Abstract

We establish a theorem called the PCL theorem, which states that it is impossible to design a transactional memory algorithm that ensures (1) parallelism , i.e., transactions do not need to synchronize unless they access the same application objects, (2) very little consistency , i.e., a consistency condition, called weak adaptive consistency , introduced here and that is weaker than snapshot isolation, processor consistency, and any other consistency condition stronger than them (such as opacity, serializability, causal serializability, etc.), and (3) very little liveness , i.e., which transactions eventually commit if they run solo.

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