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Parallelizing the Graph Betweenness Centrality Calculation

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Parallelizing the Graph Betweenness Centrality Calculation

Introduction

Betweenness centrality is a measure of centrality in a graph which is calculated based on the ratio of shortest paths passing through a particular vertex to the total number of shortest paths between all pairs of vertices.
Centrality is the measure of importance of a vertex in a graph. Centrality is an important measure in various real world scenarios. For example, finding the best place to start a restaurant in a city, identifying an influential person in a social network, identifying the busiest server in a network etc. are all cases where centrality concept is necessary.
In our endeavour we are only considering well connected unweighted graphs. The Brandes algorithmis asymptotically the best algorithm present to calculate the BC of the nodes in the graph. It has a run time of O(n*m) where n is the number of vertices and m is the number of edges in the graph.
We aim to parallelise this algorithm on the GPU using CUDA.

Definitions

Few graph definitions that we deemed necessary before tackling this problem. They are as follows:

  1. The graph is represented as G = (V,E) where V is the set of vertices and E is the set of edges. The variables n=|V| and m=|E| represent the number of vertices and edges in the graph respectively.
  2. The shortest path between two vertices is the sequence of edges with the least number of edges within it.
  3. Diameter of the graph is the longest shortest path in G.
  4. BFS or Breadth First Search Algorithm:
    • It explores the graph starting from the source node and finds all vertices as a result finding the shortest path to the vertex from the source.
    • Each set of inspected vertices are known as the vertex frontier and thier outgoing edges are known as the edge frontier.
  5. Representation in memory:
    • Graphs are usually stored in the form of an adjacency matrix of size n*n, where A[i][j] will be 1 if there exists an edge between vertices i and j. However this matrix will be sparse as many of the cells will be 0.
    • Instead of using a 2D array with O(n^2) space complexity, the Compressed Sparse Row (CSR) format is used.
    • There are two 1D arrays present, the row offsets (R) and column indices (C). R has a size of n+1.
    • Array R points at where each vertex's adjacency list beings and ends within the help of array C. For example, the adjacency list of a vertex u starts at C[R[u]] and ends at C[R[u+1]−1].

BC Calculation - The Brandes Algorithm

  1. The betweeness centrality each is found for each and every node in the graph G. BC for a node v is defined as the sum of the ratio of the number of shortest paths between a pair of nodes where v is present in the path to the number of shortest paths between the pair, mathematically give as:
    Formula
  2. The Belmann Criterion states that the number of shortest paths between s and t with v in it is given as :
    Formula
  3. So basically we have to find the number of shortest paths between each pai of nodes and sum up all the pair dependencies, where δst(v) is the pair dependecy between nodes s and t with v as intermediate node.
    Formula
    Formula
  4. How do we go about counting the number of paths between each pair?
    1. The BFS algorithm for graphs does it in O(m) time for unweighted graphs.
    2. It not only gives us the length of the shortest paths but also the predcessor list Ps(v) which contains all the nodes from which you can reach node v via a shortest path with s as the source node.
  5. The combinatorial shortest-path counting formula is :
    Formula
  6. In the Brandes algorithm, the concept of accumulation of pair dependecies was used. One node at a time is taken (basically one source node at a time in BFS, name it s) and all pair wise dependencies for node v are found with s as one of the pair members. This gives us a dependency of node s on v given as δs(v).
    Formula
  7. How do we calculate δs(v)?
    1. Consider node s as the source and v as it's only neighbour, through which multiple shortest paths are present as shown in the figure.
      Formula
    2. The dependency can be easily given as :
      Formula
    3. If multiple shortest paths are present this can be generalised to :
      Formula
  8. The summation of all dependencies on v of every node in the graph will give us the value of CB(v).

GPU Parallelisation

The graph traversal and the shortest path calculation are all independent and as a result, this algorithm is parallelisable. Coarse gain parallelism is implemented by passing each source node to a block and fine grained parallelism is achieved by assigning threads to vertices in path calculations.
We implemented the work efficient approach to parallelising the algorithm. It can briefly explained as follows:

  1. Each source node is assigned to a block of threads.
  2. During the BFS, a thread is assigned to each node in the vertex frontier. Only after all nodes in the current vertex frontier have been inspected (i.e after a level in the graph is cleared) will allthe threads move onto the next level. A synchronisation barrier is placed for each level.
  3. Futhermore to avoid redundant work, two queues are present to ensure every node in the graph is only placed once in the queue.
  4. Dependency calculation is done by iterating across the levels in the reverse fashion. The delta value is calculated in a recursive manner.
  5. Cb is then calculated by suming up all the delta (dependency) values that were obtained from the previous steps.

Results

Graphs with various number of nodes varying from 10^2 to 10^9 are generated. The algorithm was run on all these graphs and the BC values along with time taken were tabulated and shown below.

References

  1. Nvidia Blog
  2. ACM - Accelerating GPU Betweenness Centrality
  3. Paper from The University of Konstanz

Members

  1. Gurupungav Narayanan 16CO114
  2. Nihal Haneef 16CO128

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