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Byzantine Agreement with Unknown Participants and Failures

Pankaj Khanchandani
Roger Wattenhofer
Abstract

A set of mutually distrusting participants that want to agree on a common opinion must solve an instance of a Byzantine agreement problem. These problems have been extensively studied in the literature. However, most of the existing solutions assume that the participants are aware of nn -- the total number of participants in the system -- and ff -- an upper bound on the number of Byzantine participants. In this paper, we show that most of the fundamental agreement problems can be solved without affecting resiliency even if the participants do not know the values of (possibly changing) nn and ff. Specifically, we consider a synchronous system where the participants have unique but not necessarily consecutive identifiers, and give Byzantine agreement algorithms for reliable broadcast, approximate agreement, rotor-coordinator, early terminating consensus and total ordering in static and dynamic systems, all with the optimal resiliency of n>3fn> 3f. Moreover, we show that synchrony is necessary as an agreement with probabilistic termination is impossible in a semi-synchronous or asynchronous system if the participants are unaware of nn and ff.

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