Write a Blog >>
Tue 20 Jun 2017 12:00 - 12:30 at Vertex WS208 - Morning Session

Programming large-scale distributed applications requires new abstractions and models to be done well. We demonstrate that these models are possible.

Following from both the FLP result and CAP theorem, we show that concurrent programming models are necessary, but not sufficient, in the construction of large-scale distributed systems because of the problem of failure and network partitions: languages need to be able to capture and encode the tradeoffs between consistency and availability.

We present two programming models, Lasp and Austere, each of which makes a strong tradeoff with respects to the CAP theorem. These two models outline the bounds of distributed model design: strictly AP or strictly CP. We argue that all possible distributed programming models must come from this design space, and present one practical design that allows declarative specification of consistency tradeoffs, called Spry.

Christopher Meiklejohn loves distributed systems and programming languages. Previously, Christopher worked at Basho Technologies, Inc. on the distributed key-value store, Riak. Christopher develops a programming language for distributed computation, called Lasp. Christopher is currently a Ph.D. student at the Université catholique de Louvain in Belgium.

Tue 20 Jun

Displayed time zone: Amsterdam, Berlin, Bern, Rome, Stockholm, Vienna change

11:00 - 12:30
Morning SessionPMLDC at Vertex WS208
11:00
60m
Talk
Edge Compute: The First 5000 Years
PMLDC
12:00
30m
Talk
On the Design of Distributed Programming Models
PMLDC
Christopher Meiklejohn Université catholique de Louvain
File Attached