This book investigates theoretical aspects of system models for agreement problems in fault-tolerant distributed computing. A distributed system is a collection of processes that communicate with each other by sending messages over a network. Achieving agreement among these processes despite failures is a difficult but important problem. Care must be taken when choosing a system model as a too restrictive model will be applicable to very few systems, whereas too relaxed assumptions might severely reduce the set of problems that can be solved. Part I of this book provides an introduction to the context of this work, discusses related literature and describes the basic system assumptions. Part II introduces the Asynchronous Bounded-Cycle model which is entirely time-free but nevertheless sufficient to solve fault-tolerant consensus despite Byzantine faults. Part III presents an in-depth treatment of algorithms and models for solving the k-set agreement problem which requires processes to agree on at most k distinct values.
Buch Details: |
|
ISBN-13: |
978-3-8381-2729-3 |
ISBN-10: |
3838127293 |
EAN: |
9783838127293 |
Buchsprache: |
English |
By (author) : |
Peter Robinson |
Seitenanzahl: |
168 |
Veröffentlicht am: |
07.09.2011 |
Kategorie: |
Informatics |