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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Untangling Blockchain: A Data Processing View of Blockchain Systems

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TLDR
This paper conducts a comprehensive evaluation of three major blockchain systems based on BLOCKBENCH, namely Ethereum, Parity, and Hyperledger Fabric, and discusses several research directions for bringing blockchain performance closer to the realm of databases.
Abstract
Blockchain technologies are gaining massive momentum in the last few years. Blockchains are distributed ledgers that enable parties who do not fully trust each other to maintain a set of global states. The parties agree on the existence, values, and histories of the states. As the technology landscape is expanding rapidly, it is both important and challenging to have a firm grasp of what the core technologies have to offer, especially with respect to their data processing capabilities. In this paper, we first survey the state of the art, focusing on private blockchains (in which parties are authenticated). We analyze both in-production and research systems in four dimensions: distributed ledger, cryptography, consensus protocol, and smart contract. We then present BLOCKBENCH, a benchmarking framework for understanding performance of private blockchains against data processing workloads. We conduct a comprehensive evaluation of three major blockchain systems based on BLOCKBENCH, namely Ethereum, Parity, and Hyperledger Fabric. The results demonstrate several trade-offs in the design space, as well as big performance gaps between blockchain and database systems. Drawing from design principles of database systems, we discuss several research directions for bringing blockchain performance closer to the realm of databases.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Blockchain-enabled feedback-based combinatorial double auction for cloud markets

TL;DR: Wang et al. as mentioned in this paper proposed a distributed Feedback-based Combinatorial Multi-unit Double Auction mechanism backed by blockchain to establish a cloud resource market that not only produces high social welfare but also motivates participants to provide high quality service.
Journal ArticleDOI

Exploring Blockchains Interoperability: A Systematic Survey

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors provide a comprehensive review of the current progress of blockchain interoperability and discuss critical challenges and point out potential research directions, highlighting the general principles and procedures for interoperable blockchain systems.

Blockchain, IoT and Sidechains

TL;DR: This work intends to approach the problem of making IoT devices participate in the Blockchain while making their data available across other Blockchain platforms is a challenge using sidechains, creating an inter-Blockchain network.
Book ChapterDOI

CapBAC in Hyperledger Sawtooth

TL;DR: The main claim is that the features and simplicity of CapBAC magnify the usefulness of a blockchain to control the access in the IoT.
References
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Book ChapterDOI

Short Signatures from the Weil Pairing

TL;DR: A short signature scheme based on the Computational Diffie-Hellman assumption on certain elliptic and hyperelliptic curves is introduced, designed for systems where signatures are typed in by a human or signatures are sent over a low-bandwidth channel.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Practical Byzantine fault tolerance

TL;DR: A new replication algorithm that is able to tolerate Byzantine faults that works in asynchronous environments like the Internet and incorporates several important optimizations that improve the response time of previous algorithms by more than an order of magnitude.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Benchmarking cloud serving systems with YCSB

TL;DR: This work presents the "Yahoo! Cloud Serving Benchmark" (YCSB) framework, with the goal of facilitating performance comparisons of the new generation of cloud data serving systems, and defines a core set of benchmarks and reports results for four widely used systems.
Proceedings Article

In search of an understandable consensus algorithm

TL;DR: Raft is a consensus algorithm for managing a replicated log that separates the key elements of consensus, such as leader election, log replication, and safety, and it enforces a stronger degree of coherency to reduce the number of states that must be considered.
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