TY - GEN
T1 - Brief Announcement
T2 - 43rd ACM SIGACT-SIGOPS Symposium on Principles of Distributed Computing, PODC 2024
AU - Frei, Fabian
AU - Gelles, Ran
AU - Ghazy, Ahmed
AU - Nolin, Alexandre
N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2024 Copyright is held by the owner/author(s). Publication rights licensed to ACM.
PY - 2024/6/17
Y1 - 2024/6/17
N2 - In content-oblivious computation, n nodes wish to compute a given task over an asynchronous network that suffers from an extremely harsh type of noise, which corrupts the content of all messages across all channels. In a recent work, Censor-Hillel, Cohen, Gelles, and Sela (Distributed Computing, 2023) showed how to perform arbitrary computations in a content-oblivious way in 2-edge connected networks but only if the network has a distinguished node (called root) to initiate the computation.Our goal is to remove this assumption, which was conjectured to be necessary. Achieving this goal essentially reduces to performing a content-oblivious leader election since an elected leader can then serve as the root required to perform arbitrary content-oblivious computations. We focus on ring networks, which are the simplest 2-edge connected graphs. On oriented rings, we obtain a leader election algorithm with message complexity O(n · IDmax), where IDmax is the maximal assigned ID. As it turns out, this dependency on IDmax is inherent: we show a lower bound of ω(n log(IDmax/n)) messages for content-oblivious leader election algorithms. We also extend our results to non-oriented rings, where nodes cannot tell which channel leads to which neighbor. In this case, however, the algorithm does not terminate but only reaches quiescence.
AB - In content-oblivious computation, n nodes wish to compute a given task over an asynchronous network that suffers from an extremely harsh type of noise, which corrupts the content of all messages across all channels. In a recent work, Censor-Hillel, Cohen, Gelles, and Sela (Distributed Computing, 2023) showed how to perform arbitrary computations in a content-oblivious way in 2-edge connected networks but only if the network has a distinguished node (called root) to initiate the computation.Our goal is to remove this assumption, which was conjectured to be necessary. Achieving this goal essentially reduces to performing a content-oblivious leader election since an elected leader can then serve as the root required to perform arbitrary content-oblivious computations. We focus on ring networks, which are the simplest 2-edge connected graphs. On oriented rings, we obtain a leader election algorithm with message complexity O(n · IDmax), where IDmax is the maximal assigned ID. As it turns out, this dependency on IDmax is inherent: we show a lower bound of ω(n log(IDmax/n)) messages for content-oblivious leader election algorithms. We also extend our results to non-oriented rings, where nodes cannot tell which channel leads to which neighbor. In this case, however, the algorithm does not terminate but only reaches quiescence.
KW - content-oblivious computation
KW - fully defective networks
KW - leader election
KW - ring networks
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85199039499&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1145/3662158.3662785
DO - 10.1145/3662158.3662785
M3 - منشور من مؤتمر
T3 - Proceedings of the Annual ACM Symposium on Principles of Distributed Computing
SP - 549
EP - 552
BT - PODC 2024 - Proceedings of the 2024 ACM Symposium on Principles of Distributed Computing
Y2 - 17 June 2024 through 21 June 2024
ER -