Using a hybrid of exact and genetic algorithms to design survivable networks

Wide-band technology has the capability to carry many services such as voice, video and other web-site technology on one link. Therefore these networks differ significantly from traditional dense copper-based networks. These networks are sparse and tree-like, and there are few disjoint paths (links)...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inComputers & operations research Vol. 29; no. 1; pp. 53 - 66
Main Authors Ghashghai, Elham, Rardin, Ronald L.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published New York Elsevier Ltd 2002
Pergamon Press Inc
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Summary:Wide-band technology has the capability to carry many services such as voice, video and other web-site technology on one link. Therefore these networks differ significantly from traditional dense copper-based networks. These networks are sparse and tree-like, and there are few disjoint paths (links) between a pair of nodes (space and/or terrestrial stations). Therefore connectivity has become a very important issue for survivability of these networks. Survivable networks are ones which can remain suitably connected after the incapacitation of a node or a link. Finding subgraphs that meet survivability requirements is ( NP) hard on general graphs. However there are polynomial time algorithms available when these problems are solved on special graphs, including ones known as k-trees. We present a hybrid method for finding approximate optimal solutions for survivable network problems on complete graphs that takes advantage of k-tree solvability. A genetic algorithm generates “good” 3-tree subgraphs of the underlying network, where goodness is measured by the exact optimal survivable subgraph of the given 3-tree. The best such subgraph is taken as an approximate optimum for the full problem. Sufficient conditions for existence of a partial 3-tree optimal solution to the full survivable network problem validate the approach, and some computational experience is reported. Wide-band technology has the capability to carry many services such as voice, video and other web-site technology on one link. Corresponding networks thus differ significantly from traditionally dense copper-based networks. Wide-band networks are sparse and tree-like, with few disjoint paths between any pair of nodes (space and/or terrestrial stations). Therefore connectivity has become a very important issue for survivability of these networks. We propose and report computational results for a procedure to choose approximately optimal networks in this context where designs are considered survivable if they will remain suitably connected after the incapacitation of a single node or link. The algorithm is hybrid in the sense that it combines efficient algorithms for special cases with a randomized search through a sequence of such cases until a satisfactory design is obtained.
ISSN:0305-0548
1873-765X
0305-0548
DOI:10.1016/S0305-0548(00)00059-9