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Abstract

Two interior-point algorithms are proposed and analyzed, for the (local) solution of (possibly) indefinite quadratic programming problems. They are of the Newton-KKT variety in that (much like in the case of primal-dual algorithms for linear programming) search directions for the “primal” variables and the Karush-Kuhn-Tucker (KKT) multiplier estimates are components of the Newton (or quasi-Newton) direction for the solution of the equalities in the first-order KKT conditions of optimality or a perturbed version of these conditions. Our algorithms are adapted from previously proposed algorithms for convex quadratic programming and general nonlinear programming. First, inspired by recent work by P. Tseng based on a “primal” affine-scaling algorithm (à la Dikin) [J. of Global Optimization, 30 (2004), no. 2, 285–300], we consider a simple Newton-KKT affine-scaling algorithm. Then, a “barrier” version of the same algorithm is considered, which reduces to the affine-scaling version when the barrier parameter is set to zero at every iteration, rather than to the prescribed value. Global and local quadratic convergence are proved under nondegeneracy assumptions for both algorithms. Numerical results on randomly generated problems suggest that the proposed algorithms may be of great practical interest.

Keywords  Interior-point algorithms - Primal-dual algorithms - Indefinite quadratic programming  - Newton-KKT

The work of the first author was supported in part by the School of Computational Science of Florida State University through a postdoctoral fellowship. Part of this work was done while this author was a Research Fellow with the Belgian National Fund for Scientific Research (Aspirant du F.N.R.S.) at the University of Liège. The work of the second author was supported in part by the National Science Foundation under Grants DMI9813057 and DMI-0422931 and by the US Department of Energy under Grant DEFG0204ER25655. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this paper are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation or those of the US Department of Energy.

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