Hagit Attiya, Marc Snir, et al.
Journal of the ACM
Transactional memory (TM) facilitates the development of concurrent applications by letting a programmer designate certain code blocks as atomic. The common approach to stating TM correctness is through a consistency condition that restricts the possible TM executions. Unfortunately, existing consistency conditions fall short of formalizing the intuitive semantics of atomic blocks through which programmers use a TM. To close this gap, we formalize programmer expectations as observational refinement between TM implementations. This states that properties of a program using a concrete TM implementation can be established by analyzing its behavior with an abstract TM, serving as a specification of the concrete one. We show that a variant of Transactional Memory Specification (TMS), a TM consistency condition, is equivalent to observational refinement for a programming language where local variables are rolled back upon a transaction abort. We thereby establish that TMS is the weakest acceptable condition for this case. We then propose a new consistency condition, called Strong Transactional Memory Specification (STMS), and show that it is equivalent to observational refinement for a language where local variables are not rolled back upon aborts. Finally, we show that under certain natural assumptions on TM implementations, STMS is equivalent to a variant of a well-known condition of opacity. Our results suggest a new approach to evaluating TM consistency conditions and enable TM implementors and language designers to make better-informed decisions.
Hagit Attiya, Marc Snir, et al.
Journal of the ACM
Hagit Attiya, Amotz Bar-Noy, et al.
Journal of the ACM (JACM)
Mohamed M. Saad, Masoomeh Javidi Kishi, et al.
PPoPP 2019
Peter W. O'Hearn, Noam Rinetzky, et al.
PODC 2010