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GraphOps

A Dataflow library for graph analytics acceleration

Enumeration of GraphOps Components

Data-Handling Blocks

Data blocks are the primary GraphOps components. They handle incoming data streams, perform arithmetic operations, and route outputs to memory or subsequent blocks:

  • ForAllPropRdr issues memory requests for all neighbor property sets in the graph. In order to do this, it first reads all the row pointers in the graph. The incoming row pointer data are used to issue individual memory requests for each set of neighbor properties. Metadata about the requested neighbor properties are emitted as an output to be processed by the subsequent block.
  • NbrPropRed performs a reduction on a vertex's neighbor set. The unit receives the neighbor property data as a data stream from memory. Each set of neighbor properties is accompanied by a metadata packet as an input to the kernel from a preceding block (e.g. ForAllPropRdr). The metadata is used to consume the correct amount of data from the incoming neighbor property data stream. For each neighbor property set, an accumulating reduction is performed on the data and the result is emitted as an output along with accompanying metadata.
  • ElemUpdate is used to update property values in the graph data structure. The unit receives a vertex reference and an updated value as input. It issues memory read requests for the requisite memory locations and memory update requests for the updated values.
  • AllNodePropRed reads property values for the entire graph and performs actions based upon whether the values satisfy a condition. Vertices whose properties satisfy the condition are emitted to be processed in subsequent blocks. The properties themselves may also be optionally used for computation (e.g. reduction) within this block.
  • NbrPropRdr requests the properties of the neighbor set for a given vertex, which is supplied as input. This is the single-vertex version of ForAllPropRdr.
  • SetReader reads a set of vertices from memory and emits them as an output stream to subsequent blocks. This block is useful for algorithms that generate intermediate working sets, e.g. frontier sets, between iterations.
  • SetWriter accumulates a working set of vertices and streams them out to memory. As with SetReader, this functionality is useful when creating working sets.
  • NbrPropFilter issues memory requests for the properties of a neighbor set. It filters the property values according to some condition and emits properties which satisfy the condition, along with accompanying metadata.
  • GlobNbrRed is used to perform a global reduction across an entire subset of the graph. The unit takes in a stream of property values, along with accompanying metadata. It uses the metadata to filter out non-applicable properties. For the duration of the execution/iteration, it performs an accumulating reduction on the data.
  • VertexReader issues memory requests for row pointers for a single vertex and emits metadata.
  • NbrSetReader uses row pointers and metadata to issue memory requests for one vertex's list of neighbors.

Control Blocks

In GraphOps, the majority of the logic is amenable to dataflow. One key reason for this is that feedback control is rare. There are situations, however, that call for more intricate control difficult to express without state machines. The control blocks are embedded inside the data blocks and are responsible for handling these situations. They are as follows:

  • QRdrPktCntSM handles control logic for input buffers in the data blocks. A common use case occurs in the following situation: A metadata input datum dictates how many memory packets belong to a given neighbor set. In this case, the QRdrPktCntSM block handles the counting of packets on the memory data input and instructs the data block when to move on to the next neighbor set. This unit is also used for flow control, emitting a stall output signal when metadata input buffers are nearing capacity.
  • UpdQueueSM handles control logic for updating a graph property for all nodes. This unit assumes that the properties are being updated sequentially and makes use of heavy coalescing to minimize the number of update requests sent to memory.
  • CoalesceSM also handles logic for updating a graph property. However, this version does not assume in-order vertex updates and thus does not coalesce as efficiently. Best-effort coalescing buffer logic is built into the control unit.
  • FifoKernelSM is a control wrapper for a standard FIFO block. It provides an additional dataReady control signal that is necessary to construct more sophisticated queuing structures in the data blocks.
  • MemUnitSM handles requests involving very large data sizes. The hardware platform underlying the GraphOps system may have a maximum limit for size of request, so control logic is needed to issue multiple requests in this case. The unit includes input buffering to prevent subsequent requests from being dropped while a large request is being issued.

Utility Blocks

Additional logic is needed to properly interface with the memory system and the host platform. These are realized via the utility blocks:

  • EndSignal monitors done signals for all data blocks and issues a special interrupt request to halt execution when all units are finished.
  • MemUnit provides a simplified memory interface to the data blocks. It compiles memory profiling information, watches for end-of-execution interrupt requests, and includes control logic for handling very large memory requests.

Buffering and Rate Matching

In the GraphOps library, as with any streaming system, proper matching of throughput rates and buffering are critical to achieving correct execution. For example, the metadata packets in NbrPropRdr arrive at a much higher rate than the data packets. The input buffers shown in the figure are sized to account for this. In addition, the memory-requesting blocks reduce their output rate using throttling. In the ForAllPropRdr block, for instance, the memory request and metadata emission rates are reduced by a factor of two. The throttling ratio is easily modified using a single parameter, local to the requesting block. This design allows NbrPropRed to better match the memory throughput and prevent overflow in its input buffers.

Flow Control

Despite best efforts to match throughputs across different blocks, it is difficult to account for all corner cases of execution. For example, in a highly irregular graph, NbrPropRed may spend a disproportionate amount of time reducing one particularly large neighbor set. Meanwhile, the edge list pointer buffers may overflow. To address this potential issue, we simply generate a stall signal which gets emitted "upstream" towards the preceding block. Each block can propagate a downstream stall request by or'ing the incoming stall signal with the generated stall before emitting the result (Stall output).

Halting execution and Host Interaction

There needs to be an extensible and simple system to determine when the hardware has completed execution. To address this issue, each block maintains its own notion of when it has finished. For NbrPropRed, the block is completed when the edge list input buffers have been cleared after a period of execution. The EndSignal block collects all of the done signals and sends an interrupt to the host system when all done signals are stable. (Add images)

FifoKernelSM Parallel Queue

(Add images) Figure~\ref{fig:FifoKernelSM} shows a diagram of a parallel queue constructed using the FifoKernelSM control block. This structure addresses a situation commonly encountered in the GraphOps parallel processing framework. As described in the NbrPropRed architecture, incoming memory data packets carry multiple potential elements. Dynamic masks define which of them are buffered and which are discarded. In this scenario, a control block is needed which allows for round robin selection from among only those buffers which have data. When a buffer is selected, a dequeue signal needs to be automatically sent to only that buffer, leaving other queues intact. This tight feedback operation necessitates the use of special control logic.

The FifoKernelSM enables this automated parallel queue by providing a dataReady control output, in addition to the standard FIFO interface signals provided by the underlying FIFO primitive (e.g. Xilinx FIFO block). The dataReady vector goes through a combinational logic block which selects one entry from among the buffers with data available. This one-hot readEnable vector is fed back into the buffers as the dequeue input.

Parameterization

Further Notes on Applications

The number of MemUnit blocks used by each accelerator corresponds to the number of unique memory request interfaces in the system. This includes one interface used to issue the end-of-execution interrupt. As described earlier, the memory controller in the underlying hardware system offers a single channel, shared by all request queues via multiplexing. There are no ordering guarantees among the request queues.

From the lists of blocks used, it is evident that several blocks are used in multiple accelerators. This supports the observation that there are common computational paradigms in an interesting set of graph analytics algorithms. The GraphOps library makes building accelerators for these types of algorithms more accessible.

License

GraphOps is licensed under the MIT License.

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