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Achieving collaboration in distributed systems deployed over selfish peers

Today's networks are often characterized by a free aggregation of independent nodes. Thus, the possibility increases that a selfish party operates a node, which may violate the collaborative protocol in order to increase a personal benefit. If such violations differ from the system goals they can even be considered as attack. Current fault-tolerance techniques may weaken the harmful impact to some degree but they cannot always prevent them. Furthermore, the several architectures differ in their fault-tolerance capabilities. This emphasizes the need for approaches able to achieve collaboration from selfish nodes in distributed systems. In this PhD thesis, we consider the problem of attaining a targeted level of collaboration in a distributed architecture deployed over rational selfish nodes. They have interest in deviating from the collaborative protocol to increase a personal benefit. In order to cover a broad spectrum of systems, we do not modify the collaborative protocol itself. Instead, we propose to add a monitoring logic to inspect the correctness of a node's behaviour. The designer of the monitoring system is faced with a complex and dynamic situation. He needs to consider aspects such as the specific circumstances (e.g. message traffic), the inspection effort or the node's individual preferences. Furthermore, he should consider that each agent could be aware of the other agents' preferences as well as selfishness and perform strategic choices consequently. This complex and interdependent setup corresponds to a class of Game Theory (GT) known as Inspection Games (IG). They model the general situation where an inspector verifies through inspections the correct behaviour of another party, called inspectee. However, inspections are costly and the inspector's resources are limited. Hence, a complete surveillance is not possible and an inspector will try to minimize the inspections. In this thesis, the initial IG model is enriched by the possibility that a violation is not detected during an inspection (false negatives). Applied to distributed systems, the IG is used to model the network participants' strategy choice. As outcome, it enables to calculate system parameters to attain the desired collaboration value. The approach is designed as generic framework. It can be therefore applied to any architecture considering any selfish goal and any reliability technique. For the sake of concreteness, we will discuss the IG approach by means of the illustrative case of a Publish/Subscribe architecture. The IG framework of this thesis secures the whole collaborative protocol by a monitoring approach. This represents a new way in terms of reliability mechanisms. The applicability is furthermore supported by the software library RCourse. Simplifying robustness evaluations of distributed systems, it is suitable for model verification and parameter calibration.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:CCSD/oai:tel.archives-ouvertes.fr:tel-00961233
Date24 September 2013
CreatorsMayer, Tobias Rene
PublisherINSA de Lyon
Source SetsCCSD theses-EN-ligne, France
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypePhD thesis

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