A Dynamic Elimination-Combining Stack Algorithm

30 Jun 2011  ·  Gal Bar-Nissan, Danny Hendler, Adi Suissa ·

Two key synchronization paradigms for the construction of scalable concurrent data-structures are software combining and elimination. Elimination-based concurrent data-structures allow operations with reverse semantics (such as push and pop stack operations) to "collide" and exchange values without having to access a central location. Software combining, on the other hand, is effective when colliding operations have identical semantics: when a pair of threads performing operations with identical semantics collide, the task of performing the combined set of operations is delegated to one of the threads and the other thread waits for its operation(s) to be performed. Applying this mechanism iteratively can reduce memory contention and increase throughput. The most highly scalable prior concurrent stack algorithm is the elimination-backoff stack. The elimination-backoff stack provides high parallelism for symmetric workloads in which the numbers of push and pop operations are roughly equal, but its performance deteriorates when workloads are asymmetric. We present DECS, a novel Dynamic Elimination-Combining Stack algorithm, that scales well for all workload types. While maintaining the simplicity and low-overhead of the elimination-bakcoff stack, DECS manages to benefit from collisions of both identical- and reverse-semantics operations. Our empirical evaluation shows that DECS scales significantly better than both blocking and non-blocking best prior stack algorithms.

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Distributed, Parallel, and Cluster Computing

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