Co-evolving Tracing and Fault Injection with Box of Pain

Appeared in Proceedings of HotCloud '19.

Abstract

Distributed systems are hard to reason about largely because of uncertainty about what may go wrong in a particular execution, and about whether the system will mitigate those faults. Tools that perturb executions can help test whether a system is robust to faults, while tools that observe executions can help better understand their system-wide effects. We present Box of Pain, a tracer and fault injector for unmodified distributed systems that addresses both concerns by interposing at the system call level and dynamically reconstructing the partial order of communication events based on causal relationships. Box of Pain’s lightweight approach to tracing and focus on simulating the effects of partial failures on communication rather than the failures themselves sets it apart from other tracing and fault injection systems. We present evidence of the promise of Box of Pain and its approach to lightweight observation and perturbation of distributed systems.

Publication date:
July 2019

Authors:
Daniel Bittman
Ethan L. Miller
Peter Alvaro

Projects:
Tracing and Benchmarking

Available media

Full paper text: PDF

Bibtex entry

@inproceedings{bittman-hotcloud19,
  author       = {Daniel Bittman and Ethan L. Miller and Peter Alvaro},
  title        = {Co-evolving Tracing and Fault Injection with Box of Pain},
  booktitle    = {Proceedings of HotCloud '19},
  month        = jul,
  year         = {2019},
}
Last modified 22 Jul 2019