The evolution of the minimum degree ordering algorithm

A George, JWH Liu - Siam review, 1989 - SIAM
A George, JWH Liu
Siam review, 1989SIAM
Over the past fifteen years, the implementation of the minimum degree algorithm has
received much study, and many important enhancements have been made to it. This paper
describes these various enhancements, their historical development, and some experiments
showing how very effective they are in improving the execution time of the algorithm. A
shortcoming is also presented that exists in all of the widely used implementations of the
algorithm, namely, that the quality of the ordering provided by the implementations is …
Over the past fifteen years, the implementation of the minimum degree algorithm has received much study, and many important enhancements have been made to it. This paper describes these various enhancements, their historical development, and some experiments showing how very effective they are in improving the execution time of the algorithm. A shortcoming is also presented that exists in all of the widely used implementations of the algorithm, namely, that the quality of the ordering provided by the implementations is surprisingly sensitive to the initial ordering. For example, changing the input ordering can lead to an increase (or decrease) of as much as a factor of three in the cost of the subsequent numerical factorization. This sensitivity is caused by the lack of an effective tie-breaking strategy, and the authors’ experiments illustrate the importance of developing such a strategy
Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics