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Distributed graph coloring: fundamentals and recent developments

The focus of this monograph is on symmetry breaking problems in the message-passing model of distributed computing. In this model a communication network is represented by a n-vertex graph G = (V,E), whose vertices host autonomous processors. The processors communicate over the edges of G in discret...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Barenboim, Leonid, Elkin, Michael
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: Morgan & Claypool Publ. 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/1601469
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author Barenboim, Leonid
Elkin, Michael
author_facet Barenboim, Leonid
Elkin, Michael
author_sort Barenboim, Leonid
collection CERN
description The focus of this monograph is on symmetry breaking problems in the message-passing model of distributed computing. In this model a communication network is represented by a n-vertex graph G = (V,E), whose vertices host autonomous processors. The processors communicate over the edges of G in discrete rounds. The goal is to devise algorithms that use as few rounds as possible.A typical symmetry-breaking problem is the problem of graph coloring. Denote by ? the maximum degree of G. While coloring G with ? + 1 colors is trivial in the centralized setting, the problem becomes much more challenging
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institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 2013
publisher Morgan & Claypool Publ.
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spelling cern-16014692021-04-21T22:25:47Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/1601469engBarenboim, LeonidElkin, MichaelDistributed graph coloring: fundamentals and recent developmentsComputing and ComputersThe focus of this monograph is on symmetry breaking problems in the message-passing model of distributed computing. In this model a communication network is represented by a n-vertex graph G = (V,E), whose vertices host autonomous processors. The processors communicate over the edges of G in discrete rounds. The goal is to devise algorithms that use as few rounds as possible.A typical symmetry-breaking problem is the problem of graph coloring. Denote by ? the maximum degree of G. While coloring G with ? + 1 colors is trivial in the centralized setting, the problem becomes much more challengingMorgan & Claypool Publ.oai:cds.cern.ch:16014692013
spellingShingle Computing and Computers
Barenboim, Leonid
Elkin, Michael
Distributed graph coloring: fundamentals and recent developments
title Distributed graph coloring: fundamentals and recent developments
title_full Distributed graph coloring: fundamentals and recent developments
title_fullStr Distributed graph coloring: fundamentals and recent developments
title_full_unstemmed Distributed graph coloring: fundamentals and recent developments
title_short Distributed graph coloring: fundamentals and recent developments
title_sort distributed graph coloring: fundamentals and recent developments
topic Computing and Computers
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/1601469
work_keys_str_mv AT barenboimleonid distributedgraphcoloringfundamentalsandrecentdevelopments
AT elkinmichael distributedgraphcoloringfundamentalsandrecentdevelopments