Performance-Driven Optimization of Parallel Breadth-First Search
Abstract
Breadth-first search (BFS) is a fundamental graph algorithm that presents significant challenges for parallel implementation due to irregular memory access patterns, load imbalance and synchronization overhead. In this paper, we introduce a set of optimization strategies for parallel BFS on multicore systems, including hybrid traversal, bitmap-based visited set, and a novel non-atomic distance update mechanism. We evaluate these optimizations across two different architectures - a 24-core Intel Xeon platform and a 128-core AMD EPYC system - using a diverse set of synthetic and real-world graphs. Our results demonstrate that the effectiveness of optimizations varies significantly based on graph characteristics and hardware architecture. For small-diameter graphs, our hybrid BFS implementation achieves speedups of 3-8x on the Intel platform and 3-10× on the AMD system compared to a conventional parallel BFS implementation. However, the performance of large-diameter graphs is more nuanced, with some of the optimizations showing varied performance across platforms including performance degradation in some cases.
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