Near-Optimal Distributed Implementations of Dynamic Algorithms for Symmetry-Breaking Problems
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Authors
Shiri Antaki, Quanquan C. Liu, Shay Solomon
arXiv ID
2010.16177
Category
cs.DS: Data Structures & Algorithms
Citations
1
Venue
Information Technology Convergence and Services
Last Checked
4 months ago
Abstract
The field of dynamic graph algorithms aims at achieving a thorough understanding of real-world networks whose topology evolves with time. Traditionally, the focus has been on the classic sequential, centralized setting where the main quality measure of an algorithm is its update time, i.e. the time needed to restore the solution after each update. While real-life networks are very often distributed across multiple machines, the fundamental question of finding efficient dynamic, distributed graph algorithms received little attention to date. The goal in this setting is to optimize both the round and message complexities incurred per update step, ideally achieving a message complexity that matches the centralized update time in $O(1)$ (perhaps amortized) rounds. Toward initiating a systematic study of dynamic, distributed algorithms, we study some of the most central symmetry-breaking problems: maximal independent set (MIS), maximal matching/(approx-) maximum cardinality matching (MM/MCM), and $(Ξ+ 1)$-vertex coloring. This paper focuses on dynamic, distributed algorithms that are deterministic, and in particular -- robust against an adaptive adversary. Most of our focus is on our MIS algorithm, which achieves $O\left(m^{2/3}\log^2 n\right)$ amortized messages in $O\left(\log^2 n\right)$ amortized rounds in the Congest model. Notably, the amortized message complexity of our algorithm matches the amortized update time of the best-known deterministic centralized MIS algorithm by Gupta and Khan [SOSA'21] up to a polylog $n$ factor. The previous best deterministic distributed MIS algorithm, by Assadi et al. [STOC'18], uses $O(m^{3/4})$ amortized messages in $O(1)$ amortized rounds, i.e., we achieve a polynomial improvement in the message complexity by a polylog $n$ increase to the round complexity; moreover, the algorithm of Assadi et al. makes an implicit assumption that the [...]
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