New Distributed Algorithms in Almost Mixing Time via Transformations from Parallel Algorithms
Abstract
We show that many classical optimization problems --- such as (1ε)-approximate maximum flow, shortest path, and transshipment --- can be computed in τmix(G)· no(1) rounds of distributed message passing, where (G) is the mixing time of the network graph G. This extends the result of Ghaffari et al.\ [PODC'17], whose main result is a distributed MST algorithm in (G)· 2O( n n) rounds in the CONGEST model, to a much wider class of optimization problems. For many practical networks of interest, e.g., peer-to-peer or overlay network structures, the mixing time (G) is small, e.g., polylogarithmic. On these networks, our algorithms bypass the ( n+D) lower bound of Das Sarma et al.\ [STOC'11], which applies for worst-case graphs and applies to all of the above optimization problems. For all of the problems except MST, this is the first distributed algorithm which takes o( n) rounds on a (nontrivial) restricted class of network graphs. Towards deriving these improved distributed algorithms, our main contribution is a general transformation that simulates any work-efficient PRAM algorithm running in T parallel rounds via a distributed algorithm running in T· (G)· 2O( n) rounds. Work- and time-efficient parallel algorithms for all of the aforementioned problems follow by combining the work of Sherman [FOCS'13, SODA'17] and Peng and Spielman [STOC'14]. Thus, simulating these parallel algorithms using our transformation framework produces the desired distributed algorithms. The core technical component of our transformation is the algorithmic problem of solving multi-commodity routing---that is, roughly, routing n packets each from a given source to a given destination---in random graphs. For this problem, we obtain a...
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.