Lifelong Multi-Agent Path Finding for Online Pickup and Delivery Tasks
Abstract
The multi-agent path-finding (MAPF) problem has recently received a lot of attention. However, it does not capture important characteristics of many real-world domains, such as automated warehouses, where agents are constantly engaged with new tasks. In this paper, we therefore study a lifelong version of the MAPF problem, called the multi-agent pickup and delivery (MAPD) problem. In the MAPD problem, agents have to attend to a stream of delivery tasks in an online setting. One agent has to be assigned to each delivery task. This agent has to first move to a given pickup location and then to a given delivery location while avoiding collisions with other agents. We present two decoupled MAPD algorithms, Token Passing (TP) and Token Passing with Task Swaps (TPTS). Theoretically, we show that they solve all well-formed MAPD instances, a realistic subclass of MAPD instances. Experimentally, we compare them against a centralized strawman MAPD algorithm without this guarantee in a simulated warehouse system. TP can easily be extended to a fully distributed MAPD algorithm and is the best choice when real-time computation is of primary concern since it remains efficient for MAPD instances with hundreds of agents and tasks. TPTS requires limited communication among agents and balances well between TP and the centralized MAPD algorithm.
BibTeX
@conference{Ma-2017-131439,author = {Hang Ma and Jiaoyang Li and T. K. Satish Kumar and Sven Koenig},
title = {Lifelong Multi-Agent Path Finding for Online Pickup and Delivery Tasks},
booktitle = {Proceedings of 16th International Joint Conference on Autonomous Agents and MultiAgent Systems (AAMAS '17)},
year = {2017},
month = {May},
pages = {837 - 845},
}