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The complexity of deciding whether a graph admits an orientation with fixed weak diameter

Abstract

International audienceAn oriented graph G\overrightarrow{G} is said weak (resp. strong) if, for every pair {u,v}\{ u,v \} of vertices of G\overrightarrow{G}, there are directed paths joining uu and vv in either direction (resp. both directions). In case, for every pair of vertices, some of these directed paths have length at most kk, we call G\overrightarrow{G} kk-weak (resp. kk-strong). We consider several problems asking whether an undirected graph GG admits orientations satisfying some connectivity and distance properties. As a main result, we show that deciding whether GG admits a kk-weak orientation is NP-complete for every k2k \geq 2. This notably implies the NP-completeness of several problems asking whether GG is an extremal graph (in terms of needed colours) for some vertex-colouring problems

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