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    Tight Bounds for Maximal Identifiability of Failure Nodes in Boolean Network Tomography

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    We study maximal identifiability, a measure recently introduced in Boolean Network Tomography to characterize networks' capability to localize failure nodes in end-to-end path measurements. We prove tight upper and lower bounds on the maximal identifiability of failure nodes for specific classes of network topologies, such as trees and dd-dimensional grids, in both directed and undirected cases. We prove that directed dd-dimensional grids with support nn have maximal identifiability dd using 2d(n1)+22d(n-1)+2 monitors; and in the undirected case we show that 2d2d monitors suffice to get identifiability of d1d-1. We then study identifiability under embeddings: we establish relations between maximal identifiability, embeddability and graph dimension when network topologies are model as DAGs. Our results suggest the design of networks over NN nodes with maximal identifiability Ω(logN)\Omega(\log N) using O(logN)O(\log N) monitors and a heuristic to boost maximal identifiability on a given network by simulating dd-dimensional grids. We provide positive evidence of this heuristic through data extracted by exact computation of maximal identifiability on examples of small real networks
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