pgr_dijkstraCost
¶
pgr_dijkstraCost
- Total cost of the shortest path(s) using Dijkstra
algorithm.
Availability
Version 3.1.0
New proposed signature:
pgr_dijkstraCost
(Combinations)
Version 2.2.0
New Official function
Description¶
The pgr_dijkstraCost
function sumarizes of the cost of the shortest path(s)
using Dijkstra Algorithm.
Dijkstra’s algorithm, conceived by Dutch computer scientist Edsger Dijkstra in 1956. It is a graph search algorithm that solves the shortest path problem for a graph with non-negative edge path costs, producing a shortest path from a starting vertex to an ending vertex. This implementation can be used with a directed graph and an undirected graph.
Process is done only on edges with positive costs.
A negative value on a cost column is interpreted as the edge does not exist.
Values are returned when there is a path.
When there is no path:
When the starting vertex and ending vertex are the same.
The aggregate cost of the non included values \((v, v)\) is \(0\)
When the starting vertex and ending vertex are the different and there is no path:
The aggregate cost the non included values \((u, v)\) is \(\infty\)
For optimization purposes, any duplicated value in the starting vertices or on the ending vertices are ignored.
Running time: \(O(| start\ vids | * (V \log V + E))\)
It does not return a path.
Returns the sum of the costs of the shortest path of each pair combination of nodes requested.
Let be the case the values returned are stored in a table, so the unique index would be the pair:
(start_vid, end_vid)
.Depending on the function and its parameters, the results can be symmetric.
The aggregate cost of \((u, v)\) is the same as for \((v, u)\).
Any duplicated value in the start or end vertex identifiers are ignored.
The returned values are ordered:
start_vid
ascendingend_vid
ascending
Signatures¶
Summary
directed
])directed
])directed
])directed
])(start_vid, end_vid, agg_cost)
One to One¶
pgr_dijkstraCost(Edges SQL, start vid, end vid , [directed
])
(start_vid, end_vid, agg_cost)
- Example:
From vertex \(6\) to vertex \(10\) on a directed graph
SELECT * FROM pgr_dijkstraCost(
'SELECT id, source, target, cost, reverse_cost FROM edges',
6, 10, true);
start_vid | end_vid | agg_cost
-----------+---------+----------
6 | 10 | 5
(1 row)
One to Many¶
pgr_dijkstraCost(Edges SQL, start vid, end vids, [directed
])
(start_vid, end_vid, agg_cost)
- Example:
From vertex \(6\) to vertices \(\{10, 17\}\) on a directed graph
SELECT * FROM pgr_dijkstraCost(
'SELECT id, source, target, cost, reverse_cost FROM edges',
6, ARRAY[10, 17]);
start_vid | end_vid | agg_cost
-----------+---------+----------
6 | 10 | 5
6 | 17 | 4
(2 rows)
Many to One¶
pgr_dijkstraCost(Edges SQL, start vids, end vid , [directed
])
(start_vid, end_vid, agg_cost)
- Example:
From vertices \(\{6, 1\}\) to vertex \(17\) on a directed graph
SELECT * FROM pgr_dijkstraCost(
'SELECT id, source, target, cost, reverse_cost FROM edges',
ARRAY[6, 1], 17);
start_vid | end_vid | agg_cost
-----------+---------+----------
1 | 17 | 5
6 | 17 | 4
(2 rows)
Many to Many¶
pgr_dijkstraCost(Edges SQL, start vids, end vids, [directed
])
(start_vid, end_vid, agg_cost)
- Example:
From vertices \(\{6, 1\}\) to vertices \(\{10, 17\}\) on an undirected graph
SELECT * FROM pgr_dijkstraCost(
'SELECT id, source, target, cost, reverse_cost FROM edges',
ARRAY[6, 1], ARRAY[10, 17],
directed => false);
start_vid | end_vid | agg_cost
-----------+---------+----------
1 | 10 | 4
1 | 17 | 5
6 | 10 | 1
6 | 17 | 4
(4 rows)
Combinations¶
pgr_dijkstraCost(Edges SQL, Combinations SQL, [directed
])
(start_vid, end_vid, agg_cost)
- Example:
Using a combinations table on an undirected graph
The combinations table:
SELECT source, target FROM combinations;
source | target
--------+--------
5 | 6
5 | 10
6 | 5
6 | 15
6 | 14
(5 rows)
The query:
SELECT * FROM pgr_dijkstraCost(
'SELECT id, source, target, cost, reverse_cost FROM edges',
'SELECT source, target FROM combinations',
false);
start_vid | end_vid | agg_cost
-----------+---------+----------
5 | 6 | 1
5 | 10 | 2
6 | 5 | 1
6 | 15 | 2
(4 rows)
Parameters¶
Column |
Type |
Description |
---|---|---|
|
Edges SQL as described below |
|
|
Combinations SQL as described below |
|
start vid |
|
Identifier of the starting vertex of the path. |
start vids |
|
Array of identifiers of starting vertices. |
end vid |
|
Identifier of the ending vertex of the path. |
end vids |
|
Array of identifiers of ending vertices. |
Optional parameters¶
Column |
Type |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|---|
|
|
|
|
Inner Queries¶
Edges SQL¶
Column |
Type |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|---|
|
ANY-INTEGER |
Identifier of the edge. |
|
|
ANY-INTEGER |
Identifier of the first end point vertex of the edge. |
|
|
ANY-INTEGER |
Identifier of the second end point vertex of the edge. |
|
|
ANY-NUMERICAL |
Weight of the edge ( |
|
|
ANY-NUMERICAL |
-1 |
Weight of the edge (
|
Where:
- ANY-INTEGER:
SMALLINT
,INTEGER
,BIGINT
- ANY-NUMERICAL:
SMALLINT
,INTEGER
,BIGINT
,REAL
,FLOAT
Combinations SQL¶
Parameter |
Type |
Description |
---|---|---|
|
ANY-INTEGER |
Identifier of the departure vertex. |
|
ANY-INTEGER |
Identifier of the arrival vertex. |
Where:
- ANY-INTEGER:
SMALLINT
,INTEGER
,BIGINT
Result Columns¶
Set of (start_vid, end_vid, agg_cost)
Column |
Type |
Description |
---|---|---|
|
|
Identifier of the starting vertex. |
|
|
Identifier of the ending vertex. |
|
|
Aggregate cost from |
Additional Examples¶
- Example 1:
Demonstration of repeated values are ignored, and result is sorted.
SELECT * FROM pgr_dijkstraCost(
'SELECT id, source, target, cost, reverse_cost FROM edges',
ARRAY[7, 10, 15, 10, 10, 15], ARRAY[10, 7, 10, 15]);
start_vid | end_vid | agg_cost
-----------+---------+----------
7 | 10 | 4
7 | 15 | 3
10 | 7 | 2
10 | 15 | 3
15 | 7 | 3
15 | 10 | 1
(6 rows)
- Example 2:
Making start_vids the same as end_vids
SELECT * FROM pgr_dijkstraCost(
'SELECT id, source, target, cost, reverse_cost FROM edges',
ARRAY[7, 10, 15], ARRAY[7, 10, 15]);
start_vid | end_vid | agg_cost
-----------+---------+----------
7 | 10 | 4
7 | 15 | 3
10 | 7 | 2
10 | 15 | 3
15 | 7 | 3
15 | 10 | 1
(6 rows)
- Example 3:
Manually assigned vertex combinations.
SELECT * FROM pgr_dijkstraCost(
'SELECT id, source, target, cost, reverse_cost FROM edges',
'SELECT * FROM (VALUES (6, 10), (6, 7), (12, 10)) AS combinations (source, target)');
start_vid | end_vid | agg_cost
-----------+---------+----------
6 | 7 | 1
6 | 10 | 5
12 | 10 | 4
(3 rows)
See Also¶
Indices and tables