The Gathering problem for a swarm of robots asks for a distributed algorithm that brings such entities to a common place, not known in advance. We consider the well-known OBLOT model with robots constrained to move along the edges of a graph, hence gathering in one vertex, eventually. Despite the classical setting under which the problem has been usually approached, we consider the ‘hostile’ case where: i) the initial configuration may contain multiplicities, i.e. more than one robot may occupy the same vertex; ii) robots cannot detect multiplicities. As a scheduler for robots activation, we consider the ‘favorable’ round-robin case, where robots are activated one at a time. Our objective is to achieve a complete characterization of the problem in the broad context of non-vertex-transitive graphs, i.e., graphs where the vertices are partitioned into at least two different classes of equivalence. We provide a resolution algorithm for any configuration of robots moving on such graphs along with its correctness. Furthermore, we analyze its time complexity.
Gathering in Non-vertex-Transitive Graphs Under Round Robin
Navarra A.
2025
Abstract
The Gathering problem for a swarm of robots asks for a distributed algorithm that brings such entities to a common place, not known in advance. We consider the well-known OBLOT model with robots constrained to move along the edges of a graph, hence gathering in one vertex, eventually. Despite the classical setting under which the problem has been usually approached, we consider the ‘hostile’ case where: i) the initial configuration may contain multiplicities, i.e. more than one robot may occupy the same vertex; ii) robots cannot detect multiplicities. As a scheduler for robots activation, we consider the ‘favorable’ round-robin case, where robots are activated one at a time. Our objective is to achieve a complete characterization of the problem in the broad context of non-vertex-transitive graphs, i.e., graphs where the vertices are partitioned into at least two different classes of equivalence. We provide a resolution algorithm for any configuration of robots moving on such graphs along with its correctness. Furthermore, we analyze its time complexity.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.


