A \emph{covering array} is an $N \times k$ array of elements from a $v$-ary alphabet such that every $N \times t$ subarray contains all $v^t$ tuples from the alphabet of size $t$ at least $\lambda$ times; this is denoted as $\CA_\lambda(N; t, k, v)$. Covering arrays have applications in the testing of large-scale complex systems; in systems that are nondeterministic, increasing $\lambda$ gives greater confidence in the system's correctness. The \emph{covering array number}, $\CAN_\lambda(t,k,v)$ is the smallest number of rows for which a covering array on the other parameters exists. For general $\lambda$, only several nontrivial bounds are known, the smallest of which was asymptotically $\log k + \lambda \log \log k + o(\lambda)$ when $v, t$ are fixed. Additionally it has been conjectured that the $\log \log k$ term can be removed. First, we affirm the conjecture by deriving an asymptotically optimal bound for $\CAN_\lambda(t,k,v)$ for general $\lambda$ and when $v, t$ are constant using the Stein--Lov\'asz--Johnson paradigm. Second, we improve upon the constants of this method using the Lov\'asz local lemma. Third, when $\lambda=2$, we extend a two-stage paradigm of Sarkar and Colbourn that improves on the general bound and often produces better bounds than even when $\lambda=1$ of other results. Fourth, we extend this two-stage paradigm further for general $\lambda$ to obtain an even stronger upper bound, including using graph coloring. And finally, we determine a bound on how large $\lambda$ can be for when the number of rows is fixed.
翻译:暂无翻译
Alphabet is mostly a collection of companies. This newer Google is a bit slimmed down, with the companies that are pretty far afield of our main internet products contained in Alphabet instead.https://abc.xyz/