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Towards the Locality of Vizing's Theorem

Abstract

Vizing showed that it suffices to color the edges of a simple graph using Δ+1\Delta + 1 colors, where Δ\Delta is the maximum degree of the graph. However, up to this date, no efficient distributed edge-coloring algorithms are known for obtaining such a coloring, even for constant degree graphs. The current algorithms that get closest to this number of colors are the randomized (Δ+Θ~(Δ))(\Delta + \tilde{\Theta}(\sqrt{\Delta}))-edge-coloring algorithm that runs in polylog(n)\text{polylog}(n) rounds by Chang et al. (SODA '18) and the deterministic (Δ+polylog(n))(\Delta + \text{polylog}(n))-edge-coloring algorithm that runs in poly(Δ,logn)\text{poly}(\Delta, \log n) rounds by Ghaffari et al. (STOC '18). We present two distributed edge-coloring algorithms that run in poly(Δ,logn)\text{poly}(\Delta,\log n) rounds. The first algorithm, with randomization, uses only Δ+2\Delta+2 colors. The second algorithm is a deterministic algorithm that uses Δ+O(logn/loglogn)\Delta+ O(\log n/ \log \log n) colors. Our approach is to reduce the distributed edge-coloring problem into an online, restricted version of balls-into-bins problem. If \ell is the maximum load of the bins, our algorithm uses Δ+21\Delta + 2\ell - 1 colors. We show how to achieve =1\ell = 1 with randomization and =O(logn/loglogn)\ell = O(\log n / \log \log n) without randomization.

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