Abstract
Most fault-tolerant algorithms are designed assuming that out of n components, no more than t can be faulty. For example, solutions to the Consensus problem are usually developed assuming no more than t of the n processes are faulty, where “being faulty” is specialized by a failure model. We call this the t of n assumption (also known as threshold model). It is a convenient assumption to make. For example, bounds are easily expressed as a function of t: if processes can fail only by crashing, then the Consensus problem is solvable when t < n if the system is synchronous and when t < 2n if the system is asynchronous extended with a failure detector of the class ◊W. [5.5], [5.1]
This work was developed in the context of the RAMP project, supported by DARPA as project number N66001-01-1-8933.
The author is partially supported by a scholarship from CAPES.
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Junqueira, F., Marzullo, K. (2003). Designing Algorithms for Dependent Process Failures. In: Schiper, A., Shvartsman, A.A., Weatherspoon, H., Zhao, B.Y. (eds) Future Directions in Distributed Computing. Lecture Notes in Computer Science, vol 2584. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/3-540-37795-6_5
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/3-540-37795-6_5
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