Library Methods

Gelly has a growing collection of graph algorithms for easily analyzing large-scale Graphs.

Gelly’s library methods can be used by simply calling the run() method on the input graph:

Java

  1. ExecutionEnvironment env = ExecutionEnvironment.getExecutionEnvironment();
  2. Graph<Long, Long, NullValue> graph = ...
  3. // run Label Propagation for 30 iterations to detect communities on the input graph
  4. DataSet<Vertex<Long, Long>> verticesWithCommunity = graph.run(new LabelPropagation<Long>(30));
  5. // print the result
  6. verticesWithCommunity.print();

Scala

  1. val env = ExecutionEnvironment.getExecutionEnvironment
  2. val graph: Graph[java.lang.Long, java.lang.Long, NullValue] = ...
  3. // run Label Propagation for 30 iterations to detect communities on the input graph
  4. val verticesWithCommunity = graph.run(new LabelPropagation[java.lang.Long, java.lang.Long, NullValue](30))
  5. // print the result
  6. verticesWithCommunity.print()

Community Detection

Overview

In graph theory, communities refer to groups of nodes that are well connected internally, but sparsely connected to other groups. This library method is an implementation of the community detection algorithm described in the paper Towards real-time community detection in large networks.

Details

The algorithm is implemented using scatter-gather iterations. Initially, each vertex is assigned a Tuple2 containing its initial value along with a score equal to 1.0. In each iteration, vertices send their labels and scores to their neighbors. Upon receiving messages from its neighbors, a vertex chooses the label with the highest score and subsequently re-scores it using the edge values, a user-defined hop attenuation parameter, delta, and the superstep number. The algorithm converges when vertices no longer update their value or when the maximum number of iterations is reached.

Usage

The algorithm takes as input a Graph with any vertex type, Long vertex values, and Double edge values. It returns a Graph of the same type as the input, where the vertex values correspond to the community labels, i.e. two vertices belong to the same community if they have the same vertex value. The constructor takes two parameters:

  • maxIterations: the maximum number of iterations to run.
  • delta: the hop attenuation parameter, with default value 0.5.

Label Propagation

Overview

This is an implementation of the well-known Label Propagation algorithm described in this paper. The algorithm discovers communities in a graph, by iteratively propagating labels between neighbors. Unlike the Community Detection library method, this implementation does not use scores associated with the labels.

Details

The algorithm is implemented using scatter-gather iterations. Labels are expected to be of type Comparable and are initialized using the vertex values of the input Graph. The algorithm iteratively refines discovered communities by propagating labels. In each iteration, a vertex adopts the label that is most frequent among its neighbors’ labels. In case of a tie (i.e. two or more labels appear with the same frequency), the algorithm picks the greater label. The algorithm converges when no vertex changes its value or the maximum number of iterations has been reached. Note that different initializations might lead to different results.

Usage

The algorithm takes as input a Graph with a Comparable vertex type, a Comparable vertex value type and an arbitrary edge value type. It returns a DataSet of vertices, where the vertex value corresponds to the community in which this vertex belongs after convergence. The constructor takes one parameter:

  • maxIterations: the maximum number of iterations to run.

Connected Components

Overview

This is an implementation of the Weakly Connected Components algorithm. Upon convergence, two vertices belong to the same component, if there is a path from one to the other, without taking edge direction into account.

Details

The algorithm is implemented using scatter-gather iterations. This implementation uses a comparable vertex value as initial component identifier (ID). Vertices propagate their current value in each iteration. Upon receiving component IDs from its neighbors, a vertex adopts a new component ID if its value is lower than its current component ID. The algorithm converges when vertices no longer update their component ID value or when the maximum number of iterations has been reached.

Usage

The result is a DataSet of vertices, where the vertex value corresponds to the assigned component. The constructor takes one parameter:

  • maxIterations: the maximum number of iterations to run.

GSA Connected Components

Overview

This is an implementation of the Weakly Connected Components algorithm. Upon convergence, two vertices belong to the same component, if there is a path from one to the other, without taking edge direction into account.

Details

The algorithm is implemented using gather-sum-apply iterations. This implementation uses a comparable vertex value as initial component identifier (ID). In the gather phase, each vertex collects the vertex value of their adjacent vertices. In the sum phase, the minimum among those values is selected. In the apply phase, the algorithm sets the minimum value as the new vertex value if it is smaller than the current value. The algorithm converges when vertices no longer update their component ID value or when the maximum number of iterations has been reached.

Usage

The result is a DataSet of vertices, where the vertex value corresponds to the assigned component. The constructor takes one parameter:

  • maxIterations: the maximum number of iterations to run.

Single Source Shortest Paths

Overview

An implementation of the Single-Source-Shortest-Paths algorithm for weighted graphs. Given a source vertex, the algorithm computes the shortest paths from this source to all other nodes in the graph.

Details

The algorithm is implemented using scatter-gather iterations. In each iteration, a vertex sends to its neighbors a message containing the sum its current distance and the edge weight connecting this vertex with the neighbor. Upon receiving candidate distance messages, a vertex calculates the minimum distance and, if a shorter path has been discovered, it updates its value. If a vertex does not change its value during a superstep, then it does not produce messages for its neighbors for the next superstep. The computation terminates after the specified maximum number of supersteps or when there are no value updates.

Usage

The algorithm takes as input a Graph with any vertex type and Double edge values. The vertex values can be any type and are not used by this algorithm. The vertex type must implement equals(). The output is a DataSet of vertices where the vertex values correspond to the minimum distances from the given source vertex. The constructor takes two parameters:

  • srcVertexId The vertex ID of the source vertex.
  • maxIterations: the maximum number of iterations to run.

GSA Single Source Shortest Paths

The algorithm is implemented using gather-sum-apply iterations.

See the Single Source Shortest Paths library method for implementation details and usage information.

Triangle Enumerator

Overview

This library method enumerates unique triangles present in the input graph. A triangle consists of three edges that connect three vertices with each other. This implementation ignores edge directions.

Details

The basic triangle enumeration algorithm groups all edges that share a common vertex and builds triads, i.e., triples of vertices that are connected by two edges. Then, all triads are filtered for which no third edge exists that closes the triangle. For a group of n edges that share a common vertex, the number of built triads is quadratic ((n\(n-1))/2)*. Therefore, an optimization of the algorithm is to group edges on the vertex with the smaller output degree to reduce the number of triads. This implementation extends the basic algorithm by computing output degrees of edge vertices and grouping on edges on the vertex with the smaller degree.

Usage

The algorithm takes a directed graph as input and outputs a DataSet of Tuple3. The Vertex ID type has to be Comparable. Each Tuple3 corresponds to a triangle, with the fields containing the IDs of the vertices forming the triangle.

Summarization

Overview

The summarization algorithm computes a condensed version of the input graph by grouping vertices and edges based on their values. In doing so, the algorithm helps to uncover insights about patterns and distributions in the graph. One possible use case is the visualization of communities where the whole graph is too large and needs to be summarized based on the community identifier stored at a vertex.

Details

In the resulting graph, each vertex represents a group of vertices that share the same value. An edge, that connects a vertex with itself, represents all edges with the same edge value that connect vertices from the same vertex group. An edge between different vertices in the output graph represents all edges with the same edge value between members of different vertex groups in the input graph.

The algorithm is implemented using Flink data operators. First, vertices are grouped by their value and a representative is chosen from each group. For any edge, the source and target vertex identifiers are replaced with the corresponding representative and grouped by source, target and edge value. Output vertices and edges are created from their corresponding groupings.

Usage

The algorithm takes a directed, vertex (and possibly edge) attributed graph as input and outputs a new graph where each vertex represents a group of vertices and each edge represents a group of edges from the input graph. Furthermore, each vertex and edge in the output graph stores the common group value and the number of represented elements.

Clustering

Average Clustering Coefficient

Overview

The average clustering coefficient measures the mean connectedness of a graph. Scores range from 0.0 (no edges between neighbors) to 1.0 (complete graph).

Details

See the Local Clustering Coefficient library method for a detailed explanation of clustering coefficient. The Average Clustering Coefficient is the average of the Local Clustering Coefficient scores over all vertices with at least two neighbors. Each vertex, independent of degree, has equal weight for this score.

Usage

Directed and undirected variants are provided. The analytics take a simple graph as input and output an AnalyticResult containing the total number of vertices and average clustering coefficient of the graph. The graph ID type must be Comparable and Copyable.

  • setParallelism: override the parallelism of operators processing small amounts of data

Global Clustering Coefficient

Overview

The global clustering coefficient measures the connectedness of a graph. Scores range from 0.0 (no edges between neighbors) to 1.0 (complete graph).

Details

See the Local Clustering Coefficient library method for a detailed explanation of clustering coefficient. The Global Clustering Coefficient is the ratio of connected neighbors over the entire graph. Vertices with higher degrees have greater weight for this score because the count of neighbor pairs is quadratic in degree.

Usage

Directed and undirected variants are provided. The analytics take a simple graph as input and output an AnalyticResult containing the total number of triplets and triangles in the graph. The result class provides a method to compute the global clustering coefficient score. The graph ID type must be Comparable and Copyable.

  • setParallelism: override the parallelism of operators processing small amounts of data

Local Clustering Coefficient

Overview

The local clustering coefficient measures the connectedness of each vertex’s neighborhood. Scores range from 0.0 (no edges between neighbors) to 1.0 (neighborhood is a clique).

Details

An edge between neighbors of a vertex is a triangle. Counting edges between neighbors is equivalent to counting the number of triangles which include the vertex. The clustering coefficient score is the number of edges between neighbors divided by the number of potential edges between neighbors.

See the Triangle Listing library method for a detailed explanation of triangle enumeration.

Usage

Directed and undirected variants are provided. The algorithms take a simple graph as input and output a DataSet of UnaryResult containing the vertex ID, vertex degree, and number of triangles containing the vertex. The result class provides a method to compute the local clustering coefficient score. The graph ID type must be Comparable and Copyable.

  • setIncludeZeroDegreeVertices: include results for vertices with a degree of zero
  • setParallelism: override the parallelism of operators processing small amounts of data

Triadic Census

Overview

A triad is formed by any three vertices in a graph. Each triad contains three pairs of vertices which may be connected or unconnected. The Triadic Census counts the occurrences of each type of triad with the graph.

Details

This analytic counts the four undirected triad types (formed with 0, 1, 2, or 3 connecting edges) or 16 directed triad types by counting the triangles from Triangle Listing and running Vertex Metrics to obtain the number of triplets and edges. Triangle counts are then deducted from triplet counts, and triangle and triplet counts are removed from edge counts.

Usage

Directed and undirected variants are provided. The analytics take a simple graph as input and output an AnalyticResult with accessor methods for querying the count of each triad type. The graph ID type must be Comparable and Copyable.

  • setParallelism: override the parallelism of operators processing small amounts of data

Triangle Listing

Overview

Enumerates all triangles in the graph. A triangle is composed of three edges connecting three vertices into cliques of size 3.

Details

Triangles are listed by joining open triplets (two edges with a common neighbor) against edges on the triplet endpoints. This implementation uses optimizations from Schank’s algorithm to improve performance with high-degree vertices. Triplets are generated from the lowest degree vertex since each triangle need only be listed once. This greatly reduces the number of generated triplets which is quadratic in vertex degree.

Usage

Directed and undirected variants are provided. The algorithms take a simple graph as input and output a DataSet of TertiaryResult containing the three triangle vertices and, for the directed algorithm, a bitmask marking each of the six potential edges connecting the three vertices. The graph ID type must be Comparable and Copyable.

  • setParallelism: override the parallelism of operators processing small amounts of data
  • setSortTriangleVertices: normalize the triangle listing such that for each result (K0, K1, K2) the vertex IDs are sorted K0 < K1 < K2

Link Analysis

Hyperlink-Induced Topic Search

Overview

Hyperlink-Induced Topic Search (HITS, or “Hubs and Authorities”) computes two interdependent scores for every vertex in a directed graph. Good hubs are those which point to many good authorities and good authorities are those pointed to by many good hubs.

Details

Every vertex is assigned the same initial hub and authority scores. The algorithm then iteratively updates the scores until termination. During each iteration new hub scores are computed from the authority scores, then new authority scores are computed from the new hub scores. The scores are then normalized and optionally tested for convergence. HITS is similar to PageRank but vertex scores are emitted in full to each neighbor whereas in PageRank the vertex score is first divided by the number of neighbors.

Usage

The algorithm takes a simple directed graph as input and outputs a DataSet of UnaryResult containing the vertex ID, hub score, and authority score. Termination is configured by the number of iterations and/or a convergence threshold on the iteration sum of the change in scores over all vertices.

  • setIncludeZeroDegreeVertices: whether to include zero-degree vertices in the iterative computation
  • setParallelism: override the operator parallelism

PageRank

Overview

PageRank is an algorithm that was first used to rank web search engine results. Today, the algorithm and many variations are used in various graph application domains. The idea of PageRank is that important or relevant vertices tend to link to other important vertices.

Details

The algorithm operates in iterations, where pages distribute their scores to their neighbors (pages they have links to) and subsequently update their scores based on the sum of values they receive. In order to consider the importance of a link from one page to another, scores are divided by the total number of out-links of the source page. Thus, a page with 10 links will distribute 1/10 of its score to each neighbor, while a page with 100 links will distribute 1/100 of its score to each neighboring page.

Usage

The algorithm takes a directed graph as input and outputs a DataSet where each Result contains the vertex ID and PageRank score. Termination is configured with a maximum number of iterations and/or a convergence threshold on the sum of the change in score for each vertex between iterations.

  • setParallelism: override the operator parallelism

Metric

Vertex Metrics

Overview

This graph analytic computes the following statistics for both directed and undirected graphs:

  • number of vertices
  • number of edges
  • average degree
  • number of triplets
  • maximum degree
  • maximum number of triplets

The following statistics are additionally computed for directed graphs:

  • number of unidirectional edges
  • number of bidirectional edges
  • maximum out degree
  • maximum in degree

Details

The statistics are computed over vertex degrees generated from degree.annotate.directed.VertexDegrees or degree.annotate.undirected.VertexDegree.

Usage

Directed and undirected variants are provided. The analytics take a simple graph as input and output an AnalyticResult with accessor methods for the computed statistics. The graph ID type must be Comparable.

  • setIncludeZeroDegreeVertices: include results for vertices with a degree of zero
  • setParallelism: override the operator parallelism
  • setReduceOnTargetId (undirected only): the degree can be counted from either the edge source or target IDs. By default the source IDs are counted. Reducing on target IDs may optimize the algorithm if the input edge list is sorted by target ID

Edge Metrics

Overview

This graph analytic computes the following statistics:

  • number of triangle triplets
  • number of rectangle triplets
  • maximum number of triangle triplets
  • maximum number of rectangle triplets

Details

The statistics are computed over edge degrees generated from degree.annotate.directed.EdgeDegreesPair or degree.annotate.undirected.EdgeDegreePair and grouped by vertex.

Usage

Directed and undirected variants are provided. The analytics take a simple graph as input and output an AnalyticResult with accessor methods for the computed statistics. The graph ID type must be Comparable.

  • setParallelism: override the operator parallelism
  • setReduceOnTargetId (undirected only): the degree can be counted from either the edge source or target IDs. By default the source IDs are counted. Reducing on target IDs may optimize the algorithm if the input edge list is sorted by target ID

Similarity

Adamic-Adar

Overview

Adamic-Adar measures the similarity between pairs of vertices as the sum of the inverse logarithm of degree over shared neighbors. Scores are non-negative and unbounded. A vertex with higher degree has greater overall influence but is less influential to each pair of neighbors.

Details

The algorithm first annotates each vertex with the inverse of the logarithm of the vertex degree then joins this score onto edges by source vertex. Grouping on the source vertex, each pair of neighbors is emitted with the vertex score. Grouping on vertex pairs, the Adamic-Adar score is summed.

See the Jaccard Index library method for a similar algorithm.

Usage

The algorithm takes a simple undirected graph as input and outputs a DataSet of BinaryResult containing two vertex IDs and the Adamic-Adar similarity score. The graph ID type must be Copyable.

  • setMinimumRatio: filter out Adamic-Adar scores less than the given ratio times the average score
  • setMinimumScore: filter out Adamic-Adar scores less than the given minimum
  • setParallelism: override the parallelism of operators processing small amounts of data

Jaccard Index

Overview

The Jaccard Index measures the similarity between vertex neighborhoods and is computed as the number of shared neighbors divided by the number of distinct neighbors. Scores range from 0.0 (no shared neighbors) to 1.0 (all neighbors are shared).

Details

Counting shared neighbors for pairs of vertices is equivalent to counting connecting paths of length two. The number of distinct neighbors is computed by storing the sum of degrees of the vertex pair and subtracting the count of shared neighbors, which are double-counted in the sum of degrees.

The algorithm first annotates each edge with the target vertex’s degree. Grouping on the source vertex, each pair of neighbors is emitted with the degree sum. Grouping on vertex pairs, the shared neighbors are counted.

Usage

The algorithm takes a simple undirected graph as input and outputs a DataSet of tuples containing two vertex IDs, the number of shared neighbors, and the number of distinct neighbors. The result class provides a method to compute the Jaccard Index score. The graph ID type must be Copyable.

  • setMaximumScore: filter out Jaccard Index scores greater than or equal to the given maximum fraction
  • setMinimumScore: filter out Jaccard Index scores less than the given minimum fraction
  • setParallelism: override the parallelism of operators processing small amounts of data