Byzantine Resilience at Swarm Scale: A Decentralized Blocklist Protocol from Inter-robot Accusations
Kacper Wardega, Max von Hippel, Roberto Tron, Cristina Nita-Rotaru,, Wenchao Li

TL;DR
This paper introduces a decentralized blocklist protocol for multi-robot systems that enhances Byzantine fault tolerance, reduces connectivity requirements, and scales efficiently to hundreds of robots across various applications.
Contribution
It proposes a novel decentralized blocklist protocol based on inter-robot accusations, overcoming limitations of the W-MSR algorithm and generalizing Byzantine resilience to broader applications.
Findings
Reduces worst-case connectivity from 2F+1 to F+1 for Byzantine resilience.
Requires only 1 observer for information propagation, improving efficiency.
Scales to hundreds of robots in target tracking, synchronization, and localization.
Abstract
The Weighted-Mean Subsequence Reduced (W-MSR) algorithm, the state-of-the-art method for Byzantine-resilient design of decentralized multi-robot systems, is based on discarding outliers received over Linear Consensus Protocol (LCP). Although W-MSR provides well-understood theoretical guarantees relating robust network connectivity to the convergence of the underlying consensus, the method comes with several limitations preventing its use at scale: (1) the number of Byzantine robots, F, to tolerate should be known a priori, (2) the requirement that each robot maintains 2F+1 neighbors is impractical for large F, (3) information propagation is hindered by the requirement that F+1 robots independently make local measurements of the consensus property in order for the swarm's decision to change, and (4) W-MSR is specific to LCP and does not generalize to applications not implemented over…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDistributed Control Multi-Agent Systems · Age of Information Optimization · Distributed systems and fault tolerance
