Treffer: A combinatorial logarithmic approximation algorithm for the directed telephone broadcast problem

Title:
A combinatorial logarithmic approximation algorithm for the directed telephone broadcast problem
Source:
SIAM journal on computing (Print). 35(3):672-689
Publisher Information:
Philadelphia, PA: Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics, 2006.
Publication Year:
2006
Physical Description:
print, 15 ref
Original Material:
INIST-CNRS
Document Type:
Fachzeitschrift Article
File Description:
text
Language:
English
Author Affiliations:
Department of Computer Science, Yale University, New Haven, CT 06520-8285, United States
Department of Computer Science, Rutgers University, Camden, NJ, United States
ISSN:
0097-5397
Rights:
Copyright 2006 INIST-CNRS
CC BY 4.0
Sauf mention contraire ci-dessus, le contenu de cette notice bibliographique peut être utilisé dans le cadre d’une licence CC BY 4.0 Inist-CNRS / Unless otherwise stated above, the content of this bibliographic record may be used under a CC BY 4.0 licence by Inist-CNRS / A menos que se haya señalado antes, el contenido de este registro bibliográfico puede ser utilizado al amparo de una licencia CC BY 4.0 Inist-CNRS
Notes:
Computer science; theoretical automation; systems

Mathematics
Accession Number:
edscal.17822076
Database:
PASCAL Archive

Weitere Informationen

Consider a synchronous network of processors, modeled by directed or undirected graph G = (V, E), in which in each round every processor is allowed to choose one of its neighbors and to send a message to this neighbor. Given a processor s ∈ V and a subset T C V of processors, the telephone multicast problem requires computing the shortest schedule (in terms of the number of rounds) that delivers a message from s to all the processors of T. The particular case T = V is called the telephone broadcast problem. These problems have multiple applications in distributed computing. Several approximation algorithms with polylogarithmic ratio, including one with logarithmic ratio, for the undirected variants of these problems are known. However, all these algorithms involve solving large linear programs. Devising a polylogarithmic approximation algorithm for the directed variants of these problems is an open problem, posed by Ravi in [Proceedings of the 35th Annual IEEE Symposium on Foundations of Computer Science (FOCS '94), 1994, pp. 202-213]. We devise a combinatorial logarithmic approximation algorithm for these problems that applies also for the directed broadcast problem. Our algorithm has significantly smaller running time and seems to reveal more information about the combinatorial structure of the solution than the previous algorithms that are based on linear programming. We also improve the lower bounds on the approximation threshold of these problems. Both problems are known to be 3/2-inapproximable. For the undirected (resp., directed) broadcast problem we show that it is NP-hard (resp., impossible unless NP C DTIME(nO(log n))) to approximate it within a ratio of 3 - e for any e > 0 (resp., Ω(√log n)).