AbstractWe study f-resilient services, which are guaranteed to operate as long as no more than f of the associated processes fail. We prove three theorems asserting the impossibility of boosting the resilience of such services. Our first theorem allows any connection pattern between processes and services but assumes these services to be atomic (linearizable) objects. This theorem says that no distributed system in which processes coordinate using f-resilient atomic objects and reliable registers can solve the consensus problem in the presence of f+1 undetectable process stopping failures. In contrast, we show that it is possible to boost the resilience of some systems solving problems easier than consensus: for example, the 2-set-consensus...
Distributed systems ranging from small local area networks to large wide area networks like the Inte...
Abstract. The power of an object type T can be measured as the maximum number n of processes that ca...
122 p.Consensus is one of the fundamental problems in fault tolerant distributed systems. In additio...
We prove two theorems saying that no distributed system in which processes coordinate using reliable...
We prove two theorems saying that no distributed system in whichprocesses coordinate using reliable ...
We prove two theorems saying that no distributed sys-tem in which processes coordinate using reliabl...
Abstract. Many problems in distributed computing are impossible to solve when no information about p...
Many problems in distributed computing are impossible when no information about process failures is ...
We introduce the concept of unreliable failure detectors and study how they can be used to solve Con...
We introduce the concept of unreliable failure detectors and study how they can be used to solve Con...
Abstract. We provide results for implementing resilient consensus for a (countably) infinite collect...
It is well-known that several fundamental problems of fault-tolerant distributed computing, such as...
We consider the problem of Generic Repeated Coordination, of which Reliable Broadcast and Repeated D...
Distributed systems are the basis of widespread computing facilities enabling many of our daily life...
grantor: University of TorontoA fundamental question in distributed computing is to determ...
Distributed systems ranging from small local area networks to large wide area networks like the Inte...
Abstract. The power of an object type T can be measured as the maximum number n of processes that ca...
122 p.Consensus is one of the fundamental problems in fault tolerant distributed systems. In additio...
We prove two theorems saying that no distributed system in which processes coordinate using reliable...
We prove two theorems saying that no distributed system in whichprocesses coordinate using reliable ...
We prove two theorems saying that no distributed sys-tem in which processes coordinate using reliabl...
Abstract. Many problems in distributed computing are impossible to solve when no information about p...
Many problems in distributed computing are impossible when no information about process failures is ...
We introduce the concept of unreliable failure detectors and study how they can be used to solve Con...
We introduce the concept of unreliable failure detectors and study how they can be used to solve Con...
Abstract. We provide results for implementing resilient consensus for a (countably) infinite collect...
It is well-known that several fundamental problems of fault-tolerant distributed computing, such as...
We consider the problem of Generic Repeated Coordination, of which Reliable Broadcast and Repeated D...
Distributed systems are the basis of widespread computing facilities enabling many of our daily life...
grantor: University of TorontoA fundamental question in distributed computing is to determ...
Distributed systems ranging from small local area networks to large wide area networks like the Inte...
Abstract. The power of an object type T can be measured as the maximum number n of processes that ca...
122 p.Consensus is one of the fundamental problems in fault tolerant distributed systems. In additio...