A distributed algorithm is self-stabilizing if after faults and attacks hit the system and place it in some arbitrary global state, the systems recovers from this catastrophic situation without external intervention in finite time. Unidirectional networks preclude many common techniques in self-stabilization from being used, such as preserving local predicates. In this paper, we investigate the intrinsic complexity of achieving self-stabilization in unidirectional networks, and focus on the classical vertex coloring problem. When deterministic solutions are considered, we prove a lower bound of $n$ states per process (where $n$ is the network size) and a recovery time of at least $n(n-1)/2$ actions in total. We present a deterministic algor...
AbstractSelf-stabilizing protocols can resist transient failures and guarantee system recovery in a ...
International audienceA distributed algorithm is self-stabilizing if after faults and attacks hit th...
Self-stabilizing algorithms are a way to deal with network dynamicity, as it will update itself afte...
A distributed algorithm is self-stabilizing if after faults and attacks hit the system and place it ...
International audienceA distributed algorithm is self-stabilizing if after faults and attacks hit th...
A distributed algorithm is self-stabilizing if after faults and attacks hit the system and place it ...
A distributed algorithm is self-stabilizing if after faults and attacks hit the system and place it ...
International audienceA distributed algorithm is self-stabilizing if after faults and attacks hit th...
AbstractSelf-stabilization ensures automatic recovery from an arbitrary state; we define self-organi...
Scientific Context. Modern networks are very large-scale (about 100 000 nodes). Now, the more a netw...
Self-stabilization is a strong property that guarantees that a network always resume correct behavio...
Self-stabilization is a general paradigm to provide forward recovery capabilities to distributed sys...
International audienceWe initiate research on self-stabilization in highly dynamic message-passing s...
Self-stabilization is a versatile technique to withstand any transient fault in a distributed system...
AbstractSelf-stabilizing protocols can resist transient failures and guarantee system recovery in a ...
International audienceA distributed algorithm is self-stabilizing if after faults and attacks hit th...
Self-stabilizing algorithms are a way to deal with network dynamicity, as it will update itself afte...
A distributed algorithm is self-stabilizing if after faults and attacks hit the system and place it ...
International audienceA distributed algorithm is self-stabilizing if after faults and attacks hit th...
A distributed algorithm is self-stabilizing if after faults and attacks hit the system and place it ...
A distributed algorithm is self-stabilizing if after faults and attacks hit the system and place it ...
International audienceA distributed algorithm is self-stabilizing if after faults and attacks hit th...
AbstractSelf-stabilization ensures automatic recovery from an arbitrary state; we define self-organi...
Scientific Context. Modern networks are very large-scale (about 100 000 nodes). Now, the more a netw...
Self-stabilization is a strong property that guarantees that a network always resume correct behavio...
Self-stabilization is a general paradigm to provide forward recovery capabilities to distributed sys...
International audienceWe initiate research on self-stabilization in highly dynamic message-passing s...
Self-stabilization is a versatile technique to withstand any transient fault in a distributed system...
AbstractSelf-stabilizing protocols can resist transient failures and guarantee system recovery in a ...
International audienceA distributed algorithm is self-stabilizing if after faults and attacks hit th...
Self-stabilizing algorithms are a way to deal with network dynamicity, as it will update itself afte...