In computer science, the order-maintenance problem involves maintaining a totally ordered set supporting the following operations:
insert(X, Y)
, which inserts X immediately after Y in the total order;order(X, Y)
, which determines if X precedes Y in the total order; anddelete(X)
, which removes X from the set.
Paul Dietz first introduced a data structure to solve this problem in
1982.[1] This data
structure supports insert(X, Y)
in (in Big O notation)
amortized time and order(X, Y)
in constant time but does
not support deletion. Athanasios Tsakalidis used BB[α] trees with the same performance bounds that supports
deletion in and improved insertion and deletion performance to
amortized time with indirection.[2] Dietz and Daniel Sleator published an improvement to worst-case constant time in 1987.[3] Michael Bender, Richard Cole and Jack Zito published significantly simplified alternatives in 2002.[4] Bender, Fineman, Gilbert, Kopelowitz and Montes also published a deamortized solution in 2017.[5]
Efficient data structures for order-maintenance have applications in many areas, including data structure persistence,[6] graph algorithms[7][8] and fault-tolerant data structures.[9]
List labeling
A problem related to the order-maintenance problem is the
list-labeling problem in which instead of the order(X,
Y)
operation the solution must maintain an assignment of labels
from a universe of integers to the
elements of the set such that X precedes Y in the total order if and
only if X is assigned a lesser label than Y. It must also support an
operation label(X)
returning the label of any node X.
Note that order(X, Y)
can be implemented simply by
comparing label(X)
and label(Y)
so that any
solution to the list-labeling problem immediately gives one to the
order-maintenance problem. In fact, most solutions to the
order-maintenance problem are solutions to the list-labeling problem
augmented with a level of data structure indirection to improve
performance. We will see an example of this below.
For a list-labeling problem on sets of size up to , the cost of list labeling depends on how large is a function of . The relevant parameter range for order maintenance are for , for which an amortized cost solution is known,[10] and for which a constant time amortized solution is known[11]
O(1) amortized insertion via indirection
Indirection is a technique used in data structures in which a problem is split into multiple levels of a data structure in order to improve efficiency. Typically, a problem of size is split into problems of size . For example, this technique is used in y-fast tries. This strategy also works to improve the insertion and deletion performance of the data structure described above to constant amortized time. In fact, this strategy works for any solution of the list-labeling problem with amortized insertion and deletion time.
The new data structure is completely rebuilt whenever it grows too large or too small. Let be the number of elements of the total order when it was last rebuilt. The data structure is rebuilt whenever the invariant is violated by an insertion or deletion. Since rebuilding can be done in linear time this does not affect the amortized performance of insertions and deletions.
During the rebuilding operation, the elements of the total order are split into contiguous sublists, each of size . The list labeling problem is solved on the set set of nodes representing each of the sublists in their original list order. The labels for this subproblem are taken to be polynomial --- say , so that they can be compared in constant time and updated in amortized time.
For each sublist a doubly-linked list of its elements is built storing with each element a pointer to its representative in the tree as well as a local integer label. The local integer labels are also taken from a range , so that the can be compared in constant time, but because each local problem involves only items, the labels range is exponential in the number of items being labeled. Thus, they can be updated in amortized time.
See the list-labeling problem for details of both solutions.
Order
Given the sublist nodes X and Y, order(X, Y)
can be
answered by first checking if the two nodes are in the same
sublist. If so, their order can be determined by comparing their local
labels. Otherwise the labels of their representatives in the first list-labeling problem are compared.
These comparisons take constant time.
Insert
Given a new sublist node for X and a pointer to the sublist node Y,
insert(X, Y)
inserts X immediately after Y in the sublist
of Y, if there is room for X in the list, that is if the length of the list is no greater than after the insertion. It's local label is given by the local list labeling algorithm for exponential labels. This case takes amortized time.
If the local list overflows, it is split evenly into two lists of size , and the items in each list are given new labels from their (independent) ranges. This creates a new sublist, which is inserted into the list of sublists, and the new sublist node is given a label in the list of sublists by the list-labeling algorithm. Finally X is inserted into the appropriate list.
This sequence of operations take time, but there have been insertions since the list was created or last split. Thus the amortized time per insertion is .
Delete
Given a sublist node X to be deleted, delete(X)
simply
removes X from its sublist in constant time. If this leaves the
sublist empty, then we need to remove the representative of the
list of sublists. Since at least
elements were deleted from the sublist since it was first built we can afford to spend the time, the amortized cost of a deletion is .
References
- ↑ Dietz, Paul F. (1982), "Maintaining order in a linked list", Proceedings of the 14th Annual ACM Symposium on Theory of Computing (STOC '82), New York, NY, USA: ACM, pp. 122–127, doi:10.1145/800070.802184, ISBN 978-0897910705.
- ↑ Tsakalidis, Athanasios K. (1984), "Maintaining order in a generalized linked list", Acta Informatica, 21 (1): 101–112, doi:10.1007/BF00289142, MR 0747173.
- ↑ Dietz, P.; Sleator, D. (1987), "Two algorithms for maintaining order in a list", Proceedings of the 19th Annual ACM Symposium on Theory of Computing (STOC '87), New York, NY, USA: ACM, pp. 365–372, doi:10.1145/28395.28434, hdl:1802/5693, ISBN 978-0897912211. Full version, Tech. Rep. CMU-CS-88-113, Carnegie Mellon University, 1988.
- ↑ Bender, Michael A.; Cole, Richard; Demaine, Erik D.; Farach-Colton, Martin; Zito, Jack (2002), "Two simplified algorithms for maintaining order in a list", in Möhring, Rolf H.; Raman, Rajeev (eds.), Algorithms – ESA 2002, 10th Annual European Symposium, Rome, Italy, September 17–21, 2002, Proceedings, Lecture Notes in Computer Science, vol. 2461, Springer, pp. 152–164, doi:10.1007/3-540-45749-6_17
- ↑ Bender, Michael A.; Fineman, Jeremy T.; Gilbert, Seth; Kopelowitz, Tsvi; Montes, Pablo (2017), "File maintenance: When in doubt, change the layout!", in Klein, Philip N. (ed.), Proceedings of the Twenty-Eighth Annual ACM-SIAM Symposium on Discrete Algorithms, SODA 2017, Barcelona, Spain, Hotel Porta Fira, January 16–19, Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics, pp. 1503–1522, doi:10.1137/1.9781611974782.98
- ↑ Driscoll, James R.; Sarnak, Neil; Sleator, Daniel D.; Tarjan, Robert E. (1989), "Making data structures persistent", Journal of Computer and System Sciences, 38 (1): 86–124, doi:10.1016/0022-0000(89)90034-2, MR 0990051.
- ↑ Eppstein, David; Galil, Zvi; Italiano, Giuseppe F.; Nissenzweig, Amnon (1997), "Sparsification—a technique for speeding up dynamic graph algorithms", Journal of the ACM, 44 (5): 669–696, doi:10.1145/265910.265914, MR 1492341.
- ↑ Katriel, Irit; Bodlaender, Hans L. (2006), "Online topological ordering", ACM Transactions on Algorithms, 2 (3): 364–379, CiteSeerX 10.1.1.78.7933, doi:10.1145/1159892.1159896, MR 2253786.
- ↑ Aumann, Yonatan; Bender, Michael A. (1996), "Fault tolerant data structures", Proceedings of the 37th Annual Symposium on Foundations of Computer Science (FOCS 1996), pp. 580–589, doi:10.1109/SFCS.1996.548517, ISBN 978-0-8186-7594-2.
- ↑ Itai, Alon; Konheim, Alan G.; Rodeh, Michael (1981), "A Sparse Table Implementation of Priority Queues", ICALP, pp. 417–431
- ↑ Bulánek, Jan; Koucký, Michal; Saks, Michael E. (2015), "Tight Lower Bounds for the Online Labeling Problem", SIAM Journal on Computing, vol. 44, pp. 1765--1797.
External links
- Two simplified algorithms for maintaining order in a list. - This paper (Michael A. Bender, Richard Cole, Erik D. Demaine, Martin Farach-Colton, and Jack Zito, 2002) presents a list-labeling data structure with amortized performance that does not explicitly store a tree. The analysis given is simpler than the one given by (Dietz and Sleator, 1987) for a similar data structure.