Abstract
The CAP theorem and the PACELC model have described the existence of direct trade-offs between consistency and availability as well as consistency and latency in distributed systems. Cloud storage services and NoSQL systems, both optimized for the web with high availability and low latency requirements, hence, typically opt to relax consistency guarantees. In particular, these systems usually offer eventual consistency which guarantees that all replicas will, in the absence of failures and further updates, eventually converge towards a consistent state where all replicas are identical. This, obviously, is a very imprecise description of actual guarantees.Motivated by the popularity of eventually consistent storage systems, we take the position that a standard consistency benchmark is of great practical value. This paper is intended as a call for action; its goal is to motivate further research on building a standard comprehensive benchmark for quantifying the consistency guarantees of eventually consistent storage systems. We discuss the main challenges and requirements of such a benchmark, and present first steps towards a comprehensive consistency benchmark for cloud-hosted data storage systems. We evaluate our approach using experiments on both Cassandra and MongoDB.KeywordsVirtual MachineStorage SystemCloud StorageStorage ServiceCloud Storage ServiceThese keywords were added by machine and not by the authors. This process is experimental and the keywords may be updated as the learning algorithm improves.
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