The International Symposium on DIStributed Computing (DISC) 2002 was held in Toulouse, France, on October 28-30, 2002. The realization of distributed s- tems on numerous fronts and the proliferation of the Internet continue to make the symposium highly important and relevant. There were 76 regular submissions to DISC this year, which were read and evaluated by program committee members assisted by external reviewers. Twen- four papers were selected by the program committee to be included in these proceedings. The quality of submissions was high, and the committee had to decline some papers worthy of publication. The best student paper award was selected from among regular submissions that were not co-authored by any program committee member, and was given to Yongqiang Huang for his contribution "Assignment-Based Partitioning in a Condition Monitoring System", co-authored with Hector Garcia-Molina. October 2002 Dahlia Malkhi Organizing Committee Mamoun Filali Philippe Mauran G`erard Padiou (Chair) Philippe Qu`einnec Anne-Marie Zerr (Secretary) Steering Committee Andr`e Schiper, Chair (EPFL, Switzerland) Michel Raynal, Vice-chair (Irisa, France) Maurice Herlihy (Brown University, USA) Dahlia Malkhi, Program Chair (Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel) Jennifer Welch (Texas A&M University, USA) Alex Shvartsman (University of Connecticut, USA) Shay Kutten (Technion, Israel) Program Committee Gustavo Alonso (ETH Zurich, Switzerland) Roberto Baldoni (University of Rome, Italy) Dave Bakken (Washington State University, USA) Paul Ezhilchelvan (University of Newcastle, UK) Christof Fetzer (AT&T Labs-Research, USA) Faith Fich (University of Toronto, Canada) Roy Friedman (Technion, Israel) Juan A.
This book constitutes the refereed proceedings of the 16th International
Conference on Distributed Computing, DISC 2002, held in Toulouse, France,
in October 2002. The 24 revised full papers presented were carefully reviewed
and selected from 76 submissions. Among the issues addressed are broadcasting,
secure computation, view maintenance, communication protocols, distributed
agreement, self-stabilizing algorithms, message-passing systems, dynamic
networks, condition monitoring systems, shared memory computing, Byzantine
processes, routing, failure detection, compare-and-swap operations, cooperative
computation, and consensus algorithms.