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On Propagating Updates in a Byzantine Environment

Publication ,  Report
Malkhi, D; Mansour, Y; Reiter, M
August 12, 1999

We study how to efficiently diffuse updates to a large distributed system of data replicas, some of which may exhibit arbitrary (Byzantine) failures. We assume that strictly fewer than $t$ replicas fail, and that each update is initially received by at least $t$ correct replicas. The goal is to diffuse each update to all correct replicas while ensuring that correct replicas accept no updates generated spuriously by faulty replicas. To achieve reliable diffusion, each correct replica accepts an update only after receiving it from at least $t$ others. We provide the first analysis of epidemic-style protocols for such environments. This analysis is fundamentally different from known analyses for the benign case due to our treatment of fully Byzantine failures---which, among other things, precludes the use of digital signatures for authenticating forwarded updates. We propose two epidemic-style diffusion algorithms and two measures that characterize the efficiency of diffusion algorithms in general. We characterize both of our algorithms according to these measures, and also prove lower bounds with regards to these measures that show that our algorithms are close to optimal.

Duke Scholars

Publication Date

August 12, 1999
 

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Malkhi, D., Mansour, Y., & Reiter, M. (1999). On Propagating Updates in a Byzantine Environment.
Malkhi, Dahlia, Yishay Mansour, and Michael Reiter. “On Propagating Updates in a Byzantine Environment,” August 12, 1999.
Malkhi D, Mansour Y, Reiter M. On Propagating Updates in a Byzantine Environment. 1999 Aug.
Malkhi, Dahlia, et al. On Propagating Updates in a Byzantine Environment. 12 Aug. 1999.
Malkhi D, Mansour Y, Reiter M. On Propagating Updates in a Byzantine Environment. 1999 Aug.

Publication Date

August 12, 1999