ngraph.sparse-collection
Version:
Subset of the University of Florida sparse matrix collection
122 lines (48 loc) • 4.35 kB
Markdown
UF Sparse Matrix Collection, Tim Davis
http://www.cise.ufl.edu/research/sparse/matrices/LPnetlib/lp_perold
[]
id: 653
date: 1989
author: N. Gould
ed: D. Gay
fields: title name A b id aux kind date author ed notes
aux: c lo hi z0
kind: linear programming problem
notes:
A Netlib LP problem, in lp/data. For more information
send email to netlib@ornl.gov with the message:
send index from lp
send readme from lp/data
The following are relevant excerpts from lp/data/readme (by David M. Gay):
The column and nonzero counts in the PROBLEM SUMMARY TABLE below exclude
slack and surplus columns and the right-hand side vector, but include
the cost row. We have omitted other free rows and all but the first
right-hand side vector, as noted below. The byte count is for the
MPS compressed file; it includes a newline character at the end of each
line. These files start with a blank initial line intended to prevent
mail programs from discarding any of the data. The BR column indicates
whether a problem has bounds or ranges: B stands for "has bounds", R
for "has ranges". The BOUND-TYPE TABLE below shows the bound types
present in those problems that have bounds.
The optimal value is from MINOS version 5.3 (of Sept. 1988)
running on a VAX with default options.
PROBLEM SUMMARY TABLE
Name Rows Cols Nonzeros Bytes BR Optimal Value
PEROLD 626 1376 6026 47486 B -9.3807580773E+03
BOUND-TYPE TABLE
PEROLD UP LO FX FR
Nick Gould supplied PEROLD, from the Harwell collection of LP test problems.
Bob Bixby reports that the CPLEX solver (running on a Sparc station)
finds slightly different optimal values for some of the problems.
On a MIPS processor, MINOS version 5.3 (with crash and scaling of
December 1989) also finds different optimal values for some of the
problems. The following table shows the values that differ from those
shown above. (Whether CPLEX finds different values on the recently
added problems remains to be seen.)
Problem CPLEX(Sparc) MINOS(MIPS)
PEROLD -9.3807552782E+03 -9.3807553661E+03
Concerning the problems he supplied, Nick Gould says that PEROLD "is
another Pilot model (Pilot1)".
Added to Netlib on 6 April 1989
