Abstract

The length of a tree-decomposition of a graph is the maximum distance (in the graph) between two vertices of a same bag of the decomposition. The treelength of a graph is the minimum length among its tree-decompositions. Treelength of graphs has been studied for its algorithmic applications in classical metric problems such as Traveling Salesman Problem or metric dimension of graphs and also, in compact routing in the context of distributed computing. Deciding whether the treelength of a general graph is at most 2 is NP-complete (graphs of treelength one are precisely the chordal graphs), and it is known that the treelength of a graph cannot be approximated up to a factor less than 32 (the best known approximation algorithm for treelength has an approximation ratio of 3). However, nothing is known on the computational complexity of treelength in planar graphs, except that the treelength of any outerplanar graph is equal to the third of the size of a largest isometric cycle. This work initiates the study of treelength in planar graphs by considering the next natural subclass of planar graphs, namely the one of series–parallel graphs.We first fully describe the treelength of melon graphs (set of pairwise internally disjoint paths linking two vertices), showing that, even in such a restricted graph class, the expression of the treelength is not trivial. Then, we show that treelength can be approximated up to a factor 32 in series–parallel graphs. Our main result is a quadratic-time algorithm for deciding whether a series–parallel graph has treelength at most 2. Our latter result relies on a characterization of series–parallel graphs with treelength 2 in terms of an infinite family of forbidden isometric subgraphs.

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