Robustness of the Rotor–Router Mechanism

The rotor–router model, also called the Propp machine, was first considered as a deterministic alternative to the random walk. The edges adjacent to each node v (or equivalently, the exit ports at v) are arranged in a fixed cyclic order, which does not change during the exploration. Each node v main...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Algorithmica
Main Authors: Bampas, Evangelos, Gąsieniec, Leszek, Hanusse, Nicolas, Ilcinkas, David, Klasing, Ralf, Kosowski, Adrian, Radzik, Tomasz
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://kclpure.kcl.ac.uk/portal/en/publications/robustness-of-the-rotorrouter-mechanism(9e7dc91f-683a-4287-9cda-c7f7fdacc67f).html
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00453-016-0179-y
https://kclpure.kcl.ac.uk/ws/files/54708762/rotorjv.pdf
http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84976388749&partnerID=8YFLogxK
Description
Summary:The rotor–router model, also called the Propp machine, was first considered as a deterministic alternative to the random walk. The edges adjacent to each node v (or equivalently, the exit ports at v) are arranged in a fixed cyclic order, which does not change during the exploration. Each node v maintains a port pointer (Formula presented.) which indicates the exit port to be adopted by an agent on the conclusion of the next visit to this node (the “next exit port”). The rotor–router mechanism guarantees that after each consecutive visit at the same node, the pointer at this node is moved to the next port in the cyclic order. It is known that, in an undirected graph G with m edges, the route adopted by an agent controlled by the rotor–router mechanism eventually forms an Euler tour based on arcs obtained via replacing each edge in G by two arcs with opposite direction. The process of ushering the agent to an Euler tour is referred to as the lock-in problem. In Yanovski et al. (Algorithmica 37(3):165–186, 2003), it was proved that, independently of the initial configuration of the rotor–router mechanism in G, the agent locks-in in time bounded by (Formula presented.), where (Formula presented.) is the diameter of G. In this paper we examine the dependence of the lock-in time on the initial configuration of the rotor–router mechanism. Our analysis is performed in the form of a game between a player (Formula presented.) intending to lock-in the agent in an Euler tour as quickly as possible and its adversary (Formula presented.) with the counter objective. We consider all cases of who decides the initial cyclic orders and the initial values (Formula presented.). We show, for example, that if (Formula presented.) provides its own port numbering after the initial setup of pointers by (Formula presented.), the worst-case complexity of the lock-in problem is (Formula presented.). We also investigate the robustness of the rotor–router graph exploration in presence of faults in the pointers (Formula presented.) or dynamic ...