Byzantine Dispersion on Graphs
Anisur Rahaman Molla, Kaushik Mondal, William K. Moses Jr

TL;DR
This paper extends the study of Byzantine dispersion to more general graphs, considering various Byzantine capabilities and robot counts, and provides algorithms and impossibility results for these scenarios.
Contribution
It introduces new algorithms for Byzantine dispersion on general graphs, including handling Byzantine robots that can fake IDs, and analyzes limitations based on robot counts.
Findings
Algorithms for Byzantine dispersion on general graphs.
Handling Byzantine robots that can fake IDs.
Impossibility results based on robot-to-node ratios.
Abstract
This paper considers the problem of Byzantine dispersion and extends previous work along several parameters. The problem of Byzantine dispersion asks: given robots, up to of which are Byzantine, initially placed arbitrarily on an node anonymous graph, design a terminating algorithm to be run by the robots such that they eventually reach a configuration where each node has at most one non-Byzantine robot on it. Previous work solved this problem for rings and tolerated up to Byzantine robots. In this paper, we investigate the problem on more general graphs. We first develop an algorithm that tolerates up to Byzantine robots and works for a more general class of graphs. We then develop an algorithm that works for any graph but tolerates a lesser number of Byzantine robots. We subsequently turn our focus to the strength of the Byzantine robots. Previous work…
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