An efficient approximation algorithm for the survivable network design problem |
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Authors: | Harold N. Gabow Michel X. Goemans David P. Williamson |
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Affiliation: | (1) University of Colorado, Campus Box 430, 80309 Boulder, CO, USA;(2) M.I.T., Room 2-382, 77 Massachusetts Avenue, 02139 Cambridge, MA, USA;(3) IBM TJ Watson Research Center, P.O. Box 218, 10598 Yorktown Heights, NY, USA |
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Abstract: | The survivable network design problem (SNDP) is to construct a minimum-cost subgraph satisfying certain given edge-connectivity requirements. The first polynomial-time approximation algorithm was given by Williamson et al. (Combinatorica 15 (1995) 435–454). This paper gives an improved version that is more efficient. Consider a graph ofn vertices and connectivity requirements that are at mostk. Both algorithms find a solution that is within a factor 2k – 1 of optimal fork 2 and a factor 2 of optimal fork = 1. Our algorithm improves the time from O(k3n4) to O). Our algorithm shares features with those of Williamson et al. (Combinatorica 15 (1995) 435–454) but also differs from it at a high level, necessitating a different analysis of correctness and accuracy; our analysis is based on a combinatorial characterization of the redundant edges. Several other ideas are introduced to gain efficiency. These include a generalization of Padberg and Rao's characterization of minimum odd cuts, use of a representation of all minimum (s, t) cuts in a network, and a new priority queue system. The latter also improves the efficiency of the approximation algorithm of Goemans and Williamson (SIAM Journal on Computing 24 (1995) 296–317) for constrained forest problems such as minimum-weight matching, generalized Steiner trees and others. © 1998 The Mathematical Programming Society, Inc. Published by Elsevier Science B.V.A preliminary version of this paper has appeared in the Proceedings of the Third Mathematical Programming Society Conference on Integer Programming and Combinatorial Optimization, 1993, pp. 57–74.Research supported in part by NSF Grant No. CCR-9215199 and AT & T Bell Laboratories.Research supported in part by Air Force contracts AFOSR-89-0271 and F49620-92-J-0125 and DARPA contracts N00014-89-J-1988 and N00014-92-1799.This research was performed while the author was a graduate student at MIT. Research supported by an NSF Graduate Fellowship, Air Force contract F49620-92-J-0125, DARPA contracts N00014-89-J-1988 and N00014-92-J-1799, and AT & T Bell Laboratories. |
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Keywords: | Network design Approximation algorithm Steiner tree |
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