About GraphIt

The performance bottlenecks of graph applications depend not only on the algorithm and the underlying hardware, but also on the size and structure of the input graph. As a result, programmers must try different combinations of a large set of techniques, which make tradeoffs among locality, work-efficiency, and parallelism, to develop the best implementation for a specific algorithm and type of graph. Existing graph frameworks and domain specific languages (DSLs) lack flexibility, supporting only a limited set of optimizations.

GraphIt is a new DSL for graph computations that generates fast implementations for algorithms with different performance characteristics running on graphs with different sizes and structures. GraphIt separates what is computed (algorithm) from how it is computed (schedule). Programmers specify the algorithm using an algorithm language, and performance optimizations are specified using a separate scheduling language. The scheduling language enables programmers to easily search through this complicated tradeoff space by composing together a large set of edge traversal and vertex data layout optimizations.

GraphIt outperforms the next fastest of six state-of-the-art shared-memory frameworks (Ligra, Green-Marl, GraphMat, Galois, Gemini, and Grazelle) by up to 4.8x and reduces the lines of code by up to an order of magnitude compared to the next fastest framework.Below we show some performance comparisons collected on our dual-socket system with Intel Xeon E5-2695 v3 CPUs with 12 cores each for a total of 24 cores and 48 hyper-threads. The system has 128GB of DDR3-1600 memory and 30 MB last level cache on each socket, and runs with Transparent Huge Pages (THP) enabled.

Conference Talk at OOPSLA 2018

Keynote Talk by Saman at the Workshop on Graphs, Architectures, Programming, and Learning (GrAPL 2020)

A Short Demo Using GraphIt to Optimize PageRank on CPUs (April 2020 for ADA center)

Yunming’s PhD Defense (May 2020)

GraphIt is open source, under a commercially permissive MIT license. We encourage you to use it in open source or commercial projects!