Data Dissemination Problem in Wireless Networks
Ivo Kubjas, Vitaly Skachek

TL;DR
This paper investigates a generalized data dissemination problem in wireless networks, establishing bounds on the minimum number of transmissions needed for efficient data sharing across arbitrary topologies.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of r-solvable networks, relates optimal transmissions to matrix rank, and provides bounds for bipartite and general networks.
Findings
Optimal one-round transmissions equal the minimum rank of certain matrices.
Derived graph-theoretic bounds for bipartite data dissemination.
Provided upper bounds for multi-round data dissemination schemes.
Abstract
In this work, we formulate and study a data dissemination problem, which can be viewed as a generalization of the index coding problem and of the data exchange problem to networks with an arbitrary topology. We define -solvable networks, in which data dissemination can be achieved in communications rounds. We show that the optimum number of transmissions for any one-round communications scheme is given by the minimum rank of a certain constrained family of matrices. For a special case of this problem, called bipartite data dissemination problem, we present lower and upper graph-theoretic bounds on the optimum number of transmissions. For general -solvable networks, we derive an upper bound on the minimum number of transmissions in any scheme with rounds. We experimentally compare the obtained upper bound to a simple lower bound.
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