GPU-based Private Information Retrieval for On-Device Machine Learning Inference

January 26, 2023 ยท Declared Dead ยท ๐Ÿ› International Conference on Architectural Support for Programming Languages and Operating Systems

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Authors Maximilian Lam, Jeff Johnson, Wenjie Xiong, Kiwan Maeng, Udit Gupta, Yang Li, Liangzhen Lai, Ilias Leontiadis, Minsoo Rhu, Hsien-Hsin S. Lee, Vijay Janapa Reddi, Gu-Yeon Wei, David Brooks, G. Edward Suh arXiv ID 2301.10904 Category cs.CR: Cryptography & Security Cross-listed cs.DC, cs.LG Citations 18 Venue International Conference on Architectural Support for Programming Languages and Operating Systems Last Checked 3 months ago
Abstract
On-device machine learning (ML) inference can enable the use of private user data on user devices without revealing them to remote servers. However, a pure on-device solution to private ML inference is impractical for many applications that rely on embedding tables that are too large to be stored on-device. In particular, recommendation models typically use multiple embedding tables each on the order of 1-10 GBs of data, making them impractical to store on-device. To overcome this barrier, we propose the use of private information retrieval (PIR) to efficiently and privately retrieve embeddings from servers without sharing any private information. As off-the-shelf PIR algorithms are usually too computationally intensive to directly use for latency-sensitive inference tasks, we 1) propose novel GPU-based acceleration of PIR, and 2) co-design PIR with the downstream ML application to obtain further speedup. Our GPU acceleration strategy improves system throughput by more than $20 \times$ over an optimized CPU PIR implementation, and our PIR-ML co-design provides an over $5 \times$ additional throughput improvement at fixed model quality. Together, for various on-device ML applications such as recommendation and language modeling, our system on a single V100 GPU can serve up to $100,000$ queries per second -- a $>100 \times$ throughput improvement over a CPU-based baseline -- while maintaining model accuracy.
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