In order to achieve routing in a graph, nodes need to store routing information. In the case of shortest path routing, for a given destination, every node has to store an advice that is an outgoing link toward a neighbor. If this neighbor does not belong to a shortest path then the advice is considered as an error and the node giving this advice will be qualified a liar. This article focuses on the impact of graph dynamics on the advice set for a given destination. More precisely we show that, for a weighted graph G of diameter D with n nodes and m edges, the expected number of errors after M edge deletions is bounded by O(n(dot operator)M(dot operator)D/m). We also show that this bound is tight when M=O(n). Moreover, for M' node deletions, the expected number of errors is O(M'(dot operator)D). Finally we show that after a single edge addition the expected number of liars can be ?(n) for some families of graphs.
The impact of dynamic events on the number of errors in networks
2016
Abstract
In order to achieve routing in a graph, nodes need to store routing information. In the case of shortest path routing, for a given destination, every node has to store an advice that is an outgoing link toward a neighbor. If this neighbor does not belong to a shortest path then the advice is considered as an error and the node giving this advice will be qualified a liar. This article focuses on the impact of graph dynamics on the advice set for a given destination. More precisely we show that, for a weighted graph G of diameter D with n nodes and m edges, the expected number of errors after M edge deletions is bounded by O(n(dot operator)M(dot operator)D/m). We also show that this bound is tight when M=O(n). Moreover, for M' node deletions, the expected number of errors is O(M'(dot operator)D). Finally we show that after a single edge addition the expected number of liars can be ?(n) for some families of graphs.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.


