Abstract
Consider the following problem: given a graph with edge costs and a subset Qof vertices, find aminimum-cost subgraph in which there are two edge-disjoint paths connecting every pair of vertices in Q. The problem is a failure-resilient analog of the Steiner tree problem arising, for example, in telecommunications applications. We study a more generalmixed-connectivity formulation, also employed in telecommunications optimization. Given a number (or requirement) r(v) ϵ {0, 1, 2} for each vertex v in the graph, find a minimum-cost subgraph in which there are min{r(u), r(v)} edge-disjoint u-to-v paths for every pair u, v of vertices. We address the problem in planar graphs, considering a popular relaxation in which the solution is allowed to use multiple copies of the input-graph edges (paying separately for each copy). The problem is max SNP-hard in general graphs and strongly NP-hard in planar graphs. We give the first polynomial-time approximation scheme in planar graphs. The running time is O(nlog n).Under the additional restriction that the requirements are only non-zero for vertices on the boundary of a single face of a planar graph, we give a polynomial-time algorithm to find the optimal solution.
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Borradaile, G., & Klein, P. (2016). The two-edge connectivity survivable-network design problem in planar graphs. ACM Transactions on Algorithms, 12(3). https://doi.org/10.1145/2831235
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