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Dynamic Set Cover with Worst-Case Recourse

Published: November 10, 2025 | arXiv ID: 2511.07354v1

By: Shay Solomon, Amitai Uzrad

Potential Business Impact:

Finds cheaper ways to cover all items.

Business Areas:
Fast-Moving Consumer Goods Consumer Goods, Real Estate

In the dynamic set cover (SC) problem, the input is a dynamic universe of at most $n$ elements and a fixed collection of $m$ sets, where each element belongs to at most $f$ sets and each set has cost in $[1/C, 1]$. The objective is to efficiently maintain an approximate minimum SC under element updates; efficiency is primarily measured by the update time, but another important parameter is the recourse (number of changes to the solution per update). Ideally, one would like to achieve low worst-case bounds on both update time and recourse. One can achieve approximation $(1+\epsilon)\ln n$ (greedy-based) or $(1+\epsilon)f$ (primal-dual-based) with worst-case update time $O(f\log n)$ (ignoring $\epsilon$ dependencies). However, despite a large body of work, no algorithm with low update time (even amortized) and nontrivial worst-case recourse is known, even for unweighted instances ($C = 1$)! We remedy this by providing a transformation that, given as a black-box a SC algorithm with approximation $\alpha$ and update time $T$, returns a set cover algorithm with approximation $(2 + \epsilon)\alpha$, update time $O(T + \alpha C)$, and worst-case recourse $O(\alpha C)$. Our main results are obtained by leveraging this transformation for constant $C$:...

Page Count
21 pages

Category
Computer Science:
Data Structures and Algorithms