Robert E. Donovan
INTERSPEECH - Eurospeech 2001
The paper deals with the problem of managing a fault-tolerant critical section in a completely asynchronous distributed network. The existence of a solution to this problem should be contrasted with a basic result of Fischer, Lynch, and Paterson, proving that in a completely asynchronous network, "nontrivial agreement" cannot be achieved even when only a single "benign" processor failure is possible. We present solutions to several versions of the critical section problem in this model. Denote by t the maximum number of possible faulty processors. Processors are allowed to fail while in the critical section, and therefore the critical section must have at least t + 1 slots. In the case where the slots are identical we present two algorithms which require t + 1 slots. The first is very simple, but requires every non-faulty processor to use the critical section infinitely often. The second solution allows non-faulty processors to quit. For distinct slots we present an algorithm that requires 2t + 1 slots. © 1991.
Robert E. Donovan
INTERSPEECH - Eurospeech 2001
Renu Tewari, Richard P. King, et al.
IS&T/SPIE Electronic Imaging 1996
Xiaozhu Kang, Hui Zhang, et al.
ICWS 2008
Corneliu Constantinescu
SPIE Optical Engineering + Applications 2009