6,321 research outputs found
Self-stabilizing K-out-of-L exclusion on tree network
In this paper, we address the problem of K-out-of-L exclusion, a
generalization of the mutual exclusion problem, in which there are units
of a shared resource, and any process can request up to units
(). We propose the first deterministic self-stabilizing
distributed K-out-of-L exclusion protocol in message-passing systems for
asynchronous oriented tree networks which assumes bounded local memory for each
process.Comment: 15 page
Stabilizing data-link over non-FIFO channels with optimal fault-resilience
Self-stabilizing systems have the ability to converge to a correct behavior
when started in any configuration. Most of the work done so far in the
self-stabilization area assumed either communication via shared memory or via
FIFO channels. This paper is the first to lay the bases for the design of
self-stabilizing message passing algorithms over unreliable non-FIFO channels.
We propose a fault-send-deliver optimal stabilizing data-link layer that
emulates a reliable FIFO communication channel over unreliable capacity bounded
non-FIFO channels
Fast and Compact Distributed Verification and Self-Stabilization of a DFS Tree
We present algorithms for distributed verification and silent-stabilization
of a DFS(Depth First Search) spanning tree of a connected network. Computing
and maintaining such a DFS tree is an important task, e.g., for constructing
efficient routing schemes. Our algorithm improves upon previous work in various
ways. Comparable previous work has space and time complexities of bits per node and respectively, where is the highest
degree of a node, is the number of nodes and is the diameter of the
network. In contrast, our algorithm has a space complexity of bits
per node, which is optimal for silent-stabilizing spanning trees and runs in
time. In addition, our solution is modular since it utilizes the
distributed verification algorithm as an independent subtask of the overall
solution. It is possible to use the verification algorithm as a stand alone
task or as a subtask in another algorithm. To demonstrate the simplicity of
constructing efficient DFS algorithms using the modular approach, We also
present a (non-sielnt) self-stabilizing DFS token circulation algorithm for
general networks based on our silent-stabilizing DFS tree. The complexities of
this token circulation algorithm are comparable to the known ones
Stabilizing Server-Based Storage in Byzantine Asynchronous Message-Passing Systems
A stabilizing Byzantine single-writer single-reader (SWSR) regular register,
which stabilizes after the first invoked write operation, is first presented.
Then, new/old ordering inversions are eliminated by the use of a (bounded)
sequence number for writes, obtaining a practically stabilizing SWSR atomic
register. A practically stabilizing Byzantine single-writer multi-reader (SWMR)
atomic register is then obtained by using several copies of SWSR atomic
registers. Finally, bounded time-stamps, with a time-stamp per writer, together
with SWMR atomic registers, are used to construct a practically stabilizing
Byzantine multi-writer multi-reader (MWMR) atomic register. In a system of
servers implementing an atomic register, and in addition to transient failures,
the constructions tolerate t<n/8 Byzantine servers if communication is
asynchronous, and t<n/3 Byzantine servers if it is synchronous. The noteworthy
feature of the proposed algorithms is that (to our knowledge) these are the
first that build an atomic read/write storage on top of asynchronous servers
prone to transient failures, and where up to t of them can be Byzantine
Preserving Stabilization while Practically Bounding State Space
Stabilization is a key dependability property for dealing with unanticipated
transient faults, as it guarantees that even in the presence of such faults,
the system will recover to states where it satisfies its specification. One of
the desirable attributes of stabilization is the use of bounded space for each
variable. In this paper, we present an algorithm that transforms a stabilizing
program that uses variables with unbounded domain into a stabilizing program
that uses bounded variables and (practically bounded) physical time. While
non-stabilizing programs (that do not handle transient faults) can deal with
unbounded variables by assigning large enough but bounded space, stabilizing
programs that need to deal with arbitrary transient faults cannot do the same
since a transient fault may corrupt the variable to its maximum value. We show
that our transformation algorithm is applicable to several problems including
logical clocks, vector clocks, mutual exclusion, leader election, diffusing
computations, Paxos based consensus, and so on. Moreover, our approach can also
be used to bound counters used in an earlier work by Katz and Perry for adding
stabilization to a non-stabilizing program. By combining our algorithm with
that earlier work by Katz and Perry, it would be possible to provide
stabilization for a rich class of problems, by assigning large enough but
bounded space for variables.Comment: Moved some content from the Appendix to the main paper, added some
details to the transformation algorithm and to its descriptio
Optimal Decentralized State-Feedback Control with Sparsity and Delays
This work presents the solution to a class of decentralized linear quadratic
state-feedback control problems, in which the plant and controller must satisfy
the same combination of delay and sparsity constraints. Using a novel
decomposition of the noise history, the control problem is split into
independent subproblems that are solved using dynamic programming. The approach
presented herein both unifies and generalizes many existing results
The Weakest Failure Detector for Eventual Consistency
In its classical form, a consistent replicated service requires all replicas
to witness the same evolution of the service state. Assuming a message-passing
environment with a majority of correct processes, the necessary and sufficient
information about failures for implementing a general state machine replication
scheme ensuring consistency is captured by the {\Omega} failure detector. This
paper shows that in such a message-passing environment, {\Omega} is also the
weakest failure detector to implement an eventually consistent replicated
service, where replicas are expected to agree on the evolution of the service
state only after some (a priori unknown) time. In fact, we show that {\Omega}
is the weakest to implement eventual consistency in any message-passing
environment, i.e., under any assumption on when and where failures might occur.
Ensuring (strong) consistency in any environment requires, in addition to
{\Omega}, the quorum failure detector {\Sigma}. Our paper thus captures, for
the first time, an exact computational difference be- tween building a
replicated state machine that ensures consistency and one that only ensures
eventual consistency
- âŠ