Information (Jun 2021)

On the Distributed Construction of Stable Networks in Polylogarithmic Parallel Time

  • Matthew Connor,
  • Othon Michail,
  • Paul Spirakis

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/info12060254
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 6
p. 254

Abstract

Read online

We study the class of networks, which can be created in polylogarithmic parallel time by network constructors: groups of anonymous agents that interact randomly under a uniform random scheduler with the ability to form connections between each other. Starting from an empty network, the goal is to construct a stable network that belongs to a given family. We prove that the class of trees where each node has any k≥2 children can be constructed in O(logn) parallel time with high probability. We show that constructing networks that are k-regular is Ω(n) time, but a minimal relaxation to (l,k)-regular networks, where l=k−1, can be constructed in polylogarithmic parallel time for any fixed k, where k>2. We further demonstrate that when the finite-state assumption is relaxed and k is allowed to grow with n, then k=loglogn acts as a threshold above which network construction is, again, polynomial time. We use this to provide a partial characterisation of the class of polylogarithmic time network constructors.

Keywords