Bellman-Ford algorithm

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The Bellman–Ford algorithm, sometimes referred to as the Label Correcting Algorithm,[citation needed] computes single-source shortest paths in a weighted digraph (where some of the edge weights may be negative). Dijkstra's algorithm solves the same problem with a lower running time, but requires edge weights to be non-negative. Thus, Bellman–Ford is usually used only when there are negative edge weights.

According to Robert Sedgewick, "Negative weights are not merely a mathematical curiosity; [...] [they] arise in a natural way when we reduce other problems to shortest-paths problems"[1], and he gives the specific example of a reduction from the NP-complete Hamilton path problem to the shortest paths problem with general weights. If a graph contains a cycle of total negative weight then arbitrarily low weights are achievable and so there's no solution; Bellman-Ford detects this case.

If the graph does contain a cycle of negative weights, Bellman-Ford can only detect this; Bellman-Ford cannot find the shortest path that does not repeat any vertex in such a graph. This problem is at least as hard as the NP-complete longest path problem.

Contents

[edit] Algorithm

Bellman-Ford is in its basic structure very similar to Dijkstra's algorithm, but instead of greedily selecting the minimum-weight node not yet processed to relax, it simply relaxes all the edges, and does this |V| − 1 times, where |V| is the number of vertices in the graph. The repetitions allow minimum distances to accurately propagate throughout the graph, since, in the absence of negative cycles, the shortest path can only visit each node at most once. Unlike the greedy approach, which depends on certain structural assumptions derived from positive weights, this straightforward approach extends to the general case.

Bellman–Ford runs in O(|V|·|E|) time, where |V| and |E| are the number of vertices and edges respectively.

procedure BellmanFord(list vertices, list edges, vertex source)
   // This implementation takes in a graph, represented as lists of vertices
   // and edges, and modifies the vertices so that their distance and
   // predecessor attributes store the shortest paths.

   // Step 1: Initialize graph
   for each vertex v in vertices:
       if v is source then v.distance := 0
       else v.distance := infinity
       v.predecessor := null
   
   // Step 2: relax edges repeatedly
   for i from 1 to size(vertices)-1:       
       for each edge uv in edges:
           u := uv.source
           v := uv.destination             // uv is the edge from u to v
           if v.distance > u.distance + uv.weight:
               v.distance := u.distance + uv.weight
               v.predecessor := u

   // Step 3: check for negative-weight cycles
   for each edge uv in edges:
       u := uv.source
       v := uv.destination
       if v.distance > u.distance + uv.weight:
           error "Graph contains a negative-weight cycle"

[edit] Proof of correctness

The correctness of the algorithm can be shown by induction. The precise statement shown by induction is:

Lemma. After i repetitions of for cycle:

  • If Distance(u) is not infinity, it is equal to the length of some path from s to u;
  • If there is a path from s to u with at most i edges, then Distance(u) is at most the length of the shortest path from s to u with at most i edges.

Proof. For the base case of induction, consider i=0 and the moment before for cycle is executed for the first time. Then, for the source vertex, source.distance = 0, which is correct. For other vertices u, u.distance = infinity, which is also correct because there is no path from source to u with 0 edges.

For the inductive case, we first prove the first part. Consider a moment when a vertex's distance is updated by v.distance := u.distance + uv.weight. By inductive assumption, u.distance is the length of some path from source to u. Then u.distance + uv.weight is the length of the path from source to v that follows the path from source to u and then goes to v.

For the second part, consider the shortest path from source to u with at most i edges. Let v be the last vertex before u on this path. Then, the part of the path from source to v is the shortest path from source to v with at most i-1 edges. By inductive assumption, v.distance after i-1 cycles is at most the length of this path. Therefore, uv.weight + v.distance is at most the length of the path from s to u. In the ith cycle, u.distance gets compared with uv.weight + v.distance, and is set equal to it if uv.weight + v.distance was smaller. Therefore, after i cycles, u.distance is at most the length of the shortest path from source to u that uses at most i edges.

If there are no negative-weight cycles, then every shortest path visits each vertex at most once, so at step 3 no further improvements can be made. Conversely, suppose no improvement can be made. Then for any cycle with vertices v[0],..,v[k-1],

v[i].distance <= v[i-1 (mod k)].distance + v[i-1 (mod k)]v[i].weight

Summing around the cycle, the v[i].distance terms and the v[i-1 (mod k)] distance terms cancel, leaving

0 <= sum from 1 to k of v[i-1 (mod k)]v[i].weight

I.e., every cycle has nonnegative weight.

[edit] Applications in routing

A distributed variant of Bellman–Ford algorithm is used in distance-vector routing protocols, for example the Routing Information Protocol (RIP). The algorithm is distributed because it involves a number of nodes (routers) within an Autonomous system, a collection of IP networks typically owned by an ISP. It consists of the following steps:

  1. Each node calculates the distances between itself and all other nodes within the AS and stores this information as a table.
  2. Each node sends its table to all neighboring nodes.
  3. When a node receives distance tables from its neighbors, it calculates the shortest routes to all other nodes and updates its own table to reflect any changes.

The main disadvantages of Bellman–Ford algorithm in this setting are

  • Does not scale well
  • Changes in network topology are not reflected quickly since updates are spread node-by-node.
  • Counting to infinity (if link or node failures render a node unreachable from some set of other nodes, those nodes may spend forever gradually increasing their estimates of the distance to it, and in the meantime there may be routing loops)

[edit] Implementation

The following program implements the Bellman–Ford algorithm in C.

#include <limits.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>

/* Let INFINITY be an integer value not likely to be
   confused with a real weight, even a negative one. */
#define INFINITY ((1 << 14)-1)

typedef struct {
    int source;
    int dest;
    int weight;
} Edge;

void BellmanFord(Edge edges[], int edgecount, int nodecount, int source)
{
    int *distance = malloc(nodecount * sizeof *distance);
    int i, j;

    for (i=0; i < nodecount; ++i)
      distance[i] = INFINITY;
    distance[source] = 0;

    for (i=0; i < nodecount; ++i) {
        for (j=0; j < edgecount; ++j) {
            if (distance[edges[j].source] != INFINITY) {
                int new_distance = distance[edges[j].source] + edges[j].weight;
                if (new_distance < distance[edges[j].dest])
                  distance[edges[j].dest] = new_distance;
            }
        }
    }

    for (i=0; i < edgecount; ++i) {
        if (distance[edges[i].dest] > distance[edges[i].source] + edges[i].weight) {
            puts("Negative edge weight cycles detected!");
            free(distance);
            return;
        }
    }

    for (i=0; i < nodecount; ++i) {
        printf("The shortest distance between nodes %d and %d is %d\n",
            source, i, distance[i]);
    }

    free(distance);
    return;
}

int main(void)
{
    /* This test case should produce the distances 2, 4, 7, -2, and 0. */
    Edge edges[10] = {{0,1, 5}, {0,2, 8}, {0,3, -4}, {1,0, -2},
                      {2,1, -3}, {2,3, 9}, {3,1, 7}, {3,4, 2},
                      {4,0, 6}, {4,2, 7}};
    BellmanFord(edges, 10, 5, 4);
    return 0;
}

[edit] Yen's improvement

In a 1970 publication, Yen[2] described an improvement to the Bellman-Ford algorithm for a graph without negative-weight cycles. Yen's improvement first assigns some arbitrary linear order on all vertices and then partitions the set of all edges into one of two subsets. The first subset, Ef, contains all edges (vi, vj) such that i < j; the second, Eb, contains edges (vi, vj) such that i > j. The edges of each vertex are then relaxed in the same arbitrary order,[clarify] i.e. ascending for the set Ef and descending for the set Eb. Yen's improvement effectively halves the number of "passes" required for the single-source-shortest-path solution.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Robert Sedgewick. Algorithms in Java. Third Edition. ISBN 0-201-36121-3. Section 21.7: Negative Edge Weights. http://safari.oreilly.com/0201361213/ch21lev1sec7
  2. ^ Jin Y. Yen. "An algorithm for Finding Shortest Routes from all Source Nodes to a Given Destination in General Network", Quart. Appl. Math., 27, 1970, 526–530.

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