Global vs. s-t Vertex Connectivity Beyond Sequential: Almost-Perfect Reductions & Near-Optimal Separations

Abstract

A recent breakthrough by [LNPSY STOC'21] showed that solving s-t vertex connectivity is sufficient (up to polylogarithmic factors) to solve (global) vertex connectivity in the sequential model. This raises a natural question: What is the relationship between s-t and global vertex connectivity in other computational models? In this paper, we demonstrate that the connection between global and s-t variants behaves very differently across computational models: 1.In parallel and distributed models, we obtain almost tight reductions from global to s-t vertex connectivity. In PRAM, this leads to a nω+o(1)-work and no(1)-depth algorithm for vertex connectivity, improving over the 35-year-old O(nω+1)-work O(2n)-depth algorithm by [LLW FOCS'86], where ω is the matrix multiplication exponent and n is the number of vertices. In CONGEST, the reduction implies the first sublinear-round (when the diameter is moderately small) vertex connectivity algorithm. This answers an open question in [JM STOC'23]. 2. In contrast, we show that global vertex connectivity is strictly harder than s-t vertex connectivity in the two-party communication setting, requiring (n1.5) bits of communication. The s-t variant was known to be solvable in O(n) communication [BvdBEMN FOCS'22]. Our results resolve open problems raised by [MN STOC'20, BvdBEMN FOCS'22, AS SOSA'23]. At the heart of our results is a new graph decomposition framework we call common-neighborhood clustering, which can be applied in multiple models. Finally, we observe that global vertex connectivity cannot be solved without using s-t vertex connectivity, by proving an s-t to global reduction in dense graphs, in the PRAM and communication models.

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