Parallel Graph Connectivity in Log Diameter Rounds

May 08, 2018 ยท Declared Dead ยท ๐Ÿ› IEEE Annual Symposium on Foundations of Computer Science

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Authors Alexandr Andoni, Clifford Stein, Zhao Song, Zhengyu Wang, Peilin Zhong arXiv ID 1805.03055 Category cs.DS: Data Structures & Algorithms Cross-listed cs.DC Citations 104 Venue IEEE Annual Symposium on Foundations of Computer Science Last Checked 2 months ago
Abstract
We study graph connectivity problem in MPC model. On an undirected graph with $n$ nodes and $m$ edges, $O(\log n)$ round connectivity algorithms have been known for over 35 years. However, no algorithms with better complexity bounds were known. In this work, we give fully scalable, faster algorithms for the connectivity problem, by parameterizing the time complexity as a function of the diameter of the graph. Our main result is a $O(\log D \log\log_{m/n} n)$ time connectivity algorithm for diameter-$D$ graphs, using $ฮ˜(m)$ total memory. If our algorithm can use more memory, it can terminate in fewer rounds, and there is no lower bound on the memory per processor. We extend our results to related graph problems such as spanning forest, finding a DFS sequence, exact/approximate minimum spanning forest, and bottleneck spanning forest. We also show that achieving similar bounds for reachability in directed graphs would imply faster boolean matrix multiplication algorithms. We introduce several new algorithmic ideas. We describe a general technique called double exponential speed problem size reduction which roughly means that if we can use total memory $N$ to reduce a problem from size $n$ to $n/k$, for $k=(N/n)^{ฮ˜(1)}$ in one phase, then we can solve the problem in $O(\log\log_{N/n} n)$ phases. In order to achieve this fast reduction for graph connectivity, we use a multistep algorithm. One key step is a carefully constructed truncated broadcasting scheme where each node broadcasts neighbor sets to its neighbors in a way that limits the size of the resulting neighbor sets. Another key step is random leader contraction, where we choose a smaller set of leaders than many previous works do.
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