k Paths in AQL
General query idea
This type of query finds all paths between two given documents, startVertex and targetVertex in your graph. The paths are restricted by minimum and maximum length of the paths.
Every such path will be returned as a JSON object with two components:
- an array containing the
vertices
on the path - an array containing the
edges
on the path
Example
Let us take a look at a simple example to explain how it works. This is the graph that we are going to find some paths on:
Each ellipse stands for a train station with the name of the city written inside of it. They are the vertices of the graph. Arrows represent train connections between cities and are the edges of the graph. The numbers near the arrows describe how long it takes to get from one station to another. They are used as edge weights.
Let us assume that we want to go from Aberdeen to London by train.
Here we have a couple of alternatives:
a) Straight way
- Aberdeen
- Leuchars
- Edinburgh
- York
- London
b) Detour at York
- Aberdeen
- Leuchars
- Edinburgh
- York
- Carlisle
- Birmingham
- London
c) Detour at Edinburgh
- Aberdeen
- Leuchars
- Edinburgh
- Glasgow
- Carlisle
- Birmingham
- London
d) Detour at Edinburgh to York
- Aberdeen
- Leuchars
- Edinburgh
- Glasgow
- Carlisle
- York
- London
Note that we only consider paths as valid that do not contain the same vertex twice. The following alternative would visit Aberdeen twice and will not be returned by k Paths:
- Aberdeen
- Inverness
- Aberdeen
- Leuchars
- Edinburgh
- York
- London
Example Use Cases
The use-cases for k Paths are about the same as for unweighted k Shortest Paths. The main difference is that k Shortest Paths will enumerate all paths with increasing length. It will stop as soon as a given limit is reached. k Paths will instead only enumerate all paths within a given range of path length, and are thereby upper-bounded.
The k Paths traversal can be used as foundation for several other algorithms:
- Transportation of any kind (e.g. road traffic, network package routing)
- Flow problems: We need to transfer items from A to B, which alternatives do we have? What is their capacity?
Syntax
The syntax for k Paths queries is similar to the one for K Shortest Path with the addition to define the minimum and maximum length of the path.
It is highly recommended that you use a reasonable maximum path length or a LIMIT statement, as k Paths is a potentially expensive operation. On large connected graphs it can return a large number of paths.
Working with named graphs
FOR path
IN MIN..MAX OUTBOUND|INBOUND|ANY K_PATHS
startVertex TO targetVertex
GRAPH graphName
[OPTIONS options]
FOR
: emits the variable path which contains one path as an object containingvertices
andedges
of the path.IN
MIN..MAX
: the minimal and maximal depth for the traversal:- min (number, optional): paths returned by this query will have at least a length of min many edges. If not specified, it defaults to 1. The minimal possible value is 0.
- max (number, optional): paths returned by this query will have at most a length of max many edges. If omitted, max defaults to min. Thus only the vertices and edges in the range of min are returned. max can not be specified without min.
OUTBOUND|INBOUND|ANY
: defines in which direction edges are followed (outgoing, incoming, or both)K_PATHS
: the keyword to compute all Paths- startVertex
TO
targetVertex (both string|object): the two vertices between which the paths will be computed. This can be specified in the form of a document identifier string or in the form of an object with the attribute_id
. All other values will lead to a warning and an empty result. This is also the case if one of the specified documents does not exist. GRAPH
graphName (string): the name identifying the named graph. Its vertex and edge collections will be looked up.OPTIONS
options (object, optional): used to modify the execution of the search. Right now there are no options that trigger an effect. However, this may change in the future.
Working with collection sets
FOR path
IN MIN..MAX OUTBOUND|INBOUND|ANY K_PATHS
startVertex TO targetVertex
edgeCollection1, ..., edgeCollectionN
[OPTIONS options]
Instead of GRAPH graphName
you can specify a list of edge collections.
The involved vertex collections are determined by the edges of the given
edge collections.
Traversing in mixed directions
For k paths with a list of edge collections you can optionally specify the
direction for some of the edge collections. Say for example you have three edge
collections edges1, edges2 and edges3, where in edges2 the direction
has no relevance, but in edges1 and edges3 the direction should be taken
into account. In this case you can use OUTBOUND
as general search direction
and ANY
specifically for edges2 as follows:
FOR vertex IN OUTBOUND K_PATHS
startVertex TO targetVertex
edges1, ANY edges2, edges3
All collections in the list that do not specify their own direction will use the
direction defined after IN
(here: OUTBOUND
). This allows to use a different
direction for each collection in your path search.
Examples
We load an example graph to get a named graph that reflects some possible train connections in Europe and North America.
Suppose we want to query all routes from Aberdeen to London.
If we ask for routes that don’t exist we get an empty result (from Aberdeen to Toronto):
FOR p IN 1..10 OUTBOUND K_PATHS 'places/Aberdeen' TO 'places/Toronto'
GRAPH 'kShortestPathsGraph'
RETURN { places: p.vertices[*].label, travelTimes: p.edges[*].travelTime }
[]
And finally clean up by removing the named graph:
arangosh> var examples = require("@arangodb/graph-examples/example-graph.js");
arangosh> examples.dropGraph("kShortestPathsGraph");