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Deterministic Distributed Algorithms and Lower Bounds in the Hybrid Model

Authors Ioannis Anagnostides, Themis Gouleakis



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Ioannis Anagnostides
  • Department of Computer Engineering, National Technical University of Athens, Greece
Themis Gouleakis
  • Max Planck Institute for Informatics, Saarbrücken, Germany

Acknowledgements

We are indebted to Christoph Lenzen for carefully reviewing an earlier draft of our work, and proposing several improvements and interesting directions. Specifically, he suggested derandomizing Proposition 7 via the Garay-Kutten-Peleg algorithm, while he also pointed out the connection with low-congestion shortcuts, leading to the results of Section 4. We are also very grateful to the anonymous reviewers at DISC for carefully reviewing this paper, and for indicating many corrections and ways to improve the exposition. We are particularly thankful to a reviewer for providing very detailed arguments which strengthened our results in Section 3.4. All errors remain our own.

Cite As Get BibTex

Ioannis Anagnostides and Themis Gouleakis. Deterministic Distributed Algorithms and Lower Bounds in the Hybrid Model. In 35th International Symposium on Distributed Computing (DISC 2021). Leibniz International Proceedings in Informatics (LIPIcs), Volume 209, pp. 5:1-5:19, Schloss Dagstuhl – Leibniz-Zentrum für Informatik (2021) https://doi.org/10.4230/LIPIcs.DISC.2021.5

Abstract

The HYBRID model was recently introduced by Augustine et al. [John Augustine et al., 2020] in order to characterize from an algorithmic standpoint the capabilities of networks which combine multiple communication modes. Concretely, it is assumed that the standard LOCAL model of distributed computing is enhanced with the feature of all-to-all communication, but with very limited bandwidth, captured by the node-capacitated clique (NCC). In this work we provide several new insights on the power of hybrid networks for fundamental problems in distributed algorithms.
First, we present a deterministic algorithm which solves any problem on a sparse n-node graph in 𝒪̃(√n) rounds of HYBRID, where the notation 𝒪̃(⋅) suppresses polylogarithmic factors of n. We combine this primitive with several sparsification techniques to obtain efficient distributed algorithms for general graphs. Most notably, for the all-pairs shortest paths problem we give deterministic (1 + ε)- and log n/log log n-approximate algorithms for unweighted and weighted graphs respectively with round complexity 𝒪̃(√n) in HYBRID, closely matching the performance of the state of the art randomized algorithm of Kuhn and Schneider [Kuhn and Schneider, 2020]. Moreover, we make a connection with the Ghaffari-Haeupler framework of low-congestion shortcuts [Mohsen Ghaffari and Bernhard Haeupler, 2016], leading - among others - to a (1 + ε)-approximate algorithm for Min-Cut after 𝒪(polylog (n)) rounds, with high probability, even if we restrict local edges to transfer 𝒪(log n) bits per round. Finally, we prove via a reduction from the set disjointness problem that Ω̃(n^{1/3}) rounds are required to determine the radius of an unweighted graph, as well as a (3/2 - ε)-approximation for weighted graphs. As a byproduct, we show an Ω̃(n) round-complexity lower bound for computing a (4/3 - ε)-approximation of the radius in the broadcast variant of the congested clique, even for unweighted graphs.

Subject Classification

ACM Subject Classification
  • Theory of computation → Distributed algorithms
Keywords
  • Distributed Computing
  • Hybrid Model
  • Sparse Graphs
  • Deterministic Algorithms
  • All-Pairs Shortest Paths
  • Minimum Cut
  • Radius

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