A tight algorithm for Strongly Connected Steiner Subgraph on two terminals with demands

Rajesh Chitnis*, Hossein Esfandiari, Mohammad Taghi Hajiaghayi, Rohit Khandekar, Guy Kortsarz, Saeed Seddighin

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

3 Citations (Scopus)
145 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Given an edge-weighted directed graph G= (V, E) on n vertices and a set T= { t1, t2, … , tp} of p terminals, the objective of the Strongly Connected Steiner Subgraph (p-SCSS) problem is to find an edge set H⊆ E of minimum weight such that G[H] contains an ti→ tj path for each 1 ≤ i≠ j≤ p. The p-SCSS problem is NP-hard, but Feldman and Ruhl [FOCS ’99; SICOMP ’06] gave a novel nO(p) time algorithm. In this paper, we investigate the computational complexity of a variant of 2-SCSS where we have demands for the number of paths between each terminal pair. Formally, the 2 -SCSS-(k1, k2) problem is defined as follows: given an edge-weighted directed graph G= (V, E) with weight function ω: E→ R≥ 0, two terminal vertices s, t, and integers k1, k2; the objective is to find a set of k1 paths F1,F2,…,Fk1 from s⇝ t and k2 paths B1,B2,…,Bk2 from t⇝ s such that ∑ eEω(e) · ϕ(e) is minimized, where ϕ(e)=max{|{i∈[k1]:e∈Fi}|,|{j∈[k2]:e∈Bj}|}. For each k≥ 1 , we show the following:The 2 -SCSS-(k, 1) problem can be solved in time nO(k).A matching lower bound for our algorithm: the 2 -SCSS-(k, 1) problem does not have an f(k) · no(k) time algorithm for any computable function f, unless the Exponential Time Hypothesis fails. Our algorithm for 2 -SCSS-(k, 1) relies on a structural result regarding an optimal solution followed by using the idea of a “token game” similar to that of Feldman and Ruhl. We show with an example that the structural result does not hold for the 2 -SCSS-(k1, k2) problem if min { k1, k2} ≥ 2. Therefore 2 -SCSS-(k, 1) is the most general problem one can attempt to solve with our techniques. To obtain the lower bound matching the algorithm, we reduce from a special variant of the Grid Tiling problem introduced by Marx [FOCS ’07; ICALP ’12].

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1216-1239
Number of pages24
JournalAlgorithmica
Volume77
Issue number4
Early online date29 Mar 2016
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Apr 2017

Keywords

  • Directed graphs
  • Exponential time hypothesis
  • FPT algorithms
  • Strongly connected Steiner subgraph

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Computer Science(all)
  • Computer Science Applications
  • Applied Mathematics

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