Restorable Shortest Path Tiebreaking for Edge-Faulty Graphs

Greg Bodwin, Merav Parter

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference contribution

2 Citations (Scopus)
15 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

The restoration lemma by Afek, Bremler-Barr, Kaplan, Cohen, and Merritt [Dist. Comp. '02] proves that, in an undirected unweighted graph, any replacement shortest path avoiding a failing edge can be expressed as the concatenation of two original shortest paths. However, the lemma is tiebreaking-sensitive: if one selects a particular canonical shortest path for each node pair, it is no longer guaranteed that one can build replacement paths by concatenating two selected shortest paths. They left as an open problem whether a method of shortest path tiebreaking with this desirable property is generally possible. We settle this question affirmatively with the first general construction of restorable tiebreaking schemes. We then show applications to various problems in fault-tolerant network design. These include a faster algorithm for subset replacement paths, more efficient fault-tolerant (exact) distance labeling schemes, fault-tolerant subset distance preservers and +4 additive spanners with improved sparsity, and fast distributed algorithms that construct these objects. For example, an almost immediate corollary of our restorable tiebreaking scheme is the first nontrivial distributed construction of sparse fault-tolerant distance preservers resilient to three faults.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationPODC 2021 - Proceedings of the 2021 ACM Symposium on Principles of Distributed Computing
Pages435-443
Number of pages9
ISBN (Electronic)9781450385480
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 21 Jul 2021
EventPODC '21: ACM Symposium on Principles of Distributed Computing - Virtual Event, Italy
Duration: 26 Jul 202130 Jul 2021

Conference

ConferencePODC '21: ACM Symposium on Principles of Distributed Computing
Period26/7/2130/7/21

Funding

Publisher Copyright: © 2021 ACM.

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