We analyze the problem of constructing a network which will have a fixed routing and which will be highly fault tolerant. A construction is presented which forms a "product route graph" from two or more constituent "route graphs." The analysis involves the surviving route graph, which consists of all non-faulty nodes in the network with two nodes being connected by a directed edge iff the route from the first to the second is still intact after a set of component failures. The diameter of the surviving route graph, that is, the maximum distance between any pair of nodes, is a measure of the worst-case performance degradation caused by the faults. The number of faults tolerated, the diameter, and the degree of the product graph are related in a simple way to the corresponding parameters of the constituent graphs. In addition, there is a "padding theorem" which allows one to add nodes to a graph and to extend a previous routing.
CITATION STYLE
Broder, A., Fischer, M., Dolce, D., & Simons, B. (1984). Efficient fault tolerant routings in networks. In Proceedings of the Annual ACM Symposium on Theory of Computing (pp. 536–541). Association for Computing Machinery. https://doi.org/10.1145/800057.808724
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