4 research outputs found
Determination of the Topology of a Directed Network
We consider strongly-connected directed networks of identical synchronous,
finite-state processors with in- and out-degree uniformly bounded by a network
constant. Via a straightforward extension of Ostrovsky and Wilkerson's
Backwards Communication Algorithm in [OW], we exhibit a protocol which solves
the Global Topology Determination Problem, the problem of having the root
processor map the global topology of a network of unknown size and topology,
with running time O(ND) where N represents the number of processors and D
represents the diameter of the network. A simple counting argument suffices to
show that the Global Topology Determination Problem has time-complexity Omega(N
logN) which makes the protocol presented asymptotically time-optimal for many
large networks.Comment: 9 pages, no figures, accepted to appear in IPDPS 2002 (unable to
attend), (journal version to appear in Information Processing Letters
7 8 Determination of the topology of a directed network
We consider strongly-connected, directed networks of identical synchronous, finite-state processors with in- and outdegree uniformly bounded by a network constant. Via a straightforward extension of Ostrovsky and Wilkerson’s Backwards Communication Algorithm in [Proc. 14th Annual Symp. on Principles of Distributed Computing, 1995], we exhibit a protocol which solves the Global Topology Determination Problem, the problem of having a root processor map the global topolog