A characterization of colorless anonymous t-resilient task computability

12/12/2017
by   Carole Delporte-Gallet, et al.
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A task is a distributed problem for n processes, in which each process starts with a private input value, communicates with other processes, and eventually decides an output value. A task is colorless if each process can adopt the input or output value of another process. Colorless tasks are well studied in the non-anonymous shared-memory model where each process has a distinct identifier that can be used to access a single-writer/multi-reader shared register. In the anonymous case, where processes have no identifiers and communicate through multi-writer/multi-reader registers, there is a recent topological characterization of the colorless tasks that are solvable when any number of asynchronous processes may crash. In this paper we study the case where at most t processes may crash, where 1 < t < n. We prove that a colorless task is t-resilient solvable non-anonymously if and only if it is t-resilient solvable anonymously. This implies a complete characterization of colorless anonymous t-resilient asynchronous task computability.

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