The two-unicast problem
Abstract
We consider the communication capacity of wireline networks for a two-unicast traffic pattern. The network has two sources and two destinations with each source communicating a message to its own destination, subject to the capacity constraints on the directed edges of the network. We propose a simple outer bound for the problem that we call the Generalized Network Sharing (GNS) bound. We show this bound is the tightest edge-cut bound for two-unicast networks and is tight in several bottleneck cases, though it is not tight in general. We also show that the problem of computing the GNS bound is NP-complete. Finally, we show that despite its seeming simplicity, the two-unicast problem is as hard as the most general network coding problem. As a consequence, linear coding is insufficient to achieve capacity for general two-unicast networks, and non-Shannon inequalities are necessary for characterizing capacity of general two-unicast networks.
Keywords
Cite
@article{arxiv.1506.01105,
title = {The two-unicast problem},
author = {Sudeep Kamath and Venkat Anantharam and David Tse and Chih-Chun Wang},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1506.01105},
year = {2015}
}
Comments
23 pages, 22 figures