16,649 research outputs found
Approximation algorithms for general cluster routing problem
Graph routing problems have been investigated extensively in operations
research, computer science and engineering due to their ubiquity and vast
applications. In this paper, we study constant approximation algorithms for
some variations of the general cluster routing problem. In this problem, we are
given an edge-weighted complete undirected graph whose vertex set
is partitioned into clusters We are also given a subset
of and a subset of The weight function satisfies the
triangle inequality. The goal is to find a minimum cost walk that visits
each vertex in only once, traverses every edge in at least once and
for every all vertices of are traversed consecutively.Comment: In COCOON 202
Compact Oblivious Routing
Oblivious routing is an attractive paradigm for large distributed systems in which centralized control and frequent reconfigurations are infeasible or undesired (e.g., costly). Over the last almost 20 years, much progress has been made in devising oblivious routing schemes that guarantee close to optimal load and also algorithms for constructing such schemes efficiently have been designed. However, a common drawback of existing oblivious routing schemes is that they are not compact: they require large routing tables (of polynomial size), which does not scale.
This paper presents the first oblivious routing scheme which guarantees close to optimal load and is compact at the same time - requiring routing tables of polylogarithmic size. Our algorithm maintains the polylogarithmic competitive ratio of existing algorithms, and is hence particularly well-suited for emerging large-scale networks
Fast Routing Table Construction Using Small Messages
We describe a distributed randomized algorithm computing approximate
distances and routes that approximate shortest paths. Let n denote the number
of nodes in the graph, and let HD denote the hop diameter of the graph, i.e.,
the diameter of the graph when all edges are considered to have unit weight.
Given 0 < eps <= 1/2, our algorithm runs in weak-O(n^(1/2 + eps) + HD)
communication rounds using messages of O(log n) bits and guarantees a stretch
of O(eps^(-1) log eps^(-1)) with high probability. This is the first
distributed algorithm approximating weighted shortest paths that uses small
messages and runs in weak-o(n) time (in graphs where HD in weak-o(n)). The time
complexity nearly matches the lower bounds of weak-Omega(sqrt(n) + HD) in the
small-messages model that hold for stateless routing (where routing decisions
do not depend on the traversed path) as well as approximation of the weigthed
diameter. Our scheme replaces the original identifiers of the nodes by labels
of size O(log eps^(-1) log n). We show that no algorithm that keeps the
original identifiers and runs for weak-o(n) rounds can achieve a
polylogarithmic approximation ratio.
Variations of our techniques yield a number of fast distributed approximation
algorithms solving related problems using small messages. Specifically, we
present algorithms that run in weak-O(n^(1/2 + eps) + HD) rounds for a given 0
< eps <= 1/2, and solve, with high probability, the following problems:
- O(eps^(-1))-approximation for the Generalized Steiner Forest (the running
time in this case has an additive weak-O(t^(1 + 2eps)) term, where t is the
number of terminals);
- O(eps^(-2))-approximation of weighted distances, using node labels of size
O(eps^(-1) log n) and weak-O(n^(eps)) bits of memory per node;
- O(eps^(-1))-approximation of the weighted diameter;
- O(eps^(-3))-approximate shortest paths using the labels 1,...,n.Comment: 40 pages, 2 figures, extended abstract submitted to STOC'1
Cluster Before You Hallucinate: Approximating Node-Capacitated Network Design and Energy Efficient Routing
We consider circuit routing with an objective of minimizing energy, in a
network of routers that are speed scalable and that may be shutdown when idle.
We consider both multicast routing and unicast routing. It is known that this
energy minimization problem can be reduced to a capacitated flow network design
problem, where vertices have a common capacity but arbitrary costs, and the
goal is to choose a minimum cost collection of vertices whose induced subgraph
will support the specified flow requirements. For the multicast (single-sink)
capacitated design problem we give a polynomial-time algorithm that is
O(log^3n)-approximate with O(log^4 n) congestion. This translates back to a
O(log ^(4{\alpha}+3) n)-approximation for the multicast energy-minimization
routing problem, where {\alpha} is the polynomial exponent in the dynamic power
used by a router. For the unicast (multicommodity) capacitated design problem
we give a polynomial-time algorithm that is O(log^5 n)-approximate with
O(log^12 n) congestion, which translates back to a O(log^(12{\alpha}+5)
n)-approximation for the unicast energy-minimization routing problem.Comment: 22 pages (full version of STOC 2014 paper
Message and time efficient multi-broadcast schemes
We consider message and time efficient broadcasting and multi-broadcasting in
wireless ad-hoc networks, where a subset of nodes, each with a unique rumor,
wish to broadcast their rumors to all destinations while minimizing the total
number of transmissions and total time until all rumors arrive to their
destination. Under centralized settings, we introduce a novel approximation
algorithm that provides almost optimal results with respect to the number of
transmissions and total time, separately. Later on, we show how to efficiently
implement this algorithm under distributed settings, where the nodes have only
local information about their surroundings. In addition, we show multiple
approximation techniques based on the network collision detection capabilities
and explain how to calibrate the algorithms' parameters to produce optimal
results for time and messages.Comment: In Proceedings FOMC 2013, arXiv:1310.459
Power Aware Routing for Sensor Databases
Wireless sensor networks offer the potential to span and monitor large
geographical areas inexpensively. Sensor network databases like TinyDB are the
dominant architectures to extract and manage data in such networks. Since
sensors have significant power constraints (battery life), and high
communication costs, design of energy efficient communication algorithms is of
great importance. The data flow in a sensor database is very different from
data flow in an ordinary network and poses novel challenges in designing
efficient routing algorithms. In this work we explore the problem of energy
efficient routing for various different types of database queries and show that
in general, this problem is NP-complete. We give a constant factor
approximation algorithm for one class of query, and for other queries give
heuristic algorithms. We evaluate the efficiency of the proposed algorithms by
simulation and demonstrate their near optimal performance for various network
sizes
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