http://www.springeronline.com/3-540-29814-2This book constitutes the refereed proceedings of the 7th International Symposium on Self-Stabilizing Systems, SSS 2005, held in Barcelona, Spain, in October 2005. The 15 revised full papers presented were carefully reviewed and selected from 33 submissions. The papers address classical topics of self-stabilization, prevailing extensions to the field, such as snap-stabilization, code stabilization, self-stabilization with either dynamic, faulty or Byzantine components, or deal with applications of self-stabilization, either related to operating systems, security, or mobile and ad hoc networks
. Self-stabilization provides a non-masking approach to fault tolerance. Given this fact, one would ...
Our purpose in the present paper is to present a brief overview of the relatively new paradigm of se...
istics increase the number of faults which may hit the system. For instance, in WSNs, processes are ...
http://www.springeronline.com/3-540-29814-2This book constitutes the refereed proceedings of the 7th...
Self-stabilizing system is a concept of fault-tolerance in distributed computing. A distributed algo...
[[abstract]]A distributed system is self-stabilizing if, starting from any state, possibly illegitim...
International audienceThis book aims at being a comprehensive and pedagogical introduction to the co...
National audienceIn 1974, E.W. Dijkstra defined self-stabilization as the property for a distributed...
A self-stabilizing system is one which can recover from transient faults in a nite number of steps. ...
The notion of self-stabilization was first proposed by Dijkstra in 1974 in his classic paper. The pa...
Dijkstra's concept of self-stabilization assumes that faults can only affect the variables of a...
This book constitutes the refereed proceedings of the 11th International Symposium on Stabilization,...
In 1973Dijkstra introduced tocomputer science thenotion ofself-stabilization in the context ofdistri...
Self-stabilization is a theoretical framework of non-masking fault-tolerance for distributed network...
The presented dissertation focuses on the applicability of self-stabilizing algorithms in systems us...
. Self-stabilization provides a non-masking approach to fault tolerance. Given this fact, one would ...
Our purpose in the present paper is to present a brief overview of the relatively new paradigm of se...
istics increase the number of faults which may hit the system. For instance, in WSNs, processes are ...
http://www.springeronline.com/3-540-29814-2This book constitutes the refereed proceedings of the 7th...
Self-stabilizing system is a concept of fault-tolerance in distributed computing. A distributed algo...
[[abstract]]A distributed system is self-stabilizing if, starting from any state, possibly illegitim...
International audienceThis book aims at being a comprehensive and pedagogical introduction to the co...
National audienceIn 1974, E.W. Dijkstra defined self-stabilization as the property for a distributed...
A self-stabilizing system is one which can recover from transient faults in a nite number of steps. ...
The notion of self-stabilization was first proposed by Dijkstra in 1974 in his classic paper. The pa...
Dijkstra's concept of self-stabilization assumes that faults can only affect the variables of a...
This book constitutes the refereed proceedings of the 11th International Symposium on Stabilization,...
In 1973Dijkstra introduced tocomputer science thenotion ofself-stabilization in the context ofdistri...
Self-stabilization is a theoretical framework of non-masking fault-tolerance for distributed network...
The presented dissertation focuses on the applicability of self-stabilizing algorithms in systems us...
. Self-stabilization provides a non-masking approach to fault tolerance. Given this fact, one would ...
Our purpose in the present paper is to present a brief overview of the relatively new paradigm of se...
istics increase the number of faults which may hit the system. For instance, in WSNs, processes are ...