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Transitive-Closure Spanners

Transitive-Closure Spanners. David Woodruff IBM Almaden. Joint work with Arnab Bhattacharyya MIT Elena Grigorescu MIT Kyomin Jung MIT Sofya Raskhodnikova Penn State.

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Transitive-Closure Spanners

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  1. Transitive-Closure Spanners David Woodruff IBM Almaden Joint work with Arnab Bhattacharyya MIT Elena Grigorescu MIT Kyomin Jung MIT Sofya Raskhodnikova Penn State

  2. Graph Spanners [Awerbuch85,Peleg Schäffer89] A subgraph H of a graph G is a k-spanner if for all pairs of vertices u, v in G, dH(u,v) ≤ k dG(u,v) Goal: find a sparsest k-spanner dense graph G sparse subgraph H

  3. Transitive-Closure Spanners Transitive closure TC(G) has an edge from u to v iff G has a path from u to v k-TC-spannerH of G has dH(u,v) ≤k iff G has a path from u to v Alternatively: k-TC-spanner of G is a k-spanner of TC(G) G TC(G)

  4. Example: Directed Line on n Vertices • 2-TC-spanner O(n log n) edges • 3-TC-spanner O(n log log n) edges • 4-TC-spanner O(n log* n) edges • k-TC-spanner O(n(k,n)) edges • Add a (k-2)-TC-spanner on hubs • Connect each node to the hubs before and after • Recurse on the fragments between hubs … … n1/2 hubs

  5. Previous work Structural results on TC-spanners (what is a sparsest k-TC-spanner for a given graph family?) • Shortcut graphs (special case when |E(H)|· 2 |E(G)|) [Thorup 92, 95, Hesse 03] • For directed trees [Thorup 97] implicit in • data structures [Yao 82, Alon Schieber 87, Chazelle 87] • property testing [Dodis Goldreich Lehman Raskhodnikova Ron Samorodnitsky 99] • access control [Attalah Frikken Blanton 05] Computational results on directed spanners (given a graph, compute a sparsest k-spanner) • O(log n)-approximation algorithm for k=2[Kortsarz Peleg 94] • O(n2/3 polylog n)-approximation for k=3[Elkin Peleg 99]

  6. Our Contributions • Common abstraction for several applications • property testing • access control • data structures • Structural results on TC-spanners • path-separable graphs • Computational results k-TC-Spanner: Given a graph, compute a sparsest k-TC-spanner • Algorithms • Inapproximability

  7. Application 1: Testing if a List is Sorted • Is a list of n numbers sorted? Requires reading entire list. • Is a list of n numbers sorted or ²-far from sorted? (An ² fraction of list entries have to be changed to make it sorted.) [Ergün Kannan Kumar Rubinfeld Viswanathan 98]: O((log n)/²) time [Fischer 01]: (log n) queries

  8. Is a list sorted or ²-far from sorted? [Dodis Goldreich Lehman Raskhodnikova Ron Samorodnitsky 99] Test can be viewed as: Pick a random edge from sparsest 2-TC-spanner for the line and compare its endpoints. Reject if they are out of order. 1 2 5 4 3 6 7 Claim 1. There are ·n log n edges in the 2-TC-spanner. Claim 2. Green numbers are sorted. Proof: Any two green numbers are connected by a length-2 path of black edges Analysis of the test: • All sorted lists are accepted. • If a list is ²-far from sorted, it has ¸²nred numbers, )¸² n/2 red edges – If £((log n )/²) edges are checked, a red edge will be discovered w.p. ¸2/3 5 4 3

  9. Generalization: Monotonicity over PO domains 1 1 • 4 5 6 • 4 5 6 • 3 4 5 • 1 2 3 4 [FLNRRS 02]: Graph = partially ordered domain; node labels = values of the function • A function is monotone if there are no violated edges (along which labels decrease): 1 0 • A function is ²-far from monotone if ¸² fraction of labels need to be changed to make it monotone. 1 1 0 0 1 2 5 4 3 6 7 0 0 1 1 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 monotone ½-far from monotone

  10. Monotonicity Testers via Sparse 2-TC-spanners Lemma. If Ghas a 2-TC-spanner H with s(n) edges, thenmonotonicity of functions on G can be tested in time O(s(n)/(² n)) Proof: 1. Say an edge (a,b) is violated in TC(G) if f(a) > f(b) 2. If function on G is ε-far from monotone, there is a matching M in TC(G) of εn/2 violated edges [DGLRS 99] 3. A violated edge in TC(G) either appears in H, or there is a path of length 2 between the endpoints of the edge in H. By transitivity, one of the edges on the path is also violated. But any edge in H can intersect at most 2 edges in the matching M. Thus, there at least εn/4 violated edges in H 4. Sample O(s(n)/(εn)) edges of H, check if any are violated

  11. Application 2: Access Control Efficient key management in access hierarchies [Attalah Frikken Blanton 05, Attalah Blanton Frikken 06, Santis Ferrara Massuci 07] Used in content distribution, operating systems and project development Access class with private key ki Need ki to efficiently compute kj from Pij Permission edge with public key Pij To speed up key derivation time, add shortcut edges consistent with permission edges

  12. Application 3: Data Structures Computing partial products in a semigroup [Yao 82, Alon Schieber 87, Chazelle 87, Thorup 97] Example: Goal: quickly answer queries max(ai ,…,ai) for all i ·j. • Question: How many values should we store if we want to compute max of at most knumbers per query? • Answer: storage = size of sparsest k-TC-spanner for the directed line. This example generalizes to other partial products and to directed trees. max(ai ,…,aj) … aj … an a1 … ai

  13. Our Contributions • Common abstraction for several applications • Structural results on TC-spanners • Path-separable graphs O(1)-path-separable graphs have k-TC-spanners of size O(nlog n ¢(k,n)) • e.g., improves run time of monotonicity testers on planar graphs from O((n1/2 log n)/²)[FLNRRS02] to O((log2n)/²) • Computational results k-TC-Spanner: Given a graph, compute a sparsest k-TC-spanner • Algorithms • Inapproximability

  14. Graph Separators (for Undirected Graphs) Used in recursive constructions S-separators[Lipton Tarjan] • Removing S nodes disconnects a graph G on n nodes into connected components with ·n/2 nodes each s-path-separators[Abraham Gavoille 06] • Removing nodes on s paths from any spanning tree of G disconnects G into connected components with ·n/2 nodes each Gain • For some graphs s << S e.g., planar graphs are £(n1/2)-separable but 3-path-separable from any spanning tree of G

  15. Constructing TC-spanners via Path Separators • Construct k-TC-spanner for each path separator (line) P as before. • For each node v with a path to some node in P: • Let v’= smallest node in Psuch that vÃv’ • At each stage of recursion, connect v to the smallest hub above v’ • Deal symmetrically with each node u with a path from some node in P. Claim. If vÃu via some node in P, we added a path of length ·k from v to u. Proof: v and u are connected to the same hubs as v’ and u’, respectively. u v’ u’ O(n(k,n) ¢ log n ) edges P v ·(k,n) edges

  16. Path Separators for Directed Graphs Our guarantee. If the underlying undirected graph for G is s-path-separable, we can efficiently find a set of directed paths in G: • Removing nodes on these paths disconnects G into connected components with ·n/2 nodes each • Each vertex v is comparable to nodes on O(s) paths Technique. Unlike [Abraham Gavoille 06] , we choose path separators dynamically (not from the same spanning tree). Theorem. O(1)-path-separable graphs have k-TC-spanners of size O(nlog n ¢(k,n)) H-minor free graphs are O(1)-path-separable [Abraham Gavoille 06]

  17. Our Contributions • Common abstraction for several applications • Structural results on TC-spanners • Computational results on k-TC-Spanner Algorithms Hardness

  18. Approximation Algorithms • For any k > 2, we achieve an O((n lg n)1-1/k)approximation algorithm for the Directed Spanner Problem in polynomial time • Gives the same ratio for Transitive-Closure spanners • Yields the first sublinear ratio for k > 3 • Solves the main open question of [Elkin Peleg 05] • Our technique is a new balancing of a convex program with a sampling-based approach • Greatly simplifies the previous O(n2/3 polylog n)-approximation algorithm [Elkin Peleg 05] for k = 3

  19. Approximation Algorithms: Linear Program • For each edge e2G, introduce a variable xe, which indicates whether or not we include e in the k-Spanner H • For each path p of length at most k in G, introduce a variable yp. For constant k, the number of such paths is O(nk+1) = poly(n). • Integer programming formulation: min e xe s.t. 8 e =(a,b) 2G, sump: a -> b, |p| · k yp¸ 1 8 p = {(a0, a1), (a1, a2), …, (ak-1, ak)}, yp· minj=1k x(aj-1, j) 8 e, xe2 {0,1} 8 p, yp2 {0,1} • Linear programming relaxation: xe, yp2 [0,1]

  20. Approximation Algorithms: Linear Program min e xe s.t. 8 e =(a,b) 2G, sump: a -> b, |p| · k yp¸ 1 8 p = {(a0, a1), (a1, a2), …, (ak-1, ak)}, yp· minj=1k x(aj-1, j) 8 e, 8 p, xe2 [0,1], yp2 [0,1] • Solve the linear program, let the solution variables be xe*, yp* • Define a rounding scheme: include e in the 2-Spanner H if and only if xe*¸ 1/n1-1/k • If the number of paths of length at most k between vertices a, b in G is at most n1-1/k, then the constraint sump: a -> b, |p| · k yp¸ 1 ensures there is a path p for which y*p¸ 1/n1-1/k • The constraintyp·minj=1k x(aj-1, j)ensures that for all edges e 2 p, we have xe*¸ 1/n1-1/k, and so e will be added to H

  21. Approximation Algorithms: Sampling • Problem: Integrality Gap • If many paths of length at most k between two vertices, LP might assign each path small weight • But if there are at least rpaths of length at most k between two vertices, then there are at least r1/(k-1) vertices in G which are contained on such paths • Solution: sample O(n/r1/(k-1))vertices at random and grow a shortest path tree around them. Set r= n1-1/k.

  22. Approximation Algorithms: Sampling Sampling solves the “many paths” case LP solves the “few paths” case … • For any (a,b) 2 G, either the linear program includes a path between a and b of length at most k in the spanner H, or we will randomly sample a vertex v on a path p of length at most k between a and b. Since we include a shortest path tree around v in H, the distance from a to b in H will be at most k.

  23. Approximation Algorithms: LP+Sampling • Linear Programming + Sampling: • Initialize Hto empty set • For each edge e, if xe* ≥ 1/n1-1/k, then add e to H • Randomly sample r = O~(n1-1/k) vertices z1, …, zr • For each i, add the edges in BFS(zi) to H • Output H • Claim: With probability at least 1-1/n, we get H is a k-Spanner of G • Claim: |H| = O~(n1-1/k) OPT • If OPT’ is the optimum of the linear program, then OPT’ · OPT, and the cost we get from rounding the solution is at most n1-1/kOPT’ · n1-1/kOPT • Each shortest path tree around each of O~(n1-1/k) sampled vertices has O(n) edges, so we add O~(n2-1/k) edges. Since we can assume that the input graph G is connected, we have OPT ¸ n-1, so we again add at most n1-1/kOPT edges.

  24. Approximation Algorithms: Wrapup • Exponential number of variables: • Number of path variables grows exponentially with k • Can replace yp with min(xe1, xe2, …, xek) for p = (e1, …, ek) Now we have a convex program in O(n2) variables, but the constraints are of exponential size • Can design a separation oracle to solve this with the ellipsoid algorithm. • Can also derandomize the sampling by a simple greedy algorithm.

  25. k-TC-Spanner: (2log1-²n)-inapproximability for k>2 Starting point: • Reduce from Min-Rep • Use generalized butterfly graphs and broom graphs

  26. supergraph The Min-Rep Problem Instance. Undirected bipartite graph In each part: n nodes, grouped in r clusters |Ai|=|Bj|= n/r A1 B1 • (Ai,Bj) is a superedgeiff • some node in Aiis adjacent • to some node in Bj. B2 A2 • Rep-Cover is a node set S: for each superedge • (Ai,Bj) there is edge (a,b) with a2AiÅS, b2BjÅS • Goal. Find minimum size rep-cover. A3 B3 Theorem[Elkin Peleg 07]. Min-Rep is (2log1-²n)-inapproximableunless NP µ DTIME(npolylog n).

  27. Generalized Butterfly Graphs Nodes: (a1,a2,…,ak-1, i) where a1,…,ak-12 [d] and i2 [k] • Outdegree = indegree = d • There is a unique path from (a1,…,ak-1, 1)to (b1,…,bk-1, k) • Each shortcut edge is on at most d k-3 such paths (a1,…,ai,…,ak-1, i) . . . . . . (a1,…,bi,…,ak-1, i+1) layer k layer 1 layeri+1 layeri

  28. Graphs Used in the Reduction • Generalized butterfly • Broom • A complete bipartite graph with disjoint stars attached to all right nodes d d d

  29. Reduction from Min-Rep to k-TC-Spanner A1 B1 B2 A2 A3 B3 Butterflies k layers Brooms 3 layers Min-Rep

  30. A Sparse TC-Spanner for the Hard Instance A1 B1 B2 A2 A3 B3 layer k-2 OPT d 2 + |G| edges, where OPT is the size of minimum rep-cover

  31. Conclusion Our contributions • Common abstraction for several applications • monotonicity testing, access control, data structures • Structural results on TC-spanners • path-separable graphs • Computational results on k-TC-Spanner • new algorithms and inapproximability results Open questions • At what point do TC-spanners admit efficient approximation algorithms? • Showed strong inapproximability for any constant k > 2 • Showed O(1)-approximation algorithm for k = O~(n1/2) • Other applications of TC-spanners?

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