Decentralized Multi-Task Online Convex Optimization Under Random Link Failures
This work addresses network reliability issues for decentralized optimization systems, offering incremental improvements by adapting existing methods to handle random failures.
The paper tackles the problem of random link failures in decentralized multi-task online convex optimization by developing a robust saddle-point algorithm that replaces missing neighbor decisions with the latest received values, achieving O(√T) regret and O(T^{3/4}) constraint violations, matching the performance of algorithms with perfect communications.
Decentralized optimization methods often entail information exchange between neighbors. Transmission failures can happen due to network congestion, hardware/software issues, communication outage, and other factors. In this paper, we investigate the random link failure problem in decentralized multi-task online convex optimization, where agents have individual decisions that are coupled with each other via pairwise constraints. Although widely used in constrained optimization, conventional saddle-point algorithms are not directly applicable here because of random packet dropping. To address this issue, we develop a robust decentralized saddle-point algorithm against random link failures with heterogeneous probabilities by replacing the missing decisions of neighbors with their latest received values. Then, by judiciously bounding the accumulated deviation stemming from this replacement, we first establish that our algorithm achieves $\mathcal{O}(\sqrt{T})$ regret and $\mathcal{O}(T^\frac{3}{4})$ constraint violations for the full information scenario, where the complete information on the local cost function is revealed to each agent at the end of each time slot. These two bounds match, in order sense, the performance bounds of algorithms with perfect communications. Further, we extend our algorithm and analysis to the two-point bandit feedback scenario, where only the values of the local cost function at two random points are disclosed to each agent sequentially. Performance bounds of the same orders as the full information case are derived. Finally, we corroborate the efficacy of the proposed algorithms and the analytical results through numerical simulations.