Consensus in Blockchain Systems with Low Network Throughput: A Systematic Mapping Study
Abstract
Blockchain technologies originate from cryptocurrencies. Thus, most blockchain technologies assume an environment with a fast and stable network. However, in some blockchain-based systems, e.g., supply chain management (SCM) systems, some Internet of Things (IOT) nodes can only rely on the low-quality network sometimes to achieve consensus. Thus, it is critical to understand the applicability of existing consensus algorithms in such environments. We performed a systematic mapping study to evaluate and compare existing consensus mechanisms' capability to provide integrity and security with varying network properties. Our study identified 25 state-of-the-art consensus algorithms from published and preprint literature. We categorized and compared the consensus algorithms qualitatively based on established performance and integrity metrics and well-known blockchain security issues. Results show that consensus algorithms rely on the synchronous network for correctness cannot provide the expected integrity. Such consensus algorithms may also be vulnerable to distributed-denial-of-service (DDOS) and routing attacks, given limited network throughput. Conversely, asynchronous consensus algorithms, e.g., Honey-BadgerBFT, are deemed more robust against many of these attacks and may provide high integrity in asynchrony events.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2103.02916,
title = {Consensus in Blockchain Systems with Low Network Throughput: A Systematic Mapping Study},
author = {Henrik Knudsen and Jakob Svennevik Notland and Peter Halland Haro and Truls Bakkejord Ræder and Jingyue Li},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2103.02916},
year = {2021}
}