Title: The Parallel Boost Graph Library Speaker: Andrew Lumsdaine Location: Building 980, Room 24 (Sandia NM) Brief Abstract: We present a library of generic software components for parallel and distributed computations on graphs, based on the Boost Graph Library (BGL). The BGL consists of a rich set of generic graph algorithms and supporting data structures, but it was not originally designed with parallelism in mind. In this talk, we revisit the abstractions comprising the BGL in the context of distributed-memory parallelism, lifting away the implicit requirements of sequential execution and a single shared address space. We illustrate our approach by describing the process as applied to one of the core algorithms in the BGL, breadth-first search. The result is a generic algorithm that is unchanged from the sequential algorithm, requiring only the introduction of external (distributed) data structures for parallel execution. More importantly, the generic implementation retains its interface and semantics, such that other distributed algorithms can be built upon it, just as algorithms are layered in the sequential case. CSRI POC: Jonathan Berry, (505) 284-4021 |