Paul E. Green, Alan E. Baratz
IEE/LEOS Summer Topical Meetings 1990
The design of distributed, dynamic routing procedures is highly complex, due to the fact that it relies on cooperation among a number of independent processors located at the nodes of communication networks and the fact that a network may face arbitrary topological changes. As a result, many simple, intuitive, concepts that seem, at first glance, that they should result in correct algorithms do not work. This paper evaluates this theme by exploring a number of examples of this phenomenon. The conclusion is that one must be careful both in the overall design of a distributed algorithm, and in its detailed implementation. This also illustrates the importance of careful formal validation of such protocols, rather than informal, intuitive arguments. © 1986.
Paul E. Green, Alan E. Baratz
IEE/LEOS Summer Topical Meetings 1990
Reuven Cohen, Adrian Segall
IEEE INFOCOM 1993
C.-S. Li, Yoram Ofek, et al.
IEEE INFOCOM 1994
Jeffrey M. Jaffe, Zvi Rosberg
GLOBECOM 1984