DocumentCode
1972094
Title
A Performance Study on the Signal-On-Fail Approach to Imposing Total Order in the Streets of Byzantium
Author
Inayat, Qurat-ul-Ain ; Ezhilchelvan, Paul Devadoss
Author_Institution
Sch. of Comput. Sci., Univ. of Newcastle, Newcastle upon Tyne
fYear
2006
fDate
25-28 June 2006
Firstpage
578
Lastpage
590
Abstract
Any asynchronous total-order protocol must somehow circumvent the well-known FLP impossibility result. This paper exposes the performance gains obtained when this impossibility is dealt with through the use of abstract processes built to have some special failure semantics. Specifically, we build processes with signal-on-fail semantics by (i) having a subset of Byzantine-prone processes paired to check each other´s computational outputs, and (ii) assuming that paired processes do not fail simultaneously. By dynamically invoking the construction of signal-on-fail processes, coordinator-based total-order protocols which allow less than one-third of processes to fail in a Byzantine manner are developed. Using a LAN-based implementation, failure-free order latencies and fail-over latencies are measured; the former are shown to be smaller compared to the protocol of Castro and Liskov which is generally regarded to perform exceedingly well in the best-case scenarios
Keywords
computer network reliability; fault tolerant computing; local area networks; protocols; telecommunication signalling; Byzantine-prone process; LAN-based implementation; asynchronous total-order protocol; coordinator-based total-order protocols; fail-over latencies; failure-free order latencies; signal-on-fail semantics; Computer crashes; Delay effects; Delay estimation; Digital signatures; Fault tolerance; IP networks; Performance evaluation; Performance gain; Protocols; Signal processing;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Dependable Systems and Networks, 2006. DSN 2006. International Conference on
Conference_Location
Philadelphia, PA
Print_ISBN
0-7695-2607-1
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/DSN.2006.7
Filename
1633546
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