Instant restore after a media failure

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Abstract

Media failures usually leave database systems unavailable for several hours until recovery is complete, especially in applications with large devices and high transaction volume. Previous work introduced a technique called single-pass restore, which increases restore bandwidth and thus substantially decreases time to repair. Instant restore goes further as it permits read/write access to any data on a device undergoing restore—even data not yet restored—by restoring individual data segments on demand. Thus, the restore process is guided primarily by the needs of applications, and the observed mean time to repair is effectively reduced from several hours to a few seconds. This paper presents an implementation and evaluation of instant restore. The technique is incrementally implemented on a system starting with the traditional ARIES design for logging and recovery. Experiments show that the transaction latency perceived after a media failure can be cut down to less than a second. The net effect is that a few “nines” of availability are added to the system using simple and low-overhead software techniques.

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APA

Sauer, C., Graefe, G., & Härder, T. (2017). Instant restore after a media failure. In Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics) (Vol. 10509 LNCS, pp. 311–325). Springer Verlag. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-66917-5_21

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