19,801 research outputs found
Fast Routing Table Construction Using Small Messages
We describe a distributed randomized algorithm computing approximate
distances and routes that approximate shortest paths. Let n denote the number
of nodes in the graph, and let HD denote the hop diameter of the graph, i.e.,
the diameter of the graph when all edges are considered to have unit weight.
Given 0 < eps <= 1/2, our algorithm runs in weak-O(n^(1/2 + eps) + HD)
communication rounds using messages of O(log n) bits and guarantees a stretch
of O(eps^(-1) log eps^(-1)) with high probability. This is the first
distributed algorithm approximating weighted shortest paths that uses small
messages and runs in weak-o(n) time (in graphs where HD in weak-o(n)). The time
complexity nearly matches the lower bounds of weak-Omega(sqrt(n) + HD) in the
small-messages model that hold for stateless routing (where routing decisions
do not depend on the traversed path) as well as approximation of the weigthed
diameter. Our scheme replaces the original identifiers of the nodes by labels
of size O(log eps^(-1) log n). We show that no algorithm that keeps the
original identifiers and runs for weak-o(n) rounds can achieve a
polylogarithmic approximation ratio.
Variations of our techniques yield a number of fast distributed approximation
algorithms solving related problems using small messages. Specifically, we
present algorithms that run in weak-O(n^(1/2 + eps) + HD) rounds for a given 0
< eps <= 1/2, and solve, with high probability, the following problems:
- O(eps^(-1))-approximation for the Generalized Steiner Forest (the running
time in this case has an additive weak-O(t^(1 + 2eps)) term, where t is the
number of terminals);
- O(eps^(-2))-approximation of weighted distances, using node labels of size
O(eps^(-1) log n) and weak-O(n^(eps)) bits of memory per node;
- O(eps^(-1))-approximation of the weighted diameter;
- O(eps^(-3))-approximate shortest paths using the labels 1,...,n.Comment: 40 pages, 2 figures, extended abstract submitted to STOC'1
Algebraic Methods in the Congested Clique
In this work, we use algebraic methods for studying distance computation and
subgraph detection tasks in the congested clique model. Specifically, we adapt
parallel matrix multiplication implementations to the congested clique,
obtaining an round matrix multiplication algorithm, where
is the exponent of matrix multiplication. In conjunction
with known techniques from centralised algorithmics, this gives significant
improvements over previous best upper bounds in the congested clique model. The
highlight results include:
-- triangle and 4-cycle counting in rounds, improving upon the
triangle detection algorithm of Dolev et al. [DISC 2012],
-- a -approximation of all-pairs shortest paths in
rounds, improving upon the -round -approximation algorithm of Nanongkai [STOC 2014], and
-- computing the girth in rounds, which is the first
non-trivial solution in this model.
In addition, we present a novel constant-round combinatorial algorithm for
detecting 4-cycles.Comment: This is work is a merger of arxiv:1412.2109 and arxiv:1412.266
On Efficient Distributed Construction of Near Optimal Routing Schemes
Given a distributed network represented by a weighted undirected graph
on vertices, and a parameter , we devise a distributed
algorithm that computes a routing scheme in
rounds, where is the hop-diameter of the network. The running time matches
the lower bound of rounds (which holds for any
scheme with polynomial stretch), up to lower order terms. The routing tables
are of size , the labels are of size , and
every packet is routed on a path suffering stretch at most . Our
construction nearly matches the state-of-the-art for routing schemes built in a
centralized sequential manner. The previous best algorithms for building
routing tables in a distributed small messages model were by \cite[STOC
2013]{LP13} and \cite[PODC 2015]{LP15}. The former has similar properties but
suffers from substantially larger routing tables of size ,
while the latter has sub-optimal running time of
Making Name-Based Content Routing More Efficient than Link-State Routing
The Diffusive Name-based Routing Protocol (DNRP) is introduced for efficient
name-based routing in information-centric networks (ICN). DNRP establishes and
maintains multiple loop-free routes to the nearest instances of a name prefix
using only distance information. DNRP eliminates the need for periodic updates,
maintaining topology information, storing complete paths to content replicas,
or knowing about all the sites storing replicas of named content. DNRP is
suitable for large ICNs with large numbers of prefixes stored at multiple
sites. It is shown that DNRP provides loop-free routes to content independently
of the state of the topology and that it converges within a finite time to
correct routes to name prefixes after arbitrary changes in the network topology
or the placement of prefix instances. The result of simulation experiments
illustrates that DNRP is more efficient than link-state routing approaches
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