English

Meta-Theorems for Cuttable Distributed Problems

Distributed, Parallel, and Cluster Computing 2026-05-20 v1 Data Structures and Algorithms

Abstract

We prove that given any α\alpha-approximation LOCAL algorithm for Minimum Dominating Set (MDS) on planar graphs, we can construct an f(g)f(g)-round (3α+1)(3\alpha+1)-approximation LOCAL algorithm for MDS on graphs embeddable in a given Euler genus-gg surface. Heydt et al. [European Journal of Combinatorics (2025)] gave an algorithm with α=11+ε\alpha=11+\varepsilon, from which we derive a (34+ε)(34 +\varepsilon)-approximation algorithm for graphs of genus gg, therefore improving upon the current state of the art of 24g+O(1)24g+O(1) due to Amiri et al. [ACM Transactions on Algorithms (2019)]. It also improves the approximation ratio of 91+ε91+\varepsilon due to Czygrinow et al. [Theoretical Computer Science (2019)] in the particular case of orientable surfaces. We generalize this result into two directions: (1) by considering other graph problems studied in Distributed Computing such as Minimum kk-Tuple Dominating Set, for which constant-round approximation algorithms were known for planar graphs, but not for graphs of bounded genus; and (2) by considering graph classes beyond bounded genus graphs, called locally nice, and relying on the asymptotic dimension of the class. We prove these results by a series of meta-theorems about cuttable minimization problems with constant-round approximation LOCAL algorithms. Roughly speaking, in cuttable problems, one can systematically extract small subgraphs whose solutions are in proportion to the global solution restricted to the neighbourhood of the subgraph.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2605.19157,
  title  = {Meta-Theorems for Cuttable Distributed Problems},
  author = {Marthe Bonamy and Avinandan Das and Cyril Gavoille and Timothé Picavet and Jukka Suomela and Alexandra Wesolek},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2605.19157},
  year   = {2026}
}

Comments

31 pages, 6 figures. arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:2507.04960