原文:http://stackoverflow.com/questions/8200015/what-is-the-difference-between-serializability-and-linearizability

It was hard to find information about this subject. However, At some point I found a statement that explained it clearly:

  • Linearizability gives isolation at the level of operations, while Serializability gives isolation at the level of transactions.

As an example:

enter image description here

Here, A, B and C are three different transactions running at the same time. r(varname) means that the current transaction is accessing the value inside varname, and w(varname) means that the current transaction is writing a certain value in varname.

Now, to create a linearized history of these events, we have to make sure that no two operations are happening at the same time. An operation that has started while another operation already started should appear behind the first operation.

In this case:

Log1: A.r(x), B.r(X), B.r(Y), A.w(X), C.r(Y)

To create a Serialized history of these events, one has to separate all the operations of the transactions A, B and C so there are no interleaved operations from other transactions.

From our example this could result in:

Log2: A.r(x), A.w(x), B.r(X), B.r(Y), C.r(Y) 

参考链接:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Serializability




posted on 2013-11-14 17:47  #hanhui  阅读(165)  评论(0编辑  收藏  举报