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Balls into Bins via Local Search

We propose a natural process for allocating n balls into n bins that are organized as the vertices of an undirected graph G. Each ball first chooses a vertex u in G uniformly at random. Then the ball performs a local search in G starting from u until it reaches a vertex with local minimum load, where the ball is finally placed on. In our main result, we prove that this process yields a maximum load of only Θ(\log \log n) on expander graphs. In addition, we show that for d-dimensional grids the maximum load is Θ\Big(\big(\frac{\log n}{\log \log n}\big)^{\frac{1}{d+1}}\Big). Finally, for almost regular graphs with minimum degree Ω(\log n), we prove that the maximum load is constant and also reveal a fundamental difference between random and arbitrary tie-breaking rules.

preprint2012arXivOpen access
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