Abstract

The call control problem is an important optimization problem encountered in the design and operation of communication networks. The goal of the call control problem in rings is to compute, for a given ring network with edge capacities and a set of paths in the ring, a maximum cardinality subset of the paths such that no edge capacity is violated. We give a polynomial-time algorithm to solve the problem optimally. The algorithm is based on a decision procedure that checks whether a solution with at least k paths exists, which is in turn implemented by an iterative greedy approach operating in rounds. We show that the algorithm can be implemented efficiently and, as a by-product, obtain a linear-time algorithm to solve the problem in chains optimally. For the weighted version of call control in rings, where each path is associated with a weight and the goal is to maximize the total weight of the paths in the solution, we present a simple 2-approximation algorithm and a polynomial-time approximation scheme. While the complexity of the weighted version remains open, we show that it is at least as hard as the bipartite exact matching problem, which has not been resolved to be in P or NP-hard. This latter result follows from recent work by Hochbaum and Levin.

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