Minimum d-dimensional arrangement with fixed points
read the original abstract
In the Minimum $d$-Dimensional Arrangement Problem (d-dimAP) we are given a graph with edge weights, and the goal is to find a 1-1 map of the vertices into $\mathbb{Z}^d$ (for some fixed dimension $d\geq 1$) minimizing the total weighted stretch of the edges. This problem arises in VLSI placement and chip design. Motivated by these applications, we consider a generalization of d-dimAP, where the positions of some of the vertices (pins) is fixed and specified as part of the input. We are asked to extend this partial map to a map of all the vertices, again minimizing the weighted stretch of edges. This generalization, which we refer to as d-dimAP+, arises naturally in these application domains (since it can capture blocked-off parts of the board, or the requirement of power-carrying pins to be in certain locations, etc.). Perhaps surprisingly, very little is known about this problem from an approximation viewpoint. For dimension $d=2$, we obtain an $O(k^{1/2} \cdot \log n)$-approximation algorithm, based on a strengthening of the spreading-metric LP for 2-dimAP. The integrality gap for this LP is shown to be $\Omega(k^{1/4})$. We also show that it is NP-hard to approximate 2-dimAP+ within a factor better than $\Omega(k^{1/4-\eps})$. We also consider a (conceptually harder, but practically even more interesting) variant of 2-dimAP+, where the target space is the grid $\mathbb{Z}_{\sqrt{n}} \times \mathbb{Z}_{\sqrt{n}}$, instead of the entire integer lattice $\mathbb{Z}^2$. For this problem, we obtain a $O(k \cdot \log^2{n})$-approximation using the same LP relaxation. We complement this upper bound by showing an integrality gap of $\Omega(k^{1/2})$, and an $\Omega(k^{1/2-\eps})$-inapproximability result. Our results naturally extend to the case of arbitrary fixed target dimension $d\geq 1$.
This paper has not been read by Pith yet.
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.