Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jauregui, Benjamin, Li, Jason, Montealegre, Pedro, Todinca, Ioan
Format: Preprint
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/1805.10708
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1866912482075869184
author Jauregui, Benjamin
Li, Jason
Montealegre, Pedro
Todinca, Ioan
author_facet Jauregui, Benjamin
Li, Jason
Montealegre, Pedro
Todinca, Ioan
contents Algorithmic meta-theorems, stating that graph properties expressible in some particular logic can be decided efficiently in graph classes having some specific structural properties, are now standard in sequential graph algorithms. One of the most classic examples is Courcelle's theorem: all properties expressible in Monadic Second-Order logic (MSO) are decidable in linear time in graphs of bounded treewidth. We provide here a distributed version of Courcelle's theorem, in the standard CONGEST model for distributed computing: For any MSO formula $φ$ and any constant $k$, there is a CONGEST algorithm that, given an input communication network $G$ of treewidth at most $k$ and of diameter $D$, decides if $G$ satisfies property $φ$ in $\tilde O(D)$ rounds. Simple examples show that the dependency on $D$ is unavoidable. Also, if we drop the assumption of bounded treewidth, deciding MSO properties such as 3-colorability are known to require $\tildeΩ(n^2)$ rounds in the CONGEST model. Our results extend to optimization problems (e.g., computing a maximum size independent set, or a minimum dominating set) and counting (e.g. triangle counting). As usual, the $\tilde{O}$ notation hides polylogarithmic factors in $n$; here it also hides a constant factor depending on $k$ and on the MSO formula $φ$. We also give a distributed algorithm producing a linear approximation for treewidth: For any $k$, it decides that the treewidth of the input network $G$ is larger than $k$ or computes a tree decomposition of width $O(k)$ and depth $O(\log n)$, in $\tilde O(k^{O(k)} D)$ rounds in CONGEST. Our algorithms make use of the low-congestion shortcuts framework introduced by Ghaffari and Haeupler [SODA 2016], and our main technical tool is an $\tilde O(k^4 D)$ algorithm for computing $(s,t)$-vertex separators of size at most $k+1$ in graphs of treewidth at most $k$.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_1805_10708
institution arXiv
publishDate 2018
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Distributed Treewidth Computation and Courcelle's Theorem in the CONGEST Model
Jauregui, Benjamin
Li, Jason
Montealegre, Pedro
Todinca, Ioan
Data Structures and Algorithms
Algorithmic meta-theorems, stating that graph properties expressible in some particular logic can be decided efficiently in graph classes having some specific structural properties, are now standard in sequential graph algorithms. One of the most classic examples is Courcelle's theorem: all properties expressible in Monadic Second-Order logic (MSO) are decidable in linear time in graphs of bounded treewidth. We provide here a distributed version of Courcelle's theorem, in the standard CONGEST model for distributed computing: For any MSO formula $φ$ and any constant $k$, there is a CONGEST algorithm that, given an input communication network $G$ of treewidth at most $k$ and of diameter $D$, decides if $G$ satisfies property $φ$ in $\tilde O(D)$ rounds. Simple examples show that the dependency on $D$ is unavoidable. Also, if we drop the assumption of bounded treewidth, deciding MSO properties such as 3-colorability are known to require $\tildeΩ(n^2)$ rounds in the CONGEST model. Our results extend to optimization problems (e.g., computing a maximum size independent set, or a minimum dominating set) and counting (e.g. triangle counting). As usual, the $\tilde{O}$ notation hides polylogarithmic factors in $n$; here it also hides a constant factor depending on $k$ and on the MSO formula $φ$. We also give a distributed algorithm producing a linear approximation for treewidth: For any $k$, it decides that the treewidth of the input network $G$ is larger than $k$ or computes a tree decomposition of width $O(k)$ and depth $O(\log n)$, in $\tilde O(k^{O(k)} D)$ rounds in CONGEST. Our algorithms make use of the low-congestion shortcuts framework introduced by Ghaffari and Haeupler [SODA 2016], and our main technical tool is an $\tilde O(k^4 D)$ algorithm for computing $(s,t)$-vertex separators of size at most $k+1$ in graphs of treewidth at most $k$.
title Distributed Treewidth Computation and Courcelle's Theorem in the CONGEST Model
topic Data Structures and Algorithms
url https://arxiv.org/abs/1805.10708