More Bang For Your Buck(et): Fast and Space-efficient Hardware-accelerated Coarse-granular Indexing on GPUs
June 06, 2024 Β· Declared Dead Β· π IEEE International Conference on Data Engineering
"No code URL or promise found in abstract"
Evidence collected by the PWNC Scanner
Authors
Justus Henneberg, Felix Schuhknecht, Rosina Kharal, Trevor Brown
arXiv ID
2406.03965
Category
cs.DB: Databases
Cross-listed
cs.GR
Citations
3
Venue
IEEE International Conference on Data Engineering
Last Checked
3 months ago
Abstract
In recent work, we have shown that NVIDIA's raytracing cores on RTX video cards can be exploited to realize hardware-accelerated lookups for GPU-resident database indexes. On a high level, the concept materializes all keys as triangles in a 3D scene and indexes them. Lookups are performed by firing rays into the scene and utilizing the index structure to detect hits in a hardware-accelerated fashion. While this approach called RTIndeX (or short RX) is indeed promising, it currently suffers from three limitations: (1) significant memory overhead per key, (2) slow range-lookups, and (3) poor updateability. In this work, we show that all three problems can be tackled by a single design change: Generalizing RX to become a coarse-granular index cgRX. Instead of indexing individual keys, cgRX indexes buckets of keys which are post-filtered after retrieval. This drastically reduces the memory overhead, leads to the generation of a smaller and more efficient index structure, and enables fast range-lookups as well as updates. We will see that representing the buckets in the 3D space such that the lookup of a key is performed both correctly and efficiently requires the careful orchestration of firing rays in a specific sequence. Our experimental evaluation shows that cgRX offers the most bang for the buck(et) by providing a throughput in relation to the memory footprint that is 1.5-3x higher than for the comparable range-lookup supporting baselines. At the same time, cgRX improves the range-lookup performance over RX by up to 2x and offers practical updateability that is up to 5.6x faster than rebuilding from scratch.
Community Contributions
Found the code? Know the venue? Think something is wrong? Let us know!
π Similar Papers
In the same crypt β Databases
R.I.P.
π»
Ghosted
R.I.P.
π»
Ghosted
Untangling Blockchain: A Data Processing View of Blockchain Systems
R.I.P.
π»
Ghosted
Converting Static Image Datasets to Spiking Neuromorphic Datasets Using Saccades
R.I.P.
π»
Ghosted
BLOCKBENCH: A Framework for Analyzing Private Blockchains
R.I.P.
π»
Ghosted
Data Synthesis based on Generative Adversarial Networks
R.I.P.
π»
Ghosted
HoloClean: Holistic Data Repairs with Probabilistic Inference
Died the same way β π» Ghosted
R.I.P.
π»
Ghosted
Federated Learning: Strategies for Improving Communication Efficiency
R.I.P.
π»
Ghosted
In-Datacenter Performance Analysis of a Tensor Processing Unit
R.I.P.
π»
Ghosted
Deep Convolutional Neural Networks for Computer-Aided Detection: CNN Architectures, Dataset Characteristics and Transfer Learning
R.I.P.
π»
Ghosted