The Complexity of Symmetry Breaking in Massive Graphs

05/05/2021
by   Christian Konrad, et al.
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The goal of this paper is to understand the complexity of symmetry breaking problems, specifically maximal independent set (MIS) and the closely related β-ruling set problem, in two computational models suited for large-scale graph processing, namely the k-machine model and the graph streaming model. We present a number of results. For MIS in the k-machine model, we improve the Õ(m/k^2 + Δ/k)-round upper bound of Klauck et al. (SODA 2015) by presenting an Õ(m/k^2)-round algorithm. We also present an Ω̃(n/k^2) round lower bound for MIS, the first lower bound for a symmetry breaking problem in the k-machine model. For β-ruling sets, we use hierarchical sampling to obtain more efficient algorithms in the k-machine model and also in the graph streaming model. More specifically, we obtain a k-machine algorithm that runs in Õ(β nΔ^1/β/k^2) rounds and, by using a similar hierarchical sampling technique, we obtain one-pass algorithms for both insertion-only and insertion-deletion streams that use O(β· n^1+1/2^β-1) space. The latter result establishes a clear separation between MIS, which is known to require Ω(n^2) space (Cormode et al., ICALP 2019), and β-ruling sets, even for β = 2. Finally, we present an even faster 2-ruling set algorithm in the k-machine model, one that runs in Õ(n/k^2-ϵ + k^1-ϵ) rounds for any ϵ, 0 ≤ϵ≤ 1.

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