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  1. We study an online caching problem in which requests can be served by a local cache to avoid retrieval costs from a remote server. The cache can update its state after a batch of requests and store an arbitrarily small fraction of each file. We study no-regret algorithms based on Online Mirror Descent (OMD) strategies. We show that bounds for the regret crucially depend on the diversity of the request process, provided by the diversity ratio R/h , where R is the size of the batch and h is the maximum multiplicity of a request in a given batch. We characterize the optimality of OMD caching policies w.r.t. regret under different diversity regimes. We also prove that, when the cache must store the entire file, rather than a fraction, OMD strategies can be coupled with a randomized rounding scheme that preserves regret guarantees, even when update costs cannot be neglected. We provide a formal characterization of the rounding problem through optimal transport theory, and moreover we propose a computationally efficient randomized rounding scheme. 
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  2. We study a cache network under arbitrary adversarial request arrivals. We propose a distributed online policy based on the online tabular greedy algorithm. Our distributed policy achieves sublinear (1-1/e)-regret, also in the case when update costs cannot be neglected. Numerical evaluation over several topologies supports our theoretical results and demonstrates that our algorithm outperforms state-of-art online cache algorithms. 
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