Algorithms and data structures for first-order logic with connectivity under vertex failures
We introduce a new data structure for answering connectivity queries in undirected graphs subject to batched vertex failures. Precisely, given any graph G and integer k, we can in fixed-parameter time construct a data structure that can later be used to answer queries of the form: ``are vertices s a...
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Zusammenfassung: | We introduce a new data structure for answering connectivity queries in
undirected graphs subject to batched vertex failures. Precisely, given any
graph G and integer k, we can in fixed-parameter time construct a data
structure that can later be used to answer queries of the form: ``are vertices
s and t connected via a path that avoids vertices $u_1,..., u_k$?'' in time
$2^{2^{O(k)}}$. In the terminology of the literature on data structures, this
gives the first deterministic data structure for connectivity under vertex
failures where for every fixed number of failures, all operations can be
performed in constant time.
With the aim to understand the power and the limitations of our new
techniques, we prove an algorithmic meta theorem for the recently introduced
separator logic, which extends first-order logic with atoms for connectivity
under vertex failures. We prove that the model-checking problem for separator
logic is fixed-parameter tractable on every class of graphs that exclude a
fixed topological minor. We also show a weak converse. This implies that from
the point of view of parameterized complexity, under standard complexity
assumptions, the frontier of tractability of separator logic is almost exactly
delimited by classes excluding a fixed topological minor.
The backbone of our proof relies on a decomposition theorem of Cygan et al.
[SICOMP '19], which provides a tree decomposition of a given graph into bags
that are unbreakable. Crucially, unbreakability allows to reduce separator
logic to plain first-order logic within each bag individually. We design our
model-checking algorithm using dynamic programming over the tree decomposition,
where the transition at each bag amounts to running a suitable model-checking
subprocedure for plain first-order logic. This approach is robust enough to
provide also efficient enumeration of queries expressed in separator logic. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2111.03725 |