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CORR
2006
Springer

Discovering Network Topology in the Presence of Byzantine Faults

13 years 11 months ago
Discovering Network Topology in the Presence of Byzantine Faults
We pose and study the problem of Byzantine-robust topology discovery in an arbitrary asynchronous network. The problem straction of fault-tolerant routing. We formally state the weak and strong versions of the problem. The weak version requires that either each node discovers the topology of the network or at least one node detects the presence of a faulty node. The strong version requires that each node discovers the topology regardless of faults. We focus on non-cryptographic solutions to these problems. We explore their bounds. We prove that the weak topology discovery problem is solvable only if the connectivity of the network exceeds the number of faults in the system. Similarly, we show that the strong version of the problem is solvable only if the network connectivity is more than twice the number of faults. We present solutions to both versions of the problem. The presented algorithms match the established graph connectivity bounds. The algorithms do not require the individual ...
Mikhail Nesterenko, Sébastien Tixeuil
Added 11 Dec 2010
Updated 11 Dec 2010
Type Journal
Year 2006
Where CORR
Authors Mikhail Nesterenko, Sébastien Tixeuil
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