Cache-Aided Communication Schemes via Combinatorial Designs and their $q$-analogs
Shailja Agrawal, K V Sushena Sree, Prasad Krishnan, Abhinav Vaishya,, Srikar Kale

TL;DR
This paper introduces novel coded caching schemes using combinatorial designs and their $q$-analogs, achieving low subpacketization levels and efficient data shuffling for distributed computing frameworks like MapReduce.
Contribution
It presents new constructions for coded caching based on combinatorial and subspace designs, reducing subpacketization and improving practical applicability.
Findings
Achieves constant or decreasing rate with small subpacketization levels.
Provides a new binary matrix model for coded caching and data shuffling.
Extends schemes to scenarios with stragglers in distributed computing.
Abstract
We consider the standard broadcast setup with a single server broadcasting information to a number of clients, each of which contains local storage (called cache) of some size, which can store some parts of the available files at the server. The centralized coded caching framework, consists of a caching phase and a delivery phase, both of which are carefully designed in order to use the cache and the channel together optimally. In prior literature, various combinatorial structures have been used to construct coded caching schemes. One of the chief drawbacks of many of these existing constructions is the large subpacketization level, which denotes the number of times a file should be split for the schemes to provide coding gain. In this work, using a new binary matrix model, we present several novel constructions for coded caching based on the various types of combinatorial designs and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStochastic Gradient Optimization Techniques · Cryptography and Data Security · Cooperative Communication and Network Coding
