Long-running transaction

Long-running transactions (also known as the saga interaction pattern[1][2]) are computer database transactions that avoid locks on non-local resources, use compensation to handle failures, potentially aggregate smaller ACID transactions (also referred to as atomic transactions), and typically use a coordinator to complete or abort the transaction.

In contrast to rollback in ACID transactions, compensation restores the original state, or an equivalent, and is business-specific.

A number of protocols have been specified for long-running transactions using Web services within business processes.

OASIS Business Transaction Processing[3] and WS-CAF[4] are examples.

These protocols use a coordinator to mediate the successful completion or use of compensation in a long-running transaction.