Papers
Topics
Authors
Recent
Search
2000 character limit reached

Energy-Efficient Distributed Algorithms for Synchronous Networks

Published 27 Jan 2023 in cs.DC | (2301.11988v2)

Abstract: We study the design of energy-efficient algorithms for the LOCAL and CONGEST models. Specifically, as a measure of complexity, we consider the maximum, taken over all the edges, or over all the nodes, of the number of rounds at which an edge, or a node, is active in the algorithm. We first show that every Turing-computable problem has a CONGEST algorithm with constant node-activation complexity, and therefore constant edge-activation complexity as well. That is, every node (resp., edge) is active in sending (resp., transmitting) messages for only $O(1)$ rounds during the whole execution of the algorithm. In other words, every Turing-computable problem can be solved by an algorithm consuming the least possible energy. In the LOCAL model, the same holds obviously, but with the additional feature that the algorithm runs in $O(\mbox{poly}(n))$ rounds in $n$-node networks. However, we show that insisting on algorithms running in $O(\mbox{poly}(n))$ rounds in the CONGEST model comes with a severe cost in terms of energy. Namely, there are problems requiring $\Omega(\mbox{poly}(n))$ edge-activations (and thus $\Omega(\mbox{poly}(n))$ node-activations as well) in the CONGEST model whenever solved by algorithms bounded to run in $O(\mbox{poly}(n))$ rounds. Finally, we demonstrate the existence of a sharp separation between the edge-activation complexity and the node-activation complexity in the CONGEST model, for algorithms bounded to run in $O(\mbox{poly}(n))$ rounds. Specifically, under this constraint, there is a problem with $O(1)$ edge-activation complexity but $\tilde{\Omega}(n{1/4})$ node-activation complexity.

Citations (2)

Summary

Whiteboard

No one has generated a whiteboard explanation for this paper yet.

Open Problems

We haven't generated a list of open problems mentioned in this paper yet.

Continue Learning

We haven't generated follow-up questions for this paper yet.

Collections

Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.