Scaling betweenness centrality using communication-efficient sparse matrix multiplication
Betweenness centrality (BC) is a crucial graph problem that measures the significance of a vertex by the number of shortest paths leading through it. We propose Maximal Frontier Betweenness Centrality (MFBC): a succinct BC algorithm based on novel sparse matrix multiplication routines that performs...
Uložené v:
| Vydané v: | International Conference for High Performance Computing, Networking, Storage and Analysis (Online) s. 1 - 14 |
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| Hlavní autori: | , , , |
| Médium: | Konferenčný príspevok.. |
| Jazyk: | English |
| Vydavateľské údaje: |
New York, NY, USA
ACM
12.11.2017
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| Edícia: | ACM Conferences |
| Predmet: |
Computing methodologies
> Parallel computing methodologies
> Parallel algorithms
> Massively parallel algorithms
Computing methodologies
> Symbolic and algebraic manipulation
> Symbolic and algebraic algorithms
> Algebraic algorithms
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| ISBN: | 9781450351140, 145035114X |
| ISSN: | 2167-4337 |
| On-line prístup: | Získať plný text |
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| Shrnutí: | Betweenness centrality (BC) is a crucial graph problem that measures the significance of a vertex by the number of shortest paths leading through it. We propose Maximal Frontier Betweenness Centrality (MFBC): a succinct BC algorithm based on novel sparse matrix multiplication routines that performs a factor of p1/3 less communication on p processors than the best known alternatives, for graphs with n vertices and average degree k = n/p2/3. We formulate, implement, and prove the correctness of MFBC for weighted graphs by leveraging monoids instead of semirings, which enables a surprisingly succinct formulation. MFBC scales well for both extremely sparse and relatively dense graphs. It automatically searches a space of distributed data decompositions and sparse matrix multiplication algorithms for the most advantageous configuration. The MFBC implementation outperforms the well-known CombBLAS library by up to 8x and shows more robust performance. Our design methodology is readily extensible to other graph problems. |
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| ISBN: | 9781450351140 145035114X |
| ISSN: | 2167-4337 |
| DOI: | 10.1145/3126908.3126971 |

