Abstract. State machine replication reduces distributed to centralized computing. Any sequential service, modeled by a state machine, can be replicated over any number of processes and made highly available to all of them. At the heart of this fundamental reduction lies the so called universal consensus abstraction, key to providing the illusion of single shared service, despite replication. Yet, as universal as it may be, consensus is just one specific instance of a more general abstraction, k-set consensus where, instead of agreeing on a unique decision, the processes may diverge but at most k different decisions are reached. It is legitimate to ask whether the celebrated state machine replication construct has its analogue with k> 1. ...
AbstractThe theory of distributed computing shares a deep and fascinating connection with combinator...
Consensus and State Machine Replication (SMR) are generally considered to be equivalent problems. In...
Abstract—In the traditional consensus task, processes are required to agree on a common value chosen...
Abstract: A notion of a universal construction suited to distributed computing has been introduced b...
International audienceA notion of a universal construction suited to distributed computing has been ...
Abstract. Lamport showed that a replicated deterministic state machine is a general way to implement...
grantor: University of TorontoIn many asynchronous distributed systems, processes communic...
In the (N; k)-consensus task, each process in a group starts with a private input value, communicate...
Distributed Consensus is a classical problem in distributed computing. It requires the correct proc...
State machine replication is a technique used to guarantee the availability of a system even in the ...
In the traditional consensus task, processes are required to agree on a common value chosen among th...
In a distributed application, high-availability of a critical online service is ensured despite fail...
A natural way to measure the power of a distributed-computing model is to characterize the set of ta...
This paper introduces and investigates the k-simultaneous consensus problem: each process participat...
International audienceA notion of a universal construction suited to distributed computing has been ...
AbstractThe theory of distributed computing shares a deep and fascinating connection with combinator...
Consensus and State Machine Replication (SMR) are generally considered to be equivalent problems. In...
Abstract—In the traditional consensus task, processes are required to agree on a common value chosen...
Abstract: A notion of a universal construction suited to distributed computing has been introduced b...
International audienceA notion of a universal construction suited to distributed computing has been ...
Abstract. Lamport showed that a replicated deterministic state machine is a general way to implement...
grantor: University of TorontoIn many asynchronous distributed systems, processes communic...
In the (N; k)-consensus task, each process in a group starts with a private input value, communicate...
Distributed Consensus is a classical problem in distributed computing. It requires the correct proc...
State machine replication is a technique used to guarantee the availability of a system even in the ...
In the traditional consensus task, processes are required to agree on a common value chosen among th...
In a distributed application, high-availability of a critical online service is ensured despite fail...
A natural way to measure the power of a distributed-computing model is to characterize the set of ta...
This paper introduces and investigates the k-simultaneous consensus problem: each process participat...
International audienceA notion of a universal construction suited to distributed computing has been ...
AbstractThe theory of distributed computing shares a deep and fascinating connection with combinator...
Consensus and State Machine Replication (SMR) are generally considered to be equivalent problems. In...
Abstract—In the traditional consensus task, processes are required to agree on a common value chosen...