pith. sign in

Wait-Free Gathering of Mobile Robots

1 Pith paper cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.

1 Pith paper citing it
abstract

The problem of gathering multiple mobile robots to a single location, is one of the fundamental problems in distributed coordination between autonomous robots. The problem has been studied and solved even for robots that are anonymous, disoriented, memoryless and operate in the semi-synchronous (ATOM) model. However all known solutions require the robots to be faulty-free except for the results of [Agmon and Peleg 2006] who solve the gathering problem in presence of one crash fault. This leaves open the question of whether gathering of correct robots can be achieved in the presence of multiple crash failures. We resolve the question in this paper and show how to solve gathering, when any number of robots may crash at any time during the algorithm, assuming strong multiplicity detection and chirality. In contrast it is known that for the more stronger byzantine faults, it is impossible to gather even in a 3-robot system if one robot is faulty. Our algorithm solves the gathering of correct robots in the semi-synchronous model where an adversary may stop any robot before reaching its desired destination. Further the algorithm is self-stabilizing as it achieves gathering starting from any configuration (except the bivalent configuration where deterministic gathering is impossible).

fields

cs.DC 1

years

2020 1

verdicts

UNVERDICTED 1

representative citing papers

Notes on Theory of Distributed Systems

cs.DC · 2020-01-10 · unverdicted · novelty 0.0

Lecture notes compiling standard topics and results in distributed systems theory from basic communication to population protocols and topological methods.

citing papers explorer

Showing 1 of 1 citing paper.

  • Notes on Theory of Distributed Systems cs.DC · 2020-01-10 · unverdicted · none · ref 73 · internal anchor

    Lecture notes compiling standard topics and results in distributed systems theory from basic communication to population protocols and topological methods.