We consider the problem of computing a relational query q on a large input
database of size n, using a large number p of servers. The computation is
performed in rounds, and each server can receive only O(n/p1−ε)
bits of data, where ε∈[0,1] is a parameter that controls
replication. We examine how many global communication steps are needed to
compute q. We establish both lower and upper bounds, in two settings. For a
single round of communication, we give lower bounds in the strongest possible
model, where arbitrary bits may be exchanged; we show that any algorithm
requires ε≥1−1/τ∗, where τ∗ is the fractional vertex
cover of the hypergraph of q. We also give an algorithm that matches the
lower bound for a specific class of databases. For multiple rounds of
communication, we present lower bounds in a model where routing decisions for a
tuple are tuple-based. We show that for the class of tree-like queries there
exists a tradeoff between the number of rounds and the space exponent
ε. The lower bounds for multiple rounds are the first of their
kind. Our results also imply that transitive closure cannot be computed in O(1)
rounds of communication