Minquan Cheng

2papers

2 Papers

47.6ITMay 7
A Low-Complexity Framework for Multi-access Coded Caching Systems with Arbitrary User-cache Access Topology

Ting Yang, Kai Wan, Minquan Cheng et al.

This paper studies the multi-access coded caching (MACC) problem with arbitrary user-cache access topology, which extends existing MACC models that rely on highly structured and combinatorially designed topologies. We consider a MACC system consisting of a single server, $Λ$ cache-nodes, and $K$ user-nodes. The server stores $N$ equal-size files, each cache-node has a storage capacity of $M$ files, and each user-node $k\in[K]$ can access an arbitrary subset of cache-nodes $\mathcal{A}_k\subseteq[Λ]$ and retrieve the cached content stored in cache-nodes $\mathcal{A}_k$. The objective is to design a universal framework for the MACC delivery problem. Decoding conflicts among the requested packets are captured by a conflict graph, and the design of the delivery is reduced to a graph coloring problem, where achieving a lower transmission load corresponds to coloring the graph using fewer colors. Under this formulation, the classical DSatur algorithm achieves a transmission load close to the index-coding (IC) converse bound, thereby providing a practical benchmark. However, its computational complexity becomes prohibitive for large-scale graphs. To overcome this limitation, we develop a learning-driven approach using graph neural networks (GNNs) that efficiently constructs coded multicast transmissions with performance close to the theoretical bounds and generalizes across different user-cache access topologies and numbers of users. In addition, we extend the IC converse bound to MACC systems with arbitrary access topology and propose a low-complexity greedy approximation that closely matches the IC converse bound. Numerical results demonstrate that the proposed approach achieves performance close to the DSatur algorithm and the IC converse bound, while significantly reducing computational complexity, making it well-suited for large-scale MACC systems.

0.1ITMar 14
A New Construction Structure on Multi-access Coded Caching with Linear Subpacketization: Cyclic Multi-Access Non-Half-Sum Disjoint Packing

Mengyuan Li, Minquan Cheng, Kai Wan et al.

We consider the $(K,L,M,N)$ multi-access coded caching system introduced by Hachem et al., which consists of a central server with $N$ files and $K$ cache nodes, each of memory size $M$, where each user can access $L$ cache nodes in a cyclic wrap-around fashion. At present, several existing schemes achieve competitive transmission performance, but their subpacketization levels grow exponentially with the number of users. In contrast, schemes with linear or polynomial subpacketization always incur higher transmission loads. We aim to design a multi-access coded caching scheme with linear subpacketization $F$ while maintaining low transmission load. Recently, Cheng et al. proposed a construction framework for coded caching schemes with linear subpacketization (i.e., $F=K$) called non-half-sum disjoint packing (NHSDP). Inspired by this structure, we introduce a novel combinatorial structure named cyclic multi-access non-half-sum disjoint packing (CMA-NHSDP) by extending NHSDP to MACC system. By constructing CMA-NHSDP, we obtain a new class of multi-access coded caching schemes. Theoretical and numerical analyses show that our scheme achieves lower transmission loads than some existing schemes with linear subpacketization. Moreover, the proposed schemes achieves lower transmission load compared to existing schemes with exponential subpacketization in some case.