Capacity Achieving Uncoded PIR Protocol based on Combinatorial Designs

03/17/2021
by   Mohit Shrivastava, et al.
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In this paper we study the problem of private information retrieval where a user seeks to retrieve one of the F files from a cluster of N non-colluding servers without revealing the identity of the requested file. In our setting the servers are storage constrained in that they can only store a fraction μ=t/N of each file. Furthermore, we assume that the files are stored in an uncoded fashion. The rate of a PIR protocol is defined as the ratio of the file size and the total number of bits downloaded. The maximum achievable rate is referred to as capacity. It was previously shown that there are capacity achieving PIR protocols when the file size is N^F and complete files were stored on all the servers. These results were further extended for the case when servers store only a fraction of each file. However, the subpacketization v of the files required is exponential in the number of servers N. We propose a novel uncoded PIR protocol based on combinatorial designs that are also capacity achieving when the file size is v × t^F. Our protocol has linear subpacketization in the number of servers in contrast to previous work in storage constrained uncoded PIR schemes. In the proposed PIR protocol, the given system is projected to multiple instances of reduced systems with replicated servers having full storage capacity. The subfiles stored in these various instances are separately retrieved and lifted to solve the PIR problem for the original system.

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