Shortest path computation over disk-resident large graphs based on extended bulk synchronous parallel methods

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Abstract

The Single Source Shortest Path (SSSP) computation over large graphs has raised significant challenges to the memory capacity and processing efficiency. Utilizing disk-based parallel iterative computing is an economic solution. However, costs of disk I/O and communication affect the performance heavily. This paper proposes a state-transition model for SSSP and then designs two optimization strategies based on it. First, we introduce a tunable hash index to reduce the scale of wasteful data loaded from the disk. Second, we propose a new iterative mechanism and design an Across-step Message Pruning (ASMP) policy to deal with the communication bottleneck. The experimental results illustrate that our SSSP computation is 2 times faster than a basic Giraph (a memory-resident parallel framework) implementation. Compared with Hadoop and Hama (disk-resident parallel frameworks), the speedup is 21 to 43. © Springer-Verlag 2013.

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Wang, Z., Gu, Y., Zimmermann, R., & Yu, G. (2013). Shortest path computation over disk-resident large graphs based on extended bulk synchronous parallel methods. In Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics) (Vol. 7826 LNCS, pp. 1–15). https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-37450-0_1

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