• Title/Summary/Keyword: Election Problem

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On the Hardness of Leader Election in Asynchronous Distributed Systems with Crash Failures

  • Park Sung-Hoon;Kim Yoon
    • International Journal of Contents
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    • v.1 no.1
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    • pp.21-28
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    • 2005
  • This paper is about the hardness of Leader Election problem in asynchronous distributed systems in which processes can crash but links are reliable. Recently, the hardness of a problem encountered in the systems is defined with respect to the difficulty to solve it despite failures: a problem is easy if it can be solved in presence of failures, otherwise it is hard [9]. It is shown in [9] that problems are classified as three classes: F (fault-tolerant), NF (Not fault-tolerant) and NFC (NF-completeness). Among those, the class NFC is the hardest problem to solve. It is also shown in [9] that the construction of Perfect Failure Detector (problem P) belongs to NFC. In this paper, we show that Leader Election is also one of NFC problems by using a general reduction protocol that reduces the Leader Election Problem to P. We use a formulation of the Leader Election problem as a prototype to show that it belongs to NFC.

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A Study On Relationships between Election Problems of Coordinator Under Distributed Systems (분산시스템 환경에서 조정자 선출 문제들 간의 상관관계 연구)

  • Kim, Yoon
    • Journal of the Korea Society of Computer and Information
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    • v.8 no.4
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    • pp.35-40
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    • 2003
  • In this paper, I raise an issue regarding the relationships between the Election problem and the Consensus problem in asynchronous systems with unreliable failure detectors. First, I describe our system model, and then define Leader Election. After then, I show that the Election problem is harder to resolve than the Consensus problem. Each correct process eventually gets into the state in which it considers only one process to be a leader. Therefore a Perfect Failure Detector is the weakest failure detector which is sufficient to solve the Election. In order to show that the Election problem is harder to resolve than the Consensus problem, I utilize the Reduction protocol in this paper.

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The Minimum Requirements for Solving Election Problem in Asynchronous Distributed Systems (비동기적 분산 시스템하에서 선출 문제 해결을 위한 최소 필요 조건)

  • Park, Sung-Hoon
    • The Transactions of the Korea Information Processing Society
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    • v.7 no.12
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    • pp.3815-3820
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    • 2000
  • This paper is about the minimum requirements to solve the Election problem in asynchronous distributed systems. The focus of the paper is to find out what failure detector is the weakest one to solve the Election problem. We first discuss the relationship between the Election problem and the Consensus problem in asynchronous distributed systems with unreliable failure detectors and show that the Election problem is harder than the Consensus problem. More precisely, the weakest failure detector that is needed to solve this problem is a Perfect Failure Detector. which is strictly stronger than the weakest failure detector that is needed to solve Consensus.

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On Relationship between Safety and Liveness of Election Problem in Asynchronous Distributed Systems

  • Park, Sung-Hoon
    • International Journal of Contents
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    • v.7 no.4
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    • pp.30-34
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    • 2011
  • A Leader is a Coordinator that supports a set of processes to cooperate a given task. This concept is used in several domains such as distributed systems, parallelism and cooperative support for cooperative work. In completely asynchronous systems, there is no solution for the election problem satisfying both of safety and liveness properties in asynchronous distributed systems. Therefore, to solve the election problem in those systems, one property should be weaker than the other property. If an election algorithm strengthens the safety property in sacrifice of liveness property, it would not nearly progress. But on the contrary, an election algorithm strengthening the liveness property in sacrifice of the safety property would have the high probability of violating the safety property. In this paper, we presents a safety strengthened Leader Election protocol with an unreliable failure detector and analyses it in terms of safety and liveness properties in asynchronous distributed systems.

Mathematical Approach on Composition of Nomination Committee for University President Election

  • Yi, Sucheol;Heo, Sunyeong
    • Journal of Integrative Natural Science
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    • v.9 no.1
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    • pp.67-71
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    • 2016
  • The university president direct election system in Korea had begun in 1987 as a movement of college democratization in the 1980s after 6.29 Declaration. Since then, many national/private universities had adopted the election system. However, it has posed many problems and it caused a sharp division of opinions between those who approve and disapprove the direct election system. Since 2005, the government has made official of the reformation and/or abolition of the university president direct election system, and has kept pushing for universities to give up the direct election system. Now, only 3 or 4 universities hold on to the system, and many universities have changed into the indirect election system. In the indirect election, a key is the composition of president nomination committee, which confirms the university members's variety. Many universities adopting the indirect election system have used simple random sampling, like drawing lots, to compose the president nomination committee. However, drawing lots has a problem that it has large possibility of composing a biased committee. This research suggests systematic sampling as an alternative to drawing lots. A numerical analysis was conducted using a data of a university in which the indirect election was implemented recently. The drawing lots gave the biased nomination committee. On the other hand, the systematic sample improves the problem and confirms more the variety of all members.

Proof that the Election Problem belongs to NF-completeness Problems in Asynchronous Distributed Systems (비동기적 분산 시스템에서 선출 문제는 NF-completeness 문제임을 증명)

  • Park, Sung-Hoon
    • Journal of KIISE:Computer Systems and Theory
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    • v.29 no.3
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    • pp.169-175
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    • 2002
  • This paper is about the hardness of the Election problem in asynchronous distributed systems in which processes can crash but links are reliable. The hardness of the problem is defined with respect to the difficulty to solve it despite failures. It is shown that problems encountered in the system are classified as three classes of problems: F (fault-tolerant), NF (Not fault-tolerant) and NFC(NF-completeness). Among those, the class NFC is the hardest problems to solve. In this paper, we prove that the Election problem is the most difficult problem which belongs to the class NFC.

The Design of an Election Protocol based on Mobile Ad-hoc Network Environment

  • Park, Sung-Hoon;Kim, Yeong-Mok;Yoo, Su-Chang
    • Journal of the Korea Society of Computer and Information
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    • v.21 no.8
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    • pp.41-48
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    • 2016
  • In this paper, we propose an election protocol based on mobile ad-hoc network. In distributed systems, a group of computer should continue to do cooperation in order to finish some jobs. In such a system, an election protocol is especially practical and important elements to provide processes in a group with a consistent common knowledge about the membership of the group. Whenever a membership change occurs, processes should agree on which of them should do to accomplish an unfinished job or begins a new job. The problem of electing a leader is very same with the agreeing common predicate in a distributed system such as the consensus problem. Based on the termination detection protocol that is traditional one in asynchronous distributed systems, we present the new election protocol in distributed systems that are based on MANET, i.e. mobile ad hoc network.

Design of an Leader Election Protocol in Mobile Ad Hoc Distributed Systems (분산 이동 시스템에서 선출 프로토콜의 설계)

  • Park, Sung-Hoon
    • The Journal of the Korea Contents Association
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    • v.8 no.12
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    • pp.53-62
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    • 2008
  • The Election paradigm can be used as a building block in many practical problems such as group communication, atomic commit and replicated data management where a protocol coordinator might be useful. The problem has been widely studied in the research community since one reason for this wide interest is that many distributed protocols need an election protocol. However, despite its usefulness, to our knowledge there is no work that has been devoted to this problem in a mobile ad hoc computing environment. Mobile ad hoc systems are more prone to failures than conventional distributed systems. Solving election in such an environment requires from a set of mobile nodes to choose a unique node as a leader based on its priority despite failures or disconnections of mobile nodes. In this paper, we describe a solution to the election problem from mobile ad hoc computing systems. This solution is based on the Group Membership Detection algorithm.

Specification and Proof of an Election Algorithm in Mobile Ad-hoc Network Systems (모바일 Ad-hoc 네트워크 시스템하에서 선출 알고리즘의 명세 및 증명)

  • Kim, Young-Lan;Kim, Yoon;Park, Sung-Hoon;Han, Hyun-Goo
    • Journal of Korea Multimedia Society
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    • v.13 no.7
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    • pp.950-959
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    • 2010
  • The Election paradigm can be used as a building block in many practical problems such as group communication, atomic commit and replicated data management where a protocol coordinator might be useful. The problem has been widely studied in the research community since one reason for this wide interest is that many distributed protocols need an election protocol. However, mobile ad hoc systems are more prone to failures than conventional distributed systems. Solving election in such an environment requires from a set of mobile nodes to choose a unique node as a leader based on its priority despite failures or disconnections of mobile nodes. In this paper, we describe a solution to the election problem from mobile ad hoc computing systems and it was proved by temporal logic. This solution is based on the Group Membership Detection algorithm.

An Efficient Election Protocol in a Mobile Computing Environment (이동 컴퓨팅 환경에서 효율적인 선출 프로토콜)

  • Park, Sung-Hoon
    • Journal of KIISE:Information Networking
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    • v.28 no.3
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    • pp.289-296
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    • 2001
  • The Election protocol can be used as a building block in many practical problems such as group communication, atomic commit and replicated data management where a protocol coordinator might be useful. The problem has been widely studied in the research community since one reason for this wide interest is that many distributed protocols need an election protocol. However, despite its usefulness, to our knowledge there is no work that has been devoted to this problem in a mobile computing environment. Mobile systems are more prone to failures than conventional distributed system. Solving election in such an environment requires from a set of mobile hosts to choose a mobile host or a fixed host based on the their priority despite failures of both mobile computing and/or fixed hosts. In this paper, we describe a solution to the election problem from mobile computing systems. This solution is based on the Garcia Molina\\`s Bully algorithm.

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