Service Aggregated Linked Sequential Activities GOALS: Increasing number of cores accompanied by continued data deluge Develop scalable parallel data mining.

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Service Aggregated Linked Sequential Activities GOALS: Increasing number of cores accompanied by continued data deluge Develop scalable parallel data mining algorithms with good multicore and cluster performance; understand software runtime and parallelization method. Use managed code (C#) and package algorithms as services to encourage broad use assuming experts parallelize core algorithms. CURRENT RESUTS: Microsoft CCR supports MPI, dynamic threading and via DSS a Service model of computing; detailed performance measurements Speedups of 7.5 or above on 8-core systems for “large problems” with deterministic annealed (avoid local minima) algorithms for clustering, Gaussian Mixtures, GTM (dimensional reduction) etc. SALSA Team Geoffrey Fox Xiaohong Qiu Seung-Hee Bae Huapeng Yuan Indiana University Technology Collaboration George Chrysanthakopoulos Henrik Frystyk Nielsen Microsoft Application Collaboration Cheminformatics Rajarshi Guha David Wild Bioinformatics Haiku Tang Demographics (GIS) Neil Devadasan IU Bloomington and IUPUI SALSASALSA

Deterministic Annealing Clustering (DAC) a(x) = 1/N or generally p(x) with  p(x) =1 g(k)=1 and s(k)=0.5 T is annealing temperature varied down from  with final value of 1 Vary cluster center Y(k) K starts at 1 and is incremented by algorithm My 4 th most cited article but little used; probably as no good software compared to simple K-means SALSASALSA N data points E(x) in D dim. space and Minimize F by EM

Deterministic Annealing Clustering of Indiana Census Data Decrease temperature (distance scale) to discover more clusters Distance Scale Temperature 0.5

Deterministic Annealing Clustering (DAC) a(x) = 1/N or generally p(x) with  p(x) =1 g(k)=1 and s(k)=0.5 T is annealing temperature varied down from  with final value of 1 Vary cluster center Y(k) but can calculate weight P k and correlation matrix s(k) =  (k) 2 (even for matrix  (k) 2 ) using IDENTICAL formulae for Gaussian mixtures K starts at 1 and is incremented by algorithm Deterministic Annealing Gaussian Mixture models (DAGM ) a(x) = 1 g(k)={P k /(2  (k) 2 ) D/2 } 1/T s(k)=  (k) 2 (taking case of spherical Gaussian) T is annealing temperature varied down from  with final value of 1 Vary Y(k) P k and  (k) K starts at 1 and is incremented by algorithm SALSASALSA N data points E(x) in D dim. space and Minimize F by EM a(x) = 1 and g(k) = (1/K)(  /2  ) D/2 s(k) = 1/  and T = 1 Y(k) =  m=1 M W m  m (X(k)) Choose fixed  m (X) = exp( (X-  m ) 2 /  2 ) Vary W m and  but fix values of M and K a priori Y(k) E(x) W m are vectors in original high D dimension space X(k) and  m are vectors in 2 dimensional mapped space Generative Topographic Mapping (GTM) As DAGM but set T=1 and fix K Traditional Gaussian mixture models GM GTM has several natural annealing versions based on either DAC or DAGM: under investigation DAGTM: Deterministic Annealed Generative Topographic Mapping

 We implement micro-parallelism using Microsoft CCR (Concurrency and Coordination Runtime) as it supports both MPI rendezvous and dynamic (spawned) threading style of parallelism  CCR Supports exchange of messages between threads using named ports and has primitives like:  FromHandler: Spawn threads without reading ports  Receive: Each handler reads one item from a single port  MultipleItemReceive: Each handler reads a prescribed number of items of a given type from a given port. Note items in a port can be general structures but all must have same type.  MultiplePortReceive: Each handler reads a one item of a given type from multiple ports.  CCR has fewer primitives than MPI but can implement MPI collectives efficiently  Use DSS (Decentralized System Services) built in terms of CCR for service model  DSS has ~35 µs and CCR a few µs overhead SALSASALSA

MPI Exchange Latency in µs (20-30 µs computation between messaging) MachineOSRuntimeGrainsParallelismMPI Latency Intel8c:gf12 (8 core 2.33 Ghz) (in 2 chips) RedhatMPJE(Java)Process8181 MPICH2 (C)Process840.0 MPICH2:FastProcess839.3 NemesisProcess84.21 Intel8c:gf20 (8 core 2.33 Ghz) FedoraMPJEProcess8157 mpiJavaProcess8111 MPICH2Process864.2 Intel8b (8 core 2.66 Ghz) VistaMPJEProcess8170 FedoraMPJEProcess8142 FedorampiJavaProcess8100 VistaCCR (C#)Thread820.2 AMD4 (4 core 2.19 Ghz) XPMPJEProcess4185 RedhatMPJEProcess4152 mpiJavaProcess499.4 MPICH2Process439.3 XPCCRThread416.3 Intel(4 core)XPCCRThread425.8 SALSASALSA Messaging CCR versus MPI C# v. C v. Java

CCR OVERHEAD FOR A COMPUTATION OF µS BETWEEN MESSAGING Intel8b: 8 CoreNumber of Parallel Computations (μs) Dynamic Spawned Threads Pipeline Shift Two Shifts Rendezvous MPI style Pipeline Shift Exchange As Two Shifts CCR Custom Exchange SALSASALSA

Overhead (latency) of AMD4 PC with 4 execution threads on MPI style Rendezvous Messaging for Shift and Exchange implemented either as two shifts or as custom CCR pattern Stages (millions) Time Microseconds

Overhead (latency) of Intel8b PC with 8 execution threads on MPI style Rendezvous Messaging for Shift and Exchange implemented either as two shifts or as custom CCR pattern Stages (millions) Time Microseconds

Divide runtime by Grain Size n. # Clusters K 8 cores (threads) and 1 cluster show memory bandwidth effect 80 clusters show cache/memory bandwidth effect

Speedup = Number of cores/(1+f) f = (Sum of Overheads)/(Computation per core) Computation  Grain Size n. # Clusters K Overheads are Synchronization: small with CCR Load Balance: good Memory Bandwidth Limit:  0 as K   Cache Use/Interference: Important Runtime Fluctuations: Dominant large n, K All our “real” problems have f ≤ 0.05 and speedups on 8 core systems greater than 7.6 SALSASALSA

This is average of standard deviation of run time of the 8 threads between messaging synchronization points

 Early implementations of our clustering algorithm showed large fluctuations due to the cache line interference effect (false sharing)  We have one thread on each core each calculating a sum of same complexity storing result in a common array A with different cores using different array locations  Thread i stores sum in A(i) is separation 1 – no memory access interference but cache line interference  Thread i stores sum in A(X*i) is separation X  Serious degradation if X < 8 (64 bytes) with Windows  Note A is a double (8 bytes)  Less interference effect with Linux – especially Red Hat

 Note measurements at a separation X of 8 and X=1024 (and values between 8 and 1024 not shown) are essentially identical  Measurements at 7 (not shown) are higher than that at 8 (except for Red Hat which shows essentially no enhancement at X<8)  As effects due to co-location of thread variables in a 64 byte cache line, align the array with cache boundaries

GTM Projection of 2 clusters of 335 compounds in 155 dimensions GTM Projection of PubChem: 10,926,94 compounds in 166 dimension binary property space takes 4 days on 8 cores. 64X64 mesh of GTM clusters interpolates PubChem. Could usefully use 1024 cores! David Wild will use for GIS style 2D browsing interface to chemistry PCAGTM Linear PCA v. nonlinear GTM on 6 Gaussians in 3D PCA is Principal Component Analysis Parallel Generative Topographic Mapping GTM Reduce dimensionality preserving topology and perhaps distances Here project to 2D SALSASALSA

 Use Data Decomposition as in classic distributed memory but use shared memory for read variables. Each thread uses a “local” array for written variables to get good cache performance  Multicore and Cluster use same parallel algorithms but different runtime implementations; algorithms are  Accumulate matrix and vector elements in each process/thread  At iteration barrier, combine contributions (MPI_Reduce)  Linear Algebra (multiplication, equation solving, SVD) “Main Thread” and Memory M 1m11m1 0m00m0 2m22m2 3m33m3 4m44m4 5m55m5 6m66m6 7m77m7 Subsidiary threads t with memory m t MPI/CCR/DSS From other nodes MPI/CCR/DSS From other nodes SALSASALSA

 Micro-parallelism uses low latency CCR threads or MPI processes  Services can be used where loose coupling natural  Input data  Algorithms  PCA  DAC GTM GM DAGM DAGTM – both for complete algorithm and for each iteration  Linear Algebra used inside or outside above  Metric embedding MDS, Bourgain, Quadratic Programming ….  HMM, SVM ….  User interface: GIS (Web map Service) or equivalent SALSASALSA

20 Timing of HP Opteron Multicore as a function of number of simultaneous two-way service messages processed (November 2006 DSS Release)  Measurements of Axis 2 shows about 500 microseconds – DSS is 10 times better DSS Service Measurements

 This class of data mining does/will parallelize well on current/future multicore nodes  Several engineering issues for use in large applications  How to take CCR in multicore node to cluster (MPI or cross-cluster CCR?)  Need high performance linear algebra for C# (PLASMA from UTenn)  Access linear algebra services in a different language?  Need equivalent of Intel C Math Libraries for C# (vector arithmetic – level 1 BLAS)  Service model to integrate modules  Need access to a ~ 128 node Windows cluster  Future work is more applications; refine current algorithms such as DAGTM  New parallel algorithms  Clustering with pairwise distances but no vectorspaces  Bourgain Random Projection for metric embedding  MDS Dimensional Scaling with EM-like SMACOF and deterministicannealing  Support use of Newton’s Method (Marquardt’s method) as EM alternative  Later HMM and SVM SALSASALSA