42 research outputs found
Extended Formulation Lower Bounds via Hypergraph Coloring?
Exploring the power of linear programming for combinatorial optimization
problems has been recently receiving renewed attention after a series of
breakthrough impossibility results. From an algorithmic perspective, the
related questions concern whether there are compact formulations even for
problems that are known to admit polynomial-time algorithms.
We propose a framework for proving lower bounds on the size of extended
formulations. We do so by introducing a specific type of extended relaxations
that we call product relaxations and is motivated by the study of the
Sherali-Adams (SA) hierarchy. Then we show that for every approximate
relaxation of a polytope P, there is a product relaxation that has the same
size and is at least as strong. We provide a methodology for proving lower
bounds on the size of approximate product relaxations by lower bounding the
chromatic number of an underlying hypergraph, whose vertices correspond to
gap-inducing vectors.
We extend the definition of product relaxations and our methodology to mixed
integer sets. However in this case we are able to show that mixed product
relaxations are at least as powerful as a special family of extended
formulations. As an application of our method we show an exponential lower
bound on the size of approximate mixed product formulations for the metric
capacitated facility location problem, a problem which seems to be intractable
for linear programming as far as constant-gap compact formulations are
concerned
Sherali-Adams gaps, flow-cover inequalities and generalized configurations for capacity-constrained Facility Location
Metric facility location is a well-studied problem for which linear
programming methods have been used with great success in deriving approximation
algorithms. The capacity-constrained generalizations, such as capacitated
facility location (CFL) and lower-bounded facility location (LBFL), have proved
notorious as far as LP-based approximation is concerned: while there are
local-search-based constant-factor approximations, there is no known linear
relaxation with constant integrality gap. According to Williamson and Shmoys
devising a relaxation-based approximation for \cfl\ is among the top 10 open
problems in approximation algorithms.
This paper advances significantly the state-of-the-art on the effectiveness
of linear programming for capacity-constrained facility location through a host
of impossibility results for both CFL and LBFL. We show that the relaxations
obtained from the natural LP at levels of the Sherali-Adams
hierarchy have an unbounded gap, partially answering an open question of
\cite{LiS13, AnBS13}. Here, denotes the number of facilities in the
instance. Building on the ideas for this result, we prove that the standard CFL
relaxation enriched with the generalized flow-cover valid inequalities
\cite{AardalPW95} has also an unbounded gap. This disproves a long-standing
conjecture of \cite{LeviSS12}. We finally introduce the family of proper
relaxations which generalizes to its logical extreme the classic star
relaxation and captures general configuration-style LPs. We characterize the
behavior of proper relaxations for CFL and LBFL through a sharp threshold
phenomenon.Comment: arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:1305.599
Approximating Disjoint-Path Problems Using Greedy Algorithms and Packing Integer Programs
In the edge(vertex)-disjoint path problem we are given a graph and a set of connection requests. Every connection request in is a vertex pair The objective is to connect a maximum number of the pairs via edge(vertex)-disjoint paths. The edge-disjoint path problem can be generalized to the multiple-source unsplittable flow problem where connection request has a demand and every edge a capacity All these problems are NP-hard and have a multitude of applications in areas such as routing, scheduling and bin packing. Given the hardness of the problem, we study polynomial-time approximation algorithms. In this context, a -approximation algorithm is able to route at least a fraction of the connection requests. Although the edge- and vertex-disjoint path problems, and more recently the unsplittable flow generalization, have been extensively studied, they remain notoriously hard to approximate with a bounded performance guarantee. For example, even for the simple edge-disjoint path problem, no -approximation algorithm is known. Moreover some of the best existing approximation ratios are obtained through sophisticated and non-standard randomized rounding schemes. In this paper we introduce techniques which yield algorithms for a wide range of disjoint-path and unsplittable flow problems. For the general unsplittable flow problem, even with weights on the commodities, our techniques lead to the first approximation algorithm and obtain an approximation ratio that matches, to within logarithmic factors, the approximation ratio for the simple edge-disjoint path problem. In addition to this result and to improved bounds for several disjoint-path problems, our techniques simplify and unify the derivation of many existing approximation results. We use two basic techniques. First, we propose simple greedy algorithms for edge- and vertex-disjoint paths and second, we propose the use of a framework based on packing integer programs for more general problems such as unsplittable flow. A packing integer program is of the form maximize subject to As part of our tools we develop improved approximation algorithms for a class of packing integer programs, a result that we believe is of independent interest
Approximation Algorithms for Maximum Weighted Throughput on Unrelated Machines
We study the classic weighted maximum throughput problem on unrelated machines. We give a (1-1/e-?)-approximation algorithm for the preemptive case. To our knowledge this is the first ever approximation result for this problem. It is an immediate consequence of a polynomial-time reduction we design, that uses any ?-approximation algorithm for the single-machine problem to obtain an approximation factor of (1-1/e)? -? for the corresponding unrelated-machines problem, for any ? > 0. On a single machine we present a PTAS for the non-preemptive version of the problem for the special case of a constant number of distinct due dates or distinct release dates. By our reduction this yields an approximation factor of (1-1/e) -? for the non-preemptive problem on unrelated machines when there is a constant number of distinct due dates or release dates on each machine
Finding Real-Valued Single-Source Shortest Paths in o(n^3) Expected Time
Given an -vertex directed network with real costs on the edges and a designated source vertex , we give a new algorithm to compute shortest paths from . Our algorithm is a simple deterministic one with expected running time over a large class of input distributions. The shortest path problem is an old and fundamental problem with a host of applications. Our algorithm is the first strongly-polynomial algorithm in over 35 years to improve upon some aspect of the running time of the celebrated Bellman-Ford algorithm for arbitrary networks, with any type of cost assignments
Approximation Algorithms for Covering/Packing Integer Programs
Given matrices A and B and vectors a, b, c and d, all with non-negative
entries, we consider the problem of computing min {c.x: x in Z^n_+, Ax > a, Bx
< b, x < d}. We give a bicriteria-approximation algorithm that, given epsilon
in (0, 1], finds a solution of cost O(ln(m)/epsilon^2) times optimal, meeting
the covering constraints (Ax > a) and multiplicity constraints (x < d), and
satisfying Bx < (1 + epsilon)b + beta, where beta is the vector of row sums
beta_i = sum_j B_ij. Here m denotes the number of rows of A.
This gives an O(ln m)-approximation algorithm for CIP -- minimum-cost
covering integer programs with multiplicity constraints, i.e., the special case
when there are no packing constraints Bx < b. The previous best approximation
ratio has been O(ln(max_j sum_i A_ij)) since 1982. CIP contains the set cover
problem as a special case, so O(ln m)-approximation is the best possible unless
P=NP.Comment: Preliminary version appeared in IEEE Symposium on Foundations of
Computer Science (2001). To appear in Journal of Computer and System Science