Abstract
Practitioners agree that unreliable links, which sometimes deliver messages and sometime do not, are an important characteristic of wireless networks. In contrast, most theoretical models of radio networks fix a static set of links and assume that these links are reliable. This gap between theory and practice motivates us to investigate how unreliable links affect theoretical bounds on broadcast in radio networks. To that end we consider a model that includes two types of links: reliable links, which always deliver messages, and unreliable links, which sometimes fail to deliver messages. We assume that the reliable links induce a connected graph, and that unreliable links are controlled by a worst-case adversary. In the new model we show an Ω(n log n) lower bound on deterministic broadcast in undirected graphs, even when all processes are initially awake and have collision detection, and an Ω(n) lower bound on randomized broadcast in undirected networks of constant diameter. This separates the new model from the classical, reliable model. On the positive side, we give two algorithms that tolerate unreliability: an O(n3/2 √log n)-time deterministic algorithm and a randomized algorithm which terminates in O(n log2 n) rounds with high probability.
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