We compare the consensus problem with the uniform consensus problem in synchronous systems. In contrast to consensus, uniform consensus is not solvable in synchronous systems with byzantine failures. This still holds for the omission failure model if a majority of processes may be faulty. For the crash failure model, both consensus and uniform consensus are solvable, no matter how many processes are faulty. We consider this failure model and we examine the number of rounds required to reach a decision in consensus and uniform consensus algorithms. We show that compared with the best consensus algorithm, any uniform consensus algorithm takes at least one additional round to take a decision. We thus prove that uniform consensus is also harder...
The Δ-timed uniform consensus is a stronger variant of the traditional consensusand it satisfies the...
2003-2004 > Academic research: refereed > Refereed conference paperVersion of RecordPublishe
In this paper, we generalize the lower bound on the number of rounds for Consensus algorithms assumi...
Bivalency argument is a widely-used technique that employs forward induction to show impossibility r...
International audiencen synchronous message passing models in which some processes may be homonyms, ...
It was shown in 1985 that the {\em Consensus problem} cannot be solved in an asynchronous system if ...
Bivalency argument is a widely-used technique that employs forward induction to show impossibility r...
In this paper, we discuss the consensus problem for synchronous distributed systems with orderly cra...
The unbeatability of a consensus protocol, introduced by Halpern, Moses and Waarts in [14], is a str...
We present a new abstraction to replace the t of n assumption used in designing fault-tolerant algo...
In consensus, the n nodes of a distributed system seek to take a consistent decision on some output,...
In the traditional consensus task, processes are required to agree on a common value chosen among th...
Abstract — A fundamental problem of fault-tolerant distributed computing is for the reliable process...
RapportWe consider asynchronous distributed systems with message losses and process crashes. We stud...
Abstract—In the traditional consensus task, processes are required to agree on a common value chosen...
The Δ-timed uniform consensus is a stronger variant of the traditional consensusand it satisfies the...
2003-2004 > Academic research: refereed > Refereed conference paperVersion of RecordPublishe
In this paper, we generalize the lower bound on the number of rounds for Consensus algorithms assumi...
Bivalency argument is a widely-used technique that employs forward induction to show impossibility r...
International audiencen synchronous message passing models in which some processes may be homonyms, ...
It was shown in 1985 that the {\em Consensus problem} cannot be solved in an asynchronous system if ...
Bivalency argument is a widely-used technique that employs forward induction to show impossibility r...
In this paper, we discuss the consensus problem for synchronous distributed systems with orderly cra...
The unbeatability of a consensus protocol, introduced by Halpern, Moses and Waarts in [14], is a str...
We present a new abstraction to replace the t of n assumption used in designing fault-tolerant algo...
In consensus, the n nodes of a distributed system seek to take a consistent decision on some output,...
In the traditional consensus task, processes are required to agree on a common value chosen among th...
Abstract — A fundamental problem of fault-tolerant distributed computing is for the reliable process...
RapportWe consider asynchronous distributed systems with message losses and process crashes. We stud...
Abstract—In the traditional consensus task, processes are required to agree on a common value chosen...
The Δ-timed uniform consensus is a stronger variant of the traditional consensusand it satisfies the...
2003-2004 > Academic research: refereed > Refereed conference paperVersion of RecordPublishe
In this paper, we generalize the lower bound on the number of rounds for Consensus algorithms assumi...