Expected reliability of communication protocols

Abstract

We consider the problem of sending a message from a sender s to a receiver r through an unreliable network by specifying in a protocol what each vertex is supposed to do if it receives the message from one of its neighbors. A protocol for routing a message in such a graph is finite if it never floods r with an infinite number of copies of the message. The expected reliability of a given protocol is the probability that a message sent from s reaches r when the edges of the network fail independently with probability 1-p. We discuss, for given networks, the properties of finite protocols with maximum expected reliability in the case when p is close to 0 or 1, and we describe networks for which no one protocol is optimal for all values of p. In general, finding an optimal protocol for a given network and fixed probability is challenging and many open problems remain.

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