AbstractIn the totally anonymous shared memory model of asynchronous distributed computing, processes have no identifiers and run identical programs. Moreover, processes have identical interface to the shared memory, and in particular, there are no single-writer registers. This paper assumes that processes do not fail, and the shared memory consists only of read/write registers, which are initialized to some default value. A complete characterization of the functions and agreement tasks that can be solved in this model is presented. Furthermore, it is shown that if a function is computable, then two registers are sufficient for some algorithm to compute it. Consensus is an important agreement task that can be computed. The paper proves loga...
This paper investigates whether the assumption of unique identifiers is essential for wait-free dist...
A fundamental research theme in distributed computing is the comparison of systems in terms of their...
The k-set agreement problem is a generalization of the consensus problem. Namely, assuming that each...
AbstractIn the totally anonymous shared memory model of asynchronous distributed computing, processe...
The vast majority of papers on distributed computing assume that processes are assigned unique ident...
Abstract The optimal space complexity of consensus in asynchronous shared memory was ...
We present here a bounded memory consensus Obstruction-Free algorithm for the asynchronous shared me...
Consensus is one of the central distributed abstractions. By enabling a collection of processes to a...
We study the consensus problem in a shared memory model where all processes are programmed alike, th...
International audienceThe paper considers the consensus problem in an n-process shared-memory distri...
International audienceWe present here a bounded memory size Obstruction-Free consensus algorithm for...
International audienceProcess anonymity has been studied for a long time. Memory anonymity is more r...
The power of shared data types to solve consensus in asynchronous wait-free systems is a fundamental...
Consensus, which requires processes with different input values to eventually agree on one of these ...
We study two fundamental problems of distributed computing, consensus and approximate agreement, thr...
This paper investigates whether the assumption of unique identifiers is essential for wait-free dist...
A fundamental research theme in distributed computing is the comparison of systems in terms of their...
The k-set agreement problem is a generalization of the consensus problem. Namely, assuming that each...
AbstractIn the totally anonymous shared memory model of asynchronous distributed computing, processe...
The vast majority of papers on distributed computing assume that processes are assigned unique ident...
Abstract The optimal space complexity of consensus in asynchronous shared memory was ...
We present here a bounded memory consensus Obstruction-Free algorithm for the asynchronous shared me...
Consensus is one of the central distributed abstractions. By enabling a collection of processes to a...
We study the consensus problem in a shared memory model where all processes are programmed alike, th...
International audienceThe paper considers the consensus problem in an n-process shared-memory distri...
International audienceWe present here a bounded memory size Obstruction-Free consensus algorithm for...
International audienceProcess anonymity has been studied for a long time. Memory anonymity is more r...
The power of shared data types to solve consensus in asynchronous wait-free systems is a fundamental...
Consensus, which requires processes with different input values to eventually agree on one of these ...
We study two fundamental problems of distributed computing, consensus and approximate agreement, thr...
This paper investigates whether the assumption of unique identifiers is essential for wait-free dist...
A fundamental research theme in distributed computing is the comparison of systems in terms of their...
The k-set agreement problem is a generalization of the consensus problem. Namely, assuming that each...