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Fully Read/Write Fence-Free Work-Stealing with Multiplicity

Work-stealing is a popular technique to implement dynamic load balancing in a distributed manner. In this approach, each process owns a set of tasks that have to be executed. The owner of the set can put tasks in it and can take tasks from it to execute them. When a process runs out of tasks, instead of being idle, it becomes a thief to steal tasks from a victim. Thus, a work-stealing algorithm provides three high-level operations: Put and Take, which can be invoked only by the owner, and Steal, which can be invoked by a thief. One of the main targets when designing work-stealing algorithms is to make Put and Take as simple and efficient as possible. Unfortunately, it has been shown that any work-stealing algorithm in the standard asynchronous model must use expensive Read- After-Write synchronization patterns or atomic Read-Modify-Write instructions, which may be costly in practice. Thus, prior research has proposed idempotent work-stealing, a relaxation for which there are algorithms with Put and Take devoid of Read-Modify-Write atomic instructions and Read-After-Write synchronization patterns; however, Put uses fences among Write instructions, and Steal uses Compare&Swap and fences among Read instructions. In the TSO model, in which Write (resp. Read) instructions cannot be reordered, there have been proposed fully fence-free work-stealing algorithms whose Put and Take have similar properties but Steal uses Compare&Swap or a lock.

preprint2021arXivOpen access
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