DGtal  1.0.0
Interfacing with boost::graph library
Author(s) of this documentation:
by Jacques-Olivier Lachaud

Part of the Graph package.

This module shows how to use the Boost Graph library in DGtal.

# The Boost Graph library.

The Boost Graph Library (http://www.boost.org/doc/libs/1_52_0/libs/graph/doc/index.html) is a very rich library for handling graph concepts, structures and algorithms. It uses a lot generic programming to define a typology of graphs through a hierarchy of concept, and then it provides many generic algorithms on these graphs. Standard implementation of graphs are also provided (adjacency list, incidence matrix). Furthermore this library uses the Boost Property Map Library (http://www.boost.org/doc/libs/1_52_0/libs/property_map/doc/property_map.html) to associate data with vertices or edges in a very efficient and generic way.

For these reasons, it would be interesting that DGtal graphs match boost graph concepts. However, this cannot be done in full genericity with the present DGtal graph concepts. For instance, only finite graphs are handled by boost graphs. Furthermore, it is tricky to have light boost graphs (i.e. graphs constructed on-the-fly), because boost graphs require multipass iterators on vertices and edges.

For now, the only models that are wrapped to satisfy boost graph concepts are:

Note
A natural question is why DGtal graph concepts do not match exactly boost graph concepts. This is for mainly three reasons:
• DGtal graph concepts are very light compared to boost graph, and new models are thus easier to define.
• boost graphs only handle finite graphs and we would like to see the adjacency graph of digital spaces as a graph.
• boost graphs do not handle implicitly defined graphs, like graphs discover on-the-fly. If you really need boost graph, a copy / conversion is still possible.

# Wrapping DigitalSurface as a boost graph

The file DigitalSurfaceBoostGraphInterface.h defines the boost graph traits for any kind of digital surface (see DigitalSurface). With these definitions, a DigitalSurface is a model of boost::VertexListGraphConcept, boost::AdjacencyGraphConcept, boost::IncidenceGraphConcept, boost::EdgeListGraphConcept. You may use a DigitalSurface as any boost graph instance in boost graph algorithms (see http://www.boost.org/doc/libs/1_52_0/libs/graph/doc/table_of_contents.html).

Remarks
Note that, for now, vertex iterators are taken as is from the DigitalSurface container. Hence, they must be models of boost::MultiPassInputIterator. This is the case for containers SetOfSurfels, DigitalSetBoundary, ImplicitDigitalSurface, ExplicitDigitalSurface. Containers LightImplicitDigitalSurface and LightExplicitDigitalSurface are thus not valid.

## Making DigitalSurface a boost graph model

To use a DigitalSurface as a boost graph, you must include the header file DigitalSurfaceBoostGraphInterface.h before including boost graph headers (!).

...
#include "DGtal/topology/DigitalSurface.h"
...
#include "DGtal/graph/DigitalSurfaceBoostGraphInterface.h"
#include <boost/graph/graph_concepts.hpp>
...

A model of boost graph must satisfy a given number of traits (to define types) as well as functions acting on these types. This is done through specialization of boost::graph_traits. This is done for concrete realizations of template class DigitalSurface. The following snippet shows the boost graph way to get the types associated to a graph.

typedef DigitalSurface< .... > Graph; // your preferred model of digital surface
typedef boost::graph_traits<Graph>::vertex_descriptor vertex_descriptor; // ie DigitalSurface::Vertex
typedef boost::graph_traits<Graph>::edge_descriptor edge_descriptor; // ie DigitalSurface::Arc
typedef boost::graph_traits<Graph>::vertices_size_type vertices_size_type; // ie DigitalSurface::Size
typedef boost::graph_traits<Graph>::vertex_iterator vertex_iterator; // the iterator for visiting all vertices
typedef boost::graph_traits<Graph>::out_edge_iterator out_edge_iterator; // the iterator for visiting out edges of a vertex
typedef boost::graph_traits<Graph>::edge_iterator edge_iterator; // the iterator for visiting all edges

You may check that a DigitalSurface satisfies several graph concepts

BOOST_CONCEPT_ASSERT(( boost::VertexListGraphConcept<Graph> ));
BOOST_CONCEPT_ASSERT(( boost::IncidenceGraphConcept<Graph> ));
BOOST_CONCEPT_ASSERT(( boost::EdgeListGraphConcept<Graph> ));

## The boost graph way of visiting vertices

For any boost graph, there is a function boost::vertices that returns a pair of multipass input iterator on vertices representing the range of vertices of the graph. The following snippet shows how it works.

Graph g(...); // your instance of digital surface
for ( std::pair<vertex_iterator, vertex_iterator> vp = boost::vertices( g );
vp.first != vp.second; ++vp.first )
{
vertex_descriptor v1 = *vp.first;
trace.info() << v1 << std::endl; // displays each vertex
}

## The boost graph way of visiting edges

For models of EdgeListGraphConcept, there is a function boost::edges that returns a pair of multipass input iterator on edges representing the range of (oriented) edges of the graph. The following snippet shows how it works.

unsigned int nbEdges = 0;
for ( std::pair<edge_iterator, edge_iterator> ve = boost::edges( g );
ve.first != ve.second; ++ve.first, ++nbEdges )
{
edge_descriptor e = *ve.first;
vertex_descriptor v1 = boost::source( e, g );
vertex_descriptor v2 = boost::target( e, g );
trace.info() << "Edge " << nbEdges << " is "
<< v1 << " -> " << v2 << std::endl;
}

## The boost graph way of getting adjacent vertices

For models of IncidenceGraphConcept, there is a function boost::out_edges that returns a pair of multipass input iterator on the edges that starts at the given vertex and ends on adjacent vertices. The following snippet shows how it works.

for ( std::pair<vertex_iterator, vertex_iterator> vp = boost::vertices( g );
vp.first != vp.second; ++vp.first )
{
vertex_descriptor v1 = *vp.first;
trace.info() << "Neighbors of " << v1 << " are";
for ( std::pair<out_edge_iterator, out_edge_iterator> ve = boost::out_edges( v1, g );
ve.first != ve.second; ++ve.first )
{
vertex_descriptor v2 = boost::target( *ve.first, g );
trace.info() << " " << v2;
}
trace.info() << std::endl;
}

## Property maps for more elaborate algorithms

If you wish to use algorithms of the Boost Graph Library, most of them requires mapping from vertex or edge to some value (for instance a color for marking already visited vertices or a scalar for storing a distance or a weight). This is done very generically in Boost Graph through property maps. The system is rather complex but allows you to use indifferently in your algorithms an external map (for instance a std::map< vertex_descriptor, int >) or an embedded value in the vertex_descriptor type.

Standard boost graphs models offer simple mechanism to get a given property map for a graph. In DGtal, graph models do not integrate – for now – property maps. Therefore, only external property maps can be used. The snippet below shows how to create two property maps for the digital surface g, using standard property map wrappers given in the Boost Property Map Library.

#include <boost/property_map/property_map.hpp>
...
// get the property map for coloring vertices (used for not visiting twice the same vertex).
typedef std::map< vertex_descriptor, boost::default_color_type > StdColorMap; // the container type
StdColorMap colorMap; // the container instance (will store computations).
boost::associative_property_map< StdColorMap > propColorMap( colorMap ); // a facade aroundcolorMap
// get the property map for labelling vertices (the mapping Vertex -> Size that stores the component label for each vertex)
typedef std::map< vertex_descriptor, vertices_size_type > StdComponentMap;
StdComponentMap componentMap;
boost::associative_property_map< StdComponentMap > propComponentMap( componentMap );

We may afterwards use this property maps in boost graph algorithms. This snippet extracts the connected components of the graph g, and labels each vertex with its component (result is stored in componentMap, hence is also accessible with propComponentMap).

// g must be a model of VertexListGraph
vertices_size_type nbComp =
boost::connected_components // boost graph connected components algorithm.
( g, // the graph
propComponentMap, // the mapping vertex -> label
boost::color_map( propColorMap ) // this map is used internally when computing connected components.
);
trace.info() << "- nbComponents = " << nbComp << std::endl;

Note that propColorMap is given a named parameter with a call to boost::color_map. This is the method used in the Boost Graph Library to give handle parameters, especially when the algorithm requires a lot of parameters, some of them being optionnal. This is explained in section (http://www.boost.org/doc/libs/1_52_0/libs/graph/doc/bgl_named_params.html).

Note
You may of course use the VertexMap rebind mechanism when creating your property map, as follows.
// Works if VertexMap is a correct model of boost::UniqueAssociativeContainer and boost::PairAssociativeContainer.
typedef typename Graph::VertexMap< vertices_size_type > MyComponentMap;
MyComponentMap componentMap;
boost::associative_property_map< MyComponentMap > propComponentMap( componentMap );

## A breadth-first visit with the Boost Graph Library

We need to store distances to the start vertex, therefore we create a dedicated property map (here propDistanceMap). The algorithm also requires a queue (here Q) and a first vertex (start).

// get the property map for storing distances
typedef std::map< vertex_descriptor, unsigned int > StdDistanceMap;
StdDistanceMap distanceMap;
boost::associative_property_map< StdDistanceMap > propDistanceMap( distanceMap );
boost::queue< vertex_descriptor > Q; // std::queue does not have top().
vertex_descriptor start = *( g.begin() );
( g, // the graph
start, // the starting vertex
Q, // the buffer for breadth first queueing
boost::make_bfs_visitor( boost::record_distances( propDistanceMap, boost::on_tree_edge() ) ), // only record distances
propColorMap // necessary for visiting vertices
);

The following snippet computes a vertex that is as far away as possible from start.

unsigned int maxD = 0;
vertex_descriptor furthest = start;
for ( std::pair<vertex_iterator, vertex_iterator> vp = boost::vertices( g );
vp.first != vp.second; ++vp.first )
{
unsigned int d = boost::get( propDistanceMap, *vp.first );
if ( d > maxD )
{
maxD = d;
furthest = *vp.first;
}
}
trace.info() << "- d[ " << furthest << " ] = " << maxD << std::endl;

## More complex algorithms

You may have a look at graph/testDigitalSurfaceBoostGraphInterface.cpp to see a few more examples of using Boost Graph algorithms (max-flow and min-cut).

## Wrapping Object as a boost graph

The file ObjectBoostGraphInterface.h defines the boost graph traits for any kind of Object (see Object). With those definitios, an Object is a model of VertexListGraphConcept, AdjacencyGraphConcept, IncidenceGraphConcept, EdgeListGraphConcept. You may use an Object as a graph in any Boost Graph Library algorithm that satisfies the mentioned concepts.

You may have a look at graph/testObjectBoostGraphInterface.cpp for examples on how to use Object as a graph. Also see DigitalSurface section, as the interfaces are similar.