Distributed consensus with mixed time/communication bandwidth performance metrics
Federico Rossi, Marco Pavone

TL;DR
This paper explores the fundamental trade-off between time and bandwidth in distributed consensus, proposing optimal and tunable algorithms suited for wireless networks with bandwidth constraints.
Contribution
It introduces a lower bound on bandwidth complexity, presents a bandwidth-optimal consensus algorithm, and offers a tunable method balancing communication and time complexities.
Findings
Proves a lower bound on bandwidth complexity for consensus.
Develops a bandwidth-optimal consensus algorithm.
Designs a tunable algorithm balancing communication and time trade-offs.
Abstract
In this paper we study the inherent trade-off between time and communication complexity for the distributed consensus problem. In our model, communication complexity is measured as the maximum data throughput (in bits per second) sent through the network at a given instant. Such a notion of communication complexity, referred to as bandwidth complexity, is related to the frequency bandwidth a designer should collectively allocate to the agents if they were to communicate via a wireless channel, which represents an important constraint for dense robotic networks. We prove a lower bound on the bandwidth complexity of the consensus problem and provide a consensus algorithm that is bandwidth-optimal for a wide class of consensus functions. We then propose a distributed algorithm that can trade communication complexity versus time complexity as a function of a tunable parameter, which can be…
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