover, it is shown how the mechanisms can be used as the basis for implementing process migration in a distributed setting.

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