1 / 38

CSCE 668 DISTRIBUTED ALGORITHMS AND SYSTEMS

CSCE 668 DISTRIBUTED ALGORITHMS AND SYSTEMS. Fall 2011 Prof. Jennifer Welch. Leader Election in Synchronous Rings. Here is a simple algorithm. Group rounds into phases , each phase containing n rounds

latif
Download Presentation

CSCE 668 DISTRIBUTED ALGORITHMS AND SYSTEMS

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Set 5: Synchronous LE in Rings CSCE 668DISTRIBUTED ALGORITHMS AND SYSTEMS Fall 2011 Prof. Jennifer Welch

  2. Leader Election in SynchronousRings • Here is a simple algorithm. • Group rounds into phases, each phase containing n rounds • In phase i, the processor with id i, if there is one, sends a message around the ring and is elected. Set 5: Synchronous LE in Rings

  3. Example of Simple Synchronous Algorithm • n = 4, the smallest id is 7. • In phases 0 through 6 (corresponding to rounds 1 through 28), no message is ever sent. • At beginning of phase 7 (round 29), processor with id 7 sends message which is forwarded around the ring. Relies on synchrony and knowing n Set 5: Synchronous LE in Rings

  4. Analysis of Simple Algorithm • Correctness: Easy to see. • Message complexity:O(n), which is optimal • Time complexity:O(n*m), where m is the smallest id in the ring. • not bounded by any function of n, undesirable Set 5: Synchronous LE in Rings

  5. Another Synchronous Algorithm • Works in a slightly weaker model than the previous synchronous algorithm: • processors might not all start at same round; a processor either wakes up spontaneously or when it first gets a message • uniform (does not rely on knowing n) Set 5: Synchronous LE in Rings

  6. Another Synchronous Algorithm • A processor that wakes up spontaneously is active; sends its id in a fast message (one edge per round) • A processor that wakes up when receiving a msg is relay; never in the competition • A fast message carrying id m becomes slow if it reaches an active processor; starts traveling at one edge per 2m rounds • A processor only forwards a msg whose id is smaller than any id is has previously sent • If a proc. gets its own id back, elects self Set 5: Synchronous LE in Rings

  7. Analysis of Synchronous Algorithm • Correctness: convince yourself that the active processor with smallest id is elected. • Message complexity: Winner's msg is the fastest. While it traverses the ring, other msgs are slower, so they are overtaken and stopped before too many messages are sent. Set 5: Synchronous LE in Rings

  8. Message Complexity • Divide msgs into three kinds: • fast msgs • slow msgs sent while the leader's msg is fast • slow msgs sent while the leader's msg is slow • Next, count the number of each type of msg. Set 5: Synchronous LE in Rings

  9. Number of Type 1 Messages • Show that no processor forwards more than one fast msg: • Suppose pi forwards pj 's fast msg and pk 's fast msg. When pk 's fast msg arrives at pj : • either pjhas already sent its fast msg, so pk 's msg becomes slow, or • pj has not already sent its fast msg, so it never will • Number of type 1 msgs is n. pk pj pi Set 5: Synchronous LE in Rings

  10. Number of Type 2 Messages (slow sent while leader's msg is fast) • Leader's msg is fast for at most n rounds • by then it would have returned to leader • Slow msg i is forwarded n/2i times in n rounds • Max. number of msgs is when ids are small as possible (0 to n-1 and leader is 0) • Number of type 2 msgs is at most ∑n/2i ≤ n n-1 i=1 Set 5: Synchronous LE in Rings

  11. Number of Type 3 Messages (slow msgs sent while leader's is slow) • Maximum number of rounds during which leader's msg is slow is n*2L (L is leader's id). • No msgs are sent once leader's msg has returned to leader • Slow msg i is forwarded n*2L/2itimes during n*2Lrounds. • Worst case is when ids are L to L + n-1 • Number of type 3 msgs is at most ∑n*2L/2i ≤ 2n L+n-1 i=L Set 5: Synchronous LE in Rings

  12. Total Number of Messages • We showed • number of type 1 msgs is at most n • number of type 2 msgs is at most n • number of type 3 msgs is at most 2n • Thus total number of msgs is at most 4n = O(n). Set 5: Synchronous LE in Rings

  13. Time Complexity of Synchronous Algorithm • Running time is O(n 2x), where x is smallest id. • Even worse than previous algorithm, which was O(n x) • Both algorithms have two potentially undesirable properties: • rely on numeric values of ids to count • number of rounds depends on minimum id, which may bear no relationship to n • Next result shows that to obtain linear msg complexity, an algorithm must rely on numeric values of the ids. Set 5: Synchronous LE in Rings

  14. Comparison-Based LE Algorithms • We will show that if nodes cannot rely on the numeric values of the ids, then any synchronous LE algorithm has message complexity (n log n). • How do we formalize "not relying on numeric values of ids"? • Need a definition of "comparison-based", similar to that for sorting algs. Set 5: Synchronous LE in Rings

  15. Definition of Comparison-Based • First note that in the synchronous model, the behavior of an LE algorithm is totally determined by the distribution of the ids. Denote execution on ring R by exec(R). • An LE algorithm is comparison-based if, in any two "order-equivalent" rings R1 and R2, "matching" processors pi in R1 and pj in R2 have "similar" behaviors in exec(R1) and exec(R2). Set 5: Synchronous LE in Rings

  16. Definition of Order-Equivalent • Rings R1 = (x1,x2,…,xn) and R2 = (y1,y2,…,yn) are order-equivalent if xi < xj if and only if yi < yj • Example: x3 y2 y1 x4 x2 y3 x1 y4 x5 y5 Set 5: Synchronous LE in Rings

  17. Definition of Matching Processors • Processors pi in R1 and pj in R2 are matching if they are the same distance from the processor with minimum id. • Example: p0 (with id 18) in R1 and p1 (with id 5) in R2, which are 2 hops from p3 (resp., p4) Set 5: Synchronous LE in Rings

  18. Definition of Similar Behaviors • Two processors have similar behaviors in two executions if, in every round • one processor sends a message to the left (right) if and only if the other one does • content of message is irrelevant • one processor is elected if and only if the other one is Set 5: Synchronous LE in Rings

  19. Synchronous Lower Bound Theorem (3.18): For every n ≥ 8 that is a power of 2, there is a ring of size n on which any synchronous comparison-based algorithm sends (n log n) msgs. Proof: For each n, construct a highly symmetric ring Sn on which every comparison-based algorithm takes lots of messages. • Symmetry means many processors have order-equivalent neighborhoods and thus behave similarly (including sending msgs) Set 5: Synchronous LE in Rings

  20. Proof Strategy • Define highly symmetric ring Sn • Show that the number of "active" rounds when any c-b alg runs on Sn is at least n/8 (L. 3.20) • Show that in the k-th active round, at least n/(2(2k+1)) msgs are sent (L. 3.21) • Do some arithmetic to show that ∑n/(2(2k+1)) = (n log n) n/8 k=1 Set 5: Synchronous LE in Rings

  21. Active Rounds • A round is active if at least one processor sends a msg • A proc. in a synchronous algorithm can potentially learn something even in an inactive round • cf. the simple synchronous alg • But in a comparison-based alg., a proc. can't learn about the order pattern of its ring in an inactive round (intuition) • Note that the k-th active round might be much later than the k-th round Set 5: Synchronous LE in Rings

  22. 2 3 0 1 A Highly Symmetric Ring Sn • Let pi 's id be rev(i) , the integer whose binary representation using log n bits is the reverse of i 's binary rep. Example: • For technical reasons, then multiply id by n+1 and add n 4 14 p0 p1 p2 19 p3 9 Set 5: Synchronous LE in Rings

  23. Why Lots of Active Rounds L. 3.20: Number of active rounds, T, in exec(Sn) is at least n/8. Proof: Suppose T < n/8. Let pi be the elected leader. • Number of T-neighborhoods order-equivalent to pi 's is at least n/(2(2T+1)) (L. 3.19, to be shown) • Since n ≥ 8 and T < n/8, algebra shows n/(2(2T+1)) > 1. • So there is pj pi whose T-neighborhood is order-equivalent to pi's. • Then pj is also elected (L. 3.17, to be shown), contradiction. Set 5: Synchronous LE in Rings

  24. Why Enough Msgs Sent in Each Active Round L. 3.21: At least n/(2(2k + 1)) msgs are sent in kth active round. Proof: Since the round is active, at least one proc., say pi, sends a msg. • There are at least n/(2(2k+1)) procs. whose k-neighborhood is order-equivalent to pi 's (L. 3.19, to be shown) • Each of those procs. sends a msg in kth active round, since pi does (L. 3.17, to be shown). Set 5: Synchronous LE in Rings

  25. Why So Many O-E Neighborhoods L. 3.19: Every k-nbrhood of Sn has at least n/(2(2k+1)) order-equivalent k-nbrhoods. Proof Sketch: Let N be a k-nbrhood (sequence of 2k+1 ids in the ring). • Let j be smallest power of 2 larger than 2k+1. • Break Sn into n/j segments of length j, with one segment encompassing N. • Claim: Each segment is order-equivalent to N. Set 5: Synchronous LE in Rings

  26. Why Similar Behavior in Order-Equivalent Neighborhoods • Intuition is that two nodes in order-equivalent neighborhoods in the same ring will behave similarly, at least until differentiating information from beyond those neighborhoods has reached them. • Yet the definition of comparison-based algorithm only requires similar behavior for matching processors in different (albeit order-equivalent) rings. Set 5: Synchronous LE in Rings

  27. Order-Equivalent Means Similar L. 3.17: If pi and pj have order-equivalent k-nbrhoods, then piand pj have similar behaviors through k-th active round. Proof Sketch: Construct another ring Sn' such that • piin Sn behaves same as pj in Sn' • pjin Sn' behaves similarly to pjin Sn Set 5: Synchronous LE in Rings

  28. Order-Equivalent Means Similar • In more detail, construct Sn' such that • pi 's k-nbrhood in Snequalspj's in Sn' • so behavior is same through k-th active round • Sn' and Sn are order-equivalent • pj in Sn' is matching to pj in Sn • so behavior is similar through k-th active round • Can be done since ids in Sn are spaced (multiplied by n+1, plus n) • So piand pj have similar behavior in Snthrough k-th active round Set 5: Synchronous LE in Rings

  29. Anonymous Rings Revisited • Leader election is impossible in anonymous rings • No way to break symmetry • No deterministic algorithm which works in every execution • Another way to break symmetry, which works in some (but not all) executions is to use randomization. Set 5: Synchronous LE in Rings

  30. Randomized Algorithm • In each computation step, the processor receives an additional input to its state transition function, a random number. Set 5: Synchronous LE in Rings

  31. Revised LE Problem Definition • Weakened problem definition compared to original: • At most one leader is elected in every state of every admissible execution • same as previous definition • At least one leader is elected "with high probability". • weaker than previous definition • But what does "with high probability" mean? Set 5: Synchronous LE in Rings

  32. Randomized LE Algorithm • Assume synchronous model • Initially: • set id to 1 with probability 1 - 1/n and to 2 with probability 1/n • send id to left • When msg M is received: • if M contains n ids then • if id is unique maximum in M then elect self • else not elected • else append id to M and send to left Set 5: Synchronous LE in Rings

  33. Analysis of Randomized LE Alg. • Uses O(n2) msgs • There is never more than one leader • Sometimes there is no leader • leader is only elected if there is exactly one processor that sets its id to 2 • How often is there no leader, i.e., what is the probability? • Need some more definitions… Set 5: Synchronous LE in Rings

  34. Random Choices and Probabilities • Since system is synchronous, an admissible execution of the algorithm is determined solely by the initial random choices. • Call this collection random choices RC = <r0, r1, …, rn-1> where each ri is either 1 or 2. • Let exec(RC) be the resulting execution. • Definition: For any predicate P on executions, Pr[P] is the probability of {RC : exec(RC) satisfies P} I.e., the proportion of random choices resulting in an execution that satisfies P. Set 5: Synchronous LE in Rings

  35. Probability of Electing a Leader • Let P be the predicate "there is a leader". • Pr[P] = probability RC contains exactly one 2 Set 5: Synchronous LE in Rings

  36. Improving the Probability of Electing a Leader • If procs. notice there is no leader, they can try again. • Each iteration of the basic algorithm is a phase. • Keep trying until success. • Random choices that define an execution consist of an infinite sequence of 1's and 2's, one for each proc. • It is possible that algorithm doesn't terminate. Set 5: Synchronous LE in Rings

  37. Probability of Not Terminating • Probability of terminating in a particular phase is (1 - 1/n)n-1 • Probability of not terminating in a particular phase is 1 -(1 - 1/n)n-1 • Probability of not terminating in k phases is (1 - (1 - 1/n)n-1)k since phases are independent. • Last expression goes to 0 as k increases. Set 5: Synchronous LE in Rings

  38. Expected Number of Phases • Definition: Expected value of a random variable T is E[T] =  k Pr[T = k] • Let T be number of phases until termination. • Pr[T = k] = Pr[first k-1 phases fail & kth succeeds] = (1 - (1 - 1/n)n-1)k-1 (1 - 1/n)n-1 = (1 - p)k-1 p , where p = (1 - 1/n)n-1 • This is a geometric random variable with expected value p-1 < e. • So expected number of phases is < 3. k Set 5: Synchronous LE in Rings

More Related