Strong Robustness of Randomized Rumor Spreading Protocols
Abstract
Randomized rumor spreading is a classical protocol to disseminate information across a network. At SODA 2008, a quasirandom version of this protocol was proposed and competitive bounds for its run-time were proven. This prompts the question: to what extent does the quasirandom protocol inherit the second principal advantage of randomized rumor spreading, namely robustness against transmission failures? In this paper, we present a result precise up to factors. We limit ourselves to the network in which every two vertices are connected by a direct link. Run-times accurate to their leading constants are unknown for all other non-trivial networks. We show that if each transmission reaches its destination with a probability of , after rounds the quasirandom protocol has informed all nodes in the network with probability at least . Note that this is faster than the intuitively natural factor increase over the run-time of approximately for the non-corrupted case. We also provide a corresponding lower bound for the classical model. This demonstrates that the quasirandom model is at least as robust as the fully random model despite the greatly reduced degree of independent randomness.
Cite
@article{arxiv.1001.3056,
title = {Strong Robustness of Randomized Rumor Spreading Protocols},
author = {Benjamin Doerr and Anna Huber and Ariel Levavi},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1001.3056},
year = {2013}
}
Comments
Accepted for publication in "Discrete Applied Mathematics". A short version appeared in the proceedings of the 20th International Symposium on Algorithms and Computation (ISAAC 2009). Minor typos fixed in the second version. Proofs of Lemma 11 and Theorem 12 fixed in the third version. Proof of Lemma 8 fixed in the fourth version