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by huntaub 575 days ago
Without getting too much into internals which could change at any time, yes. You have to replicate, partition, and serve consensus over data to achieve high-durability and availability.

For concurrent updates, the standard practice for remote file systems is to use file locking to coordinate concurrent writes. Otherwise, NFS doesn't have any guarantees about WRITE operation ordering. If you're talking about concurrent writes which occur from NFS and S3 simultaneously, this leads to undefined behavior. We think that this is okay if we do a good job at detecting and alerting the user if this occurs because we don't think that there are applications currently written to do this kind of simultaneous data editing (because Regatta didn't exist yet).

1 comments

Thanks for the details!

Consistency at the individual file can be guaranteed this way, but I don't think this works across multiple files (as you need a global total order of operations). In any case, this is a pragmatic solution, and I like the tradeoffs. Comparing against NFS rather than Spanner seems the right way to look at it.

This is actually also interesting, in that I don’t think that the file system paradigm actually requires a global total ordering of operations (and, in fact, many file systems don’t provide this). I know that sounds like snapshots wouldn’t be valid, but I think that applications which really care about data consistency (such as databases) are built specifically to handle this (with things like write-ahead-logs).