4.5 Article

Memory-Rate Tradeoff for Caching With Uncoded Placement Under Nonuniform Random Demands

Journal

IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON INFORMATION THEORY
Volume 68, Issue 12, Pages 7850-7870

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TIT.2022.3193316

Keywords

Modified coded caching scheme; nonuniform file popularity and size; memory-rate tradeoff; cache placement; lower bound

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)

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This paper investigates the memory-rate tradeoff in a caching system with a single server and multiple users. It introduces a modified coded caching scheme (MCCS) and proves that the optimized MCCS achieves the lower bound in certain cases, providing the exact memory-rate tradeoff.
This paper considers a caching system of a single server and multiple users. We aim to characterize the memory-rate tradeoff for caching with uncoded cache placement, under nonuniform file popularity. Focusing on the modified coded caching scheme (MCCS) recently proposed by Yu, eta., we formulate the cache placement optimization problem for the MCCS to minimize the average delivery rate under nonuniform file popularity, restricting to a class of popularity-first placements. We then present two information-theoretic lower bounds on the average rate for caching with uncoded placement, one for general cache placements and the other restricted to the popularity-first placements. By comparing the average rate of the optimized MCCS with the lower bounds, we prove that the optimized MCCS attains the general lower bound for the two-user case, providing the exact memory-rate tradeoff. Furthermore, it attains the popularity-first-based lower bound for the case of general K users with distinct file requests. In these two cases, our results also reveal that the popularity-first placement is optimal for the MCCS, and zero-padding used in coded delivery incurs no loss of optimality. For the case of K users with redundant file requests, our analysis shows that there may exist a gap between the optimized MCCS and the lower hounds due to zero-padding. We next fully characterize the optimal popularity-first cache placement for the MCCS, which is shown to possess a simple file-grouping structure and can be computed via an efficient algorithm using closed-form expressions. Finally, we extend our study to accommodate nonuniformity in both file popularity and size, where we show that the optimized MCCS attains the lower bound for the two-user case, providing the exact memory-rate tradeoff. Numerical results show that, for general settings, the gap between the optimized MCCS and the lower bound only exists in limited cases and is very small.

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