Computing routing schemes that support both high throughput and low latency is one of the core challenges of network optimization. Such routes can be formalized as $h$-length flows which are defined as flows whose flow paths are restricted to have length at most $h$. Many well-studied algorithmic primitives -- such as maximal and maximum length-constrained disjoint paths -- are special cases of $h$-length flows. Likewise the optimal $h$-length flow is a fundamental quantity in network optimization, characterizing, up to poly-log factors, how quickly a network can accomplish numerous distributed primitives. In this work, we give the first efficient algorithms for computing $(1 - \epsilon)$-approximate $h$-length flows. We give deterministic algorithms that take $\tilde{O}(\text{poly}(h, \frac{1}{\epsilon}))$ parallel time and $\tilde{O}(\text{poly}(h, \frac{1}{\epsilon}) \cdot 2^{O(\sqrt{\log n})})$ distributed CONGEST time. We also give a CONGEST algorithm that succeeds with high probability and only takes $\tilde{O}(\text{poly}(h, \frac{1}{\epsilon}))$ time. Using our $h$-length flow algorithms, we give the first efficient deterministic CONGEST algorithms for the maximal length-constrained disjoint paths problem -- settling an open question of Chang and Saranurak (FOCS 2020) -- as well as essentially-optimal parallel and distributed approximation algorithms for maximum length-constrained disjoint paths. The former greatly simplifies deterministic CONGEST algorithms for computing expander decompositions. We also use our techniques to give the first efficient $(1-\epsilon)$-approximation algorithms for bipartite $b$-matching in CONGEST. Lastly, using our flow algorithms, we give the first algorithms to efficiently compute $h$-length cutmatches, an object at the heart of recent advances in length-constrained expander decompositions.
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