13,908 research outputs found
Connectivity Oracles for Graphs Subject to Vertex Failures
We introduce new data structures for answering connectivity queries in graphs
subject to batched vertex failures. A deterministic structure processes a batch
of failed vertices in time and thereafter
answers connectivity queries in time. It occupies space . We develop a randomized Monte Carlo version of our data structure
with update time , query time , and space
for any failure bound . This is the first connectivity oracle for
general graphs that can efficiently deal with an unbounded number of vertex
failures.
We also develop a more efficient Monte Carlo edge-failure connectivity
oracle. Using space , edge failures are processed in time and thereafter, connectivity queries are answered in
time, which are correct w.h.p.
Our data structures are based on a new decomposition theorem for an
undirected graph , which is of independent interest. It states that
for any terminal set we can remove a set of
vertices such that the remaining graph contains a Steiner forest for with
maximum degree
Covering problems in edge- and node-weighted graphs
This paper discusses the graph covering problem in which a set of edges in an
edge- and node-weighted graph is chosen to satisfy some covering constraints
while minimizing the sum of the weights. In this problem, because of the large
integrality gap of a natural linear programming (LP) relaxation, LP rounding
algorithms based on the relaxation yield poor performance. Here we propose a
stronger LP relaxation for the graph covering problem. The proposed relaxation
is applied to designing primal-dual algorithms for two fundamental graph
covering problems: the prize-collecting edge dominating set problem and the
multicut problem in trees. Our algorithms are an exact polynomial-time
algorithm for the former problem, and a 2-approximation algorithm for the
latter problem, respectively. These results match the currently known best
results for purely edge-weighted graphs.Comment: To appear in SWAT 201
Content Distribution by Multiple Multicast Trees and Intersession Cooperation: Optimal Algorithms and Approximations
In traditional massive content distribution with multiple sessions, the
sessions form separate overlay networks and operate independently, where some
sessions may suffer from insufficient resources even though other sessions have
excessive resources. To cope with this problem, we consider the universal
swarming approach, which allows multiple sessions to cooperate with each other.
We formulate the problem of finding the optimal resource allocation to maximize
the sum of the session utilities and present a subgradient algorithm which
converges to the optimal solution in the time-average sense. The solution
involves an NP-hard subproblem of finding a minimum-cost Steiner tree. We cope
with this difficulty by using a column generation method, which reduces the
number of Steiner-tree computations. Furthermore, we allow the use of
approximate solutions to the Steiner-tree subproblem. We show that the
approximation ratio to the overall problem turns out to be no less than the
reciprocal of the approximation ratio to the Steiner-tree subproblem.
Simulation results demonstrate that universal swarming improves the performance
of resource-poor sessions with negligible impact to resource-rich sessions. The
proposed approach and algorithm are expected to be useful for
infrastructure-based content distribution networks with long-lasting sessions
and relatively stable network environment
Greedy Algorithms for Steiner Forest
In the Steiner Forest problem, we are given terminal pairs ,
and need to find the cheapest subgraph which connects each of the terminal
pairs together. In 1991, Agrawal, Klein, and Ravi, and Goemans and Williamson
gave primal-dual constant-factor approximation algorithms for this problem;
until now, the only constant-factor approximations we know are via linear
programming relaxations.
We consider the following greedy algorithm: Given terminal pairs in a metric
space, call a terminal "active" if its distance to its partner is non-zero.
Pick the two closest active terminals (say ), set the distance
between them to zero, and buy a path connecting them. Recompute the metric, and
repeat. Our main result is that this algorithm is a constant-factor
approximation.
We also use this algorithm to give new, simpler constructions of cost-sharing
schemes for Steiner forest. In particular, the first "group-strict" cost-shares
for this problem implies a very simple combinatorial sampling-based algorithm
for stochastic Steiner forest
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