Affiliation:
1. Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, Virginia
2. Cornell University, Ithaca, New York
3. Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest, Hungary
4. Northeastern University, Boston, Massachusetts
5. McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Abstract
A flow of a commodity is said to be confluent if at any node all the flow of the commodity leaves along a single edge. In this article, we study single-commodity confluent flow problems, where we need to route given node demands to a single destination using a confluent flow. Single- and multi-commodity confluent flows arise in a variety of application areas, most notably in networking; in fact, most flows in the Internet are (multi-commodity) confluent flows since Internet routing is destination based.
We present near-tight approximation algorithms, hardness results, and existence theorems for minimizing congestion in single-commodity confluent flows. The maximum edge congestion of a single-commodity confluent flow occurs at one of the incoming edges of the destination. Therefore, finding a minimum-congestion confluent flow is equivalent to the following problem: given a directed graph
G
with
k
sinks
and non-negative demands on all the nodes of
G
, determine a confluent flow that routes every node demand to some sink such that the maximum congestion at a sink is minimized.
The main result of this article is a polynomial-time algorithm for determining a confluent flow with congestion at most 1 + ln(
k
) in
G
, if
G
admits a splittable flow with congestion at most 1. We complement this result in two directions. First, we present a graph
G
that admits a splittable flow with congestion at most 1, yet no confluent flow with congestion smaller than
H
k
, the
k
th harmonic number, thus establishing tight upper and lower bounds to within an additive constant less than 1. Second, we show that it is NP-hard to approximate the congestion of an optimal confluent flow to within a factor of (log
2
k
)/2, thus resolving the polynomial-time approximability to within a multiplicative constant. We also consider a demand maximization version of the problem. We show that if
G
admits a splittable flow of congestion at most 1, then a variant of the congestion minimization algorithm yields a confluent flow in
G
with congestion at most 1 that satisfies 1/3 fraction of total demand.
We show that the gap between confluent flows and splittable flows is much smaller, if the underlying graph is
k
-connected. In particular, we prove that
k
-connected graphs with
k
sinks admit confluent flows of congestion less than
C
+
d
max
, where
C
is the congestion of the best splittable flow, and
d
max
is the maximum demand of any node in
G
. The proof of this existence theorem is non-constructive and relies on topological techniques introduced by Lovász.
Publisher
Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)
Subject
Artificial Intelligence,Hardware and Architecture,Information Systems,Control and Systems Engineering,Software
Cited by
19 articles.
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