Chapter 8. Maximum Flow
The maximum-flow problem is the problem of determining how much of some quantity (say, water) can move through a network.
There is a long history of algorithms for solving the maximum-flow problem, with the first algorithm due to Ford and Fulkerson [12]. The best general-purpose algorithm known to date is the push-relabel algorithm of Goldberg [9, 16, 17], which is based on the notion of a preflow introduced by Karzanov [20].
The BGL contains two algorithms for computing maximum flows. The Edmunds–Karp algorithm (a refinement of the original Ford–Fulkerson) and the push-relabel algorithm.
8.1 Definitions
A flow network is a directed graph G = (V, E) with a source vertex s and a sink vertex t. Each edge has a positive ...
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