Litcius/Paper detail

Rhino: Efficient Management of Very Large Distributed State for Stream Processing Engines

Bonaventura Del Monte, Steffen Zeuch, Tilmann Rabl, Volker Markl

202049 citationsDOI

Abstract

Scale-out stream processing engines (SPEs) are powering large big data applications on high velocity data streams. Industrial setups require SPEs to sustain outages, varying data rates, and low-latency processing. SPEs need to transparently reconfigure stateful queries during runtime. However, state-of-the-art SPEs are not ready yet to handle on-the-fly reconfigurations of queries with terabytes of state due to three problems. These are network overhead for state migration, consistency, and overhead on data processing. In this paper, we propose Rhino, a library for efficient reconfigurations of running queries in the presence of very large distributed state. Rhino provides a handover protocol and a state migration protocol to consistently and efficiently migrate stream processing among servers. Overall, our evaluation shows that Rhino scales with state sizes of up to TBs, reconfigures a running query 15 times faster than the state-of-the-art, and reduces latency by three orders of magnitude upon a reconfiguration.

Topics & Concepts

Computer scienceStateful firewallStream processingLatency (audio)Control reconfigurationServerDistributed computingOverhead (engineering)State (computer science)Computer networkState managementOperating systemEmbedded systemAlgorithmTelecommunicationsNetwork packetCloud Computing and Resource ManagementDistributed systems and fault toleranceSoftware System Performance and Reliability