Rateless Codes for Near-Perfect Load Balancing in Distributed Matrix-Vector Multiplication
April 27, 2018 Β· Declared Dead Β· π Proceedings of the ACM on Measurement and Analysis of Computing Systems
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Authors
Ankur Mallick, Malhar Chaudhari, Utsav Sheth, Ganesh Palanikumar, Gauri Joshi
arXiv ID
1804.10331
Category
cs.DC: Distributed Computing
Cross-listed
cs.IT
Citations
151
Venue
Proceedings of the ACM on Measurement and Analysis of Computing Systems
Last Checked
4 months ago
Abstract
Large-scale machine learning and data mining applications require computer systems to perform massive matrix-vector and matrix-matrix multiplication operations that need to be parallelized across multiple nodes. The presence of straggling nodes -- computing nodes that unpredictably slowdown or fail -- is a major bottleneck in such distributed computations. Ideal load balancing strategies that dynamically allocate more tasks to faster nodes require knowledge or monitoring of node speeds as well as the ability to quickly move data. Recently proposed fixed-rate erasure coding strategies can handle unpredictable node slowdown, but they ignore partial work done by straggling nodes thus resulting in a lot of redundant computation. We propose a \emph{rateless fountain coding} strategy that achieves the best of both worlds -- we prove that its latency is asymptotically equal to ideal load balancing, and it performs asymptotically zero redundant computations. Our idea is to create linear combinations of the $m$ rows of the matrix and assign these encoded rows to different worker nodes. The original matrix-vector product can be decoded as soon as slightly more than $m$ row-vector products are collectively finished by the nodes. We conduct experiments in three computing environments: local parallel computing, Amazon EC2, and Amazon Lambda, which show that rateless coding gives as much as $3\times$ speed-up over uncoded schemes.
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