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Distributed And Parallel Low-Diameter Decompositions for Arbitrary and Restricted Graphs

Information Technology Convergence and Services (ITCS), 2024
Main:17 Pages
4 Figures
Bibliography:1 Pages
2 Tables
Appendix:51 Pages
Abstract

We consider the distributed and parallel construction of low-diameter decompositions with strong diameter for (weighted) graphs and (weighted) graphs that can be separated through kO~(1)k \in \tilde{O}(1) shortest paths. This class of graphs includes planar graphs, graphs of bounded treewidth, and graphs that exclude a fixed minor KrK_r. We present algorithms in the PRAM, CONGEST, and the novel HYBRID communication model that are competitive in all relevant parameters. Given D>0\mathcal{D} > 0, our low-diameter decomposition algorithm divides the graph into connected clusters of strong diameter D\mathcal{D}. For a arbitrary graph, an edge eEe \in E of length e\ell_e is cut between two clusters with probability O(elog(n)D)O(\frac{\ell_e\cdot\log(n)}{\mathcal{D} }). If the graph can be separated by kO~(1)k \in \tilde{O}(1) paths, the probability improves to O(eloglognD)O(\frac{\ell_e\cdot\log \log n}{\mathcal{D} }). In either case, the decompositions can be computed in O~(1)\tilde{O}(1) depth and O~(kn)\tilde{O}(kn) work in the PRAM and O~(1)\tilde{O}(1) time in the HYBRID model. In CONGEST, the runtimes are O~(HD+n)\tilde{O}(HD + \sqrt{n}) and O~(HD)\tilde{O}(HD) respectively. All these results hold w.h.p. Broadly speaking, we present distributed and parallel implementations of sequential divide-and-conquer algorithms where we replace exact shortest paths with approximate shortest paths. In contrast to exact paths, these can be efficiently computed in the distributed and parallel setting [STOC '22]. Further, and perhaps more importantly, we show that instead of explicitly computing vertex-separators to enable efficient parallelization of these algorithms, it suffices to sample a few random paths of bounded length and the nodes close to them. Thereby, we do not require complex embeddings whose implementation is unknown in the distributed and parallel setting.

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