Minor Sparsifiers and the Distributed Laplacian Paradigm
December 31, 2020 Β· Declared Dead Β· π IEEE Annual Symposium on Foundations of Computer Science
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Authors
Sebastian Forster, Gramoz Goranci, Yang P. Liu, Richard Peng, Xiaorui Sun, Mingquan Ye
arXiv ID
2012.15675
Category
cs.DS: Data Structures & Algorithms
Cross-listed
cs.DC
Citations
24
Venue
IEEE Annual Symposium on Foundations of Computer Science
Last Checked
3 months ago
Abstract
We study distributed algorithms built around minor-based vertex sparsifiers, and give the first algorithm in the CONGEST model for solving linear systems in graph Laplacian matrices to high accuracy. Our Laplacian solver has a round complexity of $O(n^{o(1)}(\sqrt{n}+D))$, and thus almost matches the lower bound of $\widetildeΞ©(\sqrt{n}+D)$, where $n$ is the number of nodes in the network and $D$ is its diameter. We show that our distributed solver yields new sublinear round algorithms for several cornerstone problems in combinatorial optimization. This is achieved by leveraging the powerful algorithmic framework of Interior Point Methods (IPMs) and the Laplacian paradigm in the context of distributed graph algorithms, which entails numerically solving optimization problems on graphs via a series of Laplacian systems. Problems that benefit from our distributed algorithmic paradigm include exact mincost flow, negative weight shortest paths, maxflow, and bipartite matching on sparse directed graphs. For the maxflow problem, this is the first exact distributed algorithm that applies to directed graphs, while the previous work by [Ghaffari et al. SICOMP'18] considered the approximate setting and works only for undirected graphs. For the mincost flow and the negative weight shortest path problems, our results constitute the first exact distributed algorithms running in a sublinear number of rounds. Given that the hybrid between IPMs and the Laplacian paradigm has proven useful for tackling numerous optimization problems in the centralized setting, we believe that our distributed solver will find future applications.
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