DocumentCode :
3732346
Title :
Interactive Consistency in Practical, Mostly-Asynchronous Systems
Author :
Panos Diamantopoulos;Stathis Maneas;Christos Patsonakis;Nikos Chondros;Mema Roussopoulos
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Inf. &
fYear :
2015
Firstpage :
752
Lastpage :
759
Abstract :
Interactive consistency is the problem in which n nodes, where up to t may be byzantine, each with its own private value, run an algorithm that allows all non-faulty nodes to infer the values of each other node. This problem is relevant to critical applications that rely on the combination of the opinions of multiple peers to provide a service. Examples include monitoring a content source to prevent equivocation or to track variability in the content provided, and resolving divergent state amongst the nodes of a distributed system. Previous works assume a fully synchronous system, where one can make strong assumptions such as negligible message delivery delays and/or detection of absent messages. However, practical, real-world systems are mostly asynchronous, i.e., they exhibit only some periods of synchrony during which message delivery is timely, thus requiring a different approach. In this paper, we present a thorough study on practical interactive consistency. We leverage the vast prior work on broadcast and byzantine consensus algorithms to design, implement and evaluate a set of algorithms, with varying timing assumptions and message complexity, that can be used to achieve interactive consistency in real-world distributed systems. We provide a complete, open-source implementation of each proposed interactive consistency algorithm by building a multi-layered stack of protocols that include several broadcast protocols, as well as a binary and a multi-valued consensus protocol. Most of these protocols have never been implemented and evaluated in a real system before. We analyze the performance of our suite of algorithms experimentally by engaging in both single instance and multiple parallel instances of each alternative.
Keywords :
"Protocols","Peer-to-peer computing","Reliability","Algorithm design and analysis","Delays","Complexity theory","Integrated circuits"
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Parallel and Distributed Systems (ICPADS), 2015 IEEE 21st International Conference on
Electronic_ISBN :
1521-9097
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/ICPADS.2015.99
Filename :
7384362
Link To Document :
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