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Distributed Non Negative RESCAL decomposition with estimation of latent features

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pyDRESCALk is a software package for applying non-negative RESCAL decomposition in a distributed fashion to large datasets. It can be utilized for decomposing relational datasets. It can minimize the difference between reconstructed data and the original data through Frobenius norm. Additionally, the Custom Clustering algorithm allows for automated determination for the number of Latent features.


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Features:

  • Ability to decompose relational datasets.
  • Utilization of MPI4py for distributed operation.
  • Distributed random initializations.
  • Distributed Custom Clustering algorithm for estimating automated latent feature number (k) determination.
  • Objective of minimization of Frobenius norm.
  • Support for distributed CPUs/GPUs.
  • Support for Dense/Sparse data.
  • Demonstrated scaling performance upto 10TB of dense and 9Exabytes of Sparse data.

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Overview of the pyDRESCALk workflow implementation.

Installation:

On a desktop machine:

git clone https://github.com/lanl/pyDRESCALk.git
cd pyDRESCALk
conda create --name pyDRESCALk python=3.7.1 openmpi mpi4py
source activate pyDRESCALk
python setup.py install

On a HPC server:

git clone https://github.com/lanl/pyDRESCALk.git
cd pyDRESCALk
conda create --name pyDRESCALk python=3.7.1 
source activate pyDRESCALk
module load <openmpi>
pip install mpi4py
python setup.py install

Prerequisites

  • conda
  • numpy>=1.2
  • matplotlib
  • MPI4py
  • scipy
  • h5py

Documentation

You can find the documentation here.

Usage

main.py can be used to run the software on command line:

mpirun -n <procs> python main.py [-h] [--process PROCESS] --p_r P_R --p_c P_C [--k K]
               [--fpath FPATH] [--ftype FTYPE] [--fname FNAME] [--init INIT]
               [--itr ITR] [--norm NORM] [--method METHOD] [--verbose VERBOSE]
               [--results_path RESULTS_PATH] 
               [--timing_stats TIMING_STATS] 
               [--precision PRECISION] [--perturbations PERTURBATIONS]
               [--noise_var NOISE_VAR] [--start_k START_K] [--end_k END_K]
               [--step_k STEP_K]  [--sampling SAMPLING] [--key KEY]


arguments:
  -h, --help            show this help message and exit
  --process PROCESS     pyDRESCAL/pyDRESCALk
  --p_r P_R             Now of row processors
  --p_c P_C             Now of column processors
  --k K                 feature count
  --fpath FPATH         data path to read(eg: tmp/)
  --ftype FTYPE         data type : mat/folder/h5
  --fname FNAME         File name
  --init INIT           RESCAL initializations: rand/nnsvd
  --itr ITR             RESCAL iterations, default:1000
  --norm NORM           Reconstruction Norm for NMF to optimize:FRO
  --method METHOD       RESCAL update method:MU/BCD/HALS
  --verbose VERBOSE
  --results_path RESULTS_PATH
                        Path for saving results
  --timing_stats TIMING_STATS
                        Switch to turn on/off benchmarking.
  --prune PRUNE         Prune zero row/column.
  --precision PRECISION
                        Precision of the data(float32/float64/float16).
  --perturbations PERTURBATIONS
                        perturbation for RESCALk
  --noise_var NOISE_VAR
                        Noise variance for RESCALk
  --start_k START_K     Start index of K for RESCALk
  --end_k END_K         End index of K for RESCALk
  --step_k STEP_K       step for K search
  --sampling SAMPLING   Sampling noise for NMFk i.e uniform/poisson
  --key KEY             Key for data if strored in dictionary. 

Example on running pyDRESALk using main.py:

mpirun -n 4 python main.py --p_r=2 --p_c=2 --process='pyDRESCALk'  --fpath='data/' --ftype='mat' --fname='dnations' --init='rand' --itr=5000 --norm='fro' --method='mu' --results_path='results/' --perturbation=20 --noise_var=0.015 --start_k=2 --end_k=5  --sampling='uniform' --data_key='R'

Example estimation of k using the provided sample dataset:

'''Imports block'''

import sys
import pyDRESCALk.config as config
config.init(0)
from pyDRESCALk.pyDRESCALk import *
from pyDRESCALk.data_io import *
from pyDRESCALk.dist_comm import *
from scipy.io import loadmat
from mpi4py import MPI
comm = MPI.COMM_WORLD
args = parse()
comm = MPI.COMM_WORLD
p_r, p_c = 2, 2
comms = MPI_comm(comm, p_r, p_c)
comm1 = comms.comm
rank = comm.rank
size = comm.size
args = parse()
args.size, args.rank, args.comm, args.p_r, args.p_c = size, rank, comms, p_r, p_c
args.row_comm, args.col_comm, args.comm1 = comms.cart_1d_row(), comms.cart_1d_column(), comm1
rank = comms.rank
args.fpath = '../data/'
args.fname = 'dnations'
args.ftype = 'mat'
args.start_k = 2
args.end_k = 5
args.itr = 200
args.init = 'rand'
args.noise_var = 0.005
args.verbose = True
args.norm = 'fro'
args.method = 'mu'
args.np = np
args.precision = np.float32
args.key = 'R'
A_ij = np.moveaxis(data_read(args).read().astype(args.precision),-1,0) #Always make data of dimension mxnxn.
print('Data dimension for rank=',rank,'=',A_ij.shape)
args.results_path = '../Results/'
pyDRESCALk(A_ij, factors=None, params=args).fit()

See the examples or tests for more use cases.


Benchmarking

plot Figure: Scaling benchmarks for 10 iterations for Frobenius norm based MU updates with MPI operations for i) strong and ii) weak scaling and Communication vs computation operations for iii) strong and iv) weak scaling.

Scalability

plot

Authors

How to cite pyDRESCALk?

@software{pyDRESCALk,
  author       = {Bhattarai, Manish and
                  Kharat, Namita and
                  Skau, Erik and
                  Truong, Duc and
                  Eren, Maksim and
                  Rajopadhye, Sanjay and
                  Djidjev, Hristo and
                  Alexandrov, Boian},
  title        = {pyDRESCALk: Python Distributed Non Negative RESCAL decomposition with determination of latent features},
  month        = dec,
  year         = 2021,
  publisher    = {Zenodo},
  version      = {v1.0.0},
  doi          = {10.5281/zenodo.5758446},
  url          = {https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5758446}
}


@article{bhattarai2023distributed,
  title={Distributed non-negative rescal with automatic model selection for exascale data},
  author={Bhattarai, Manish and Boureima, Ismael and Skau, Erik and Nebgen, Benjamin and Djidjev, Hristo and Rajopadhye, Sanjay and Smith, James P and Alexandrov, Boian and others},
  journal={Journal of Parallel and Distributed Computing},
  volume={179},
  pages={104709},
  year={2023},
  publisher={Elsevier}
}


Acknowledgments

Los Alamos National Lab (LANL), T-1

Copyright Notice

Β© (or copyright) 2020. Triad National Security, LLC. All rights reserved. This program was produced under U.S. Government contract 89233218CNA000001 for Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL), which is operated by Triad National Security, LLC for the U.S. Department of Energy/National Nuclear Security Administration. All rights in the program are reserved by Triad National Security, LLC, and the U.S. Department of Energy/National Nuclear Security Administration. The Government is granted for itself and others acting on its behalf a nonexclusive, paid-up, irrevocable worldwide license in this material to reproduce, prepare derivative works, distribute copies to the public, perform publicly and display publicly, and to permit others to do so.

License

This program is open source under the BSD-3 License. Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met:

  1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.

  2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.

  3. Neither the name of the copyright holder nor the names of its contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software without specific prior written permission.

THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT HOLDER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.