Abstract:Constrained pathfinding is a well-studied, yet challenging network optimisation problem that can be seen in a broad range of real-world applications. Pathfinding with multiple resource limits, which is known as the Resource Constrained Shortest Path Problem (RCSP), aims to plan a cost-optimum path subject to limited usage of resources. Given the recent advances in constrained and multi-criteria search with A*, this paper introduces a new resource constrained search framework on the basis of A* to tackle RCSP in large networks, even in the presence of negative cost and negative resources. We empirically evaluate our new algorithm on a set of large instances and show up to two orders of magnitude faster performance compared to state-of-the-art RCSP algorithms in the literature.
Abstract:The Multi-objective Shortest Path (MOSP) problem is a classic network optimization problem that aims to find all Pareto-optimal paths between two points in a graph with multiple edge costs. Recent studies on multi-objective search with A* (MOA*) have demonstrated superior performance in solving difficult MOSP instances. This paper presents a novel search framework that allows efficient parallelization of MOA* with different objective orders. The framework incorporates a unique upper bounding strategy that helps the search reduce the problem's dimensionality to one in certain cases. Experimental results demonstrate that the proposed framework can enhance the performance of recent A*-based solutions, with the speed-up proportional to the problem dimension.
Abstract:The classic Resource Constrained Shortest Path (RCSP) problem aims to find a cost optimal path between a pair of nodes in a network such that the resources used in the path are within a given limit. Having been studied for over a decade, RCSP has seen recent solutions that utilize heuristic-guided search to solve the constrained problem faster. Building upon the bidirectional A* search paradigm, this research introduces a novel constrained search framework that uses efficient pruning strategies to allow for accelerated and effective RCSP search in large-scale networks. Results show that, compared to the state of the art, our enhanced framework can significantly reduce the constrained search time, achieving speed-ups of over to two orders of magnitude.