ACM Transactions on Programming Languages and Systems (TOPLAS)
Immediate atomic snapshots and fast renaming
PODC '93 Proceedings of the twelfth annual ACM symposium on Principles of distributed computing
Unreliable failure detectors for reliable distributed systems
Journal of the ACM (JACM)
A simple algorithmically reasoned characterization of wait-free computation (extended abstract)
PODC '97 Proceedings of the sixteenth annual ACM symposium on Principles of distributed computing
An impossibility about failure detectors in the iterated immediate snapshot model
Information Processing Letters
The Iterated Restricted Immediate Snapshot Model
COCOON '08 Proceedings of the 14th annual international conference on Computing and Combinatorics
PODC '12 Proceedings of the 2012 ACM symposium on Principles of distributed computing
Synchrony weakened by message adversaries vs asynchrony restricted by failure detectors
Proceedings of the 2013 ACM symposium on Principles of distributed computing
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The base distributed asynchronous read/write computation model is made up of n asynchronous processes which communicate by reading and writing atomic registers only. The distributed asynchronous iterated model is a more constrained model in which the processes execute an infinite number of rounds and communicate at each round with a new object called immediate snapshot object. Moreover, in both models up to n−1 processes may crash in an unexpected way. When considering computability issues, two main results are associated with the previous models. The first states that they are computationally equivalent for decision tasks. The second states that they are no longer equivalent when both are enriched with the same failure detector. This paper shows how to capture failure detectors in each model so that both models become computationally equivalent. To that end it introduces the notion of a "strongly correct" process which appears particularly well-suited to the iterated model, and presents simulations that prove the computational equivalence when both models are enriched with the same failure detector. The paper extends also these simulations to the case where the wait-freedom requirement is replaced by the notion of t-resilience.