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We give contention-resolution algorithms for several basic primitives, and analyze them under a relaxed, roughly-synchronous stochastic scheduler, where processes run at roughly the same rate up to a constant factor with high probability. Specifically, we construct read/write registers and CAS registers that have latency $O(\log P)$ w.h.p. under our scheduler model, using $O(1)$ hardware read/write registers and, in the case of our CAS construction, one hardware CAS register. Our algorithms guarantee performance even when their operations are invoked by an adaptive adversary that is able to see the entire history of operations so far, including their timing and return values. This allows them to be used as building blocks inside larger programs; using this compositionality property, we obtain several other constructions (LL/SC, fetch-and-increment, bounded max registers, and counters).
To complement our constructions, we give a trade-off showing that even under a perfectly synchronous schedule and even if each process only executes one operation, any algorithm that implements any of the primitives that we consider, uses space $M$, and has latency at most $L$ with high probability must have expected latency at least $\Omega(\log_{ML} P)$.
From: Renfei Zhou [view email]
[v1]
Thu, 16 Apr 2026 01:49:58 UTC (232 KB)
[v2]
Thu, 9 Jul 2026 22:43:38 UTC (227 KB)
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