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Taming unbalanced training workloads in deep learning with partial collective operations

Shigang Li, Tal Ben‐Nun, Salvatore Di Girolamo, Dan Alistarh, Torsten Hoefler

202055 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Load imbalance pervasively exists in distributed deep learning training systems, either caused by the inherent imbalance in learned tasks or by the system itself. Traditional synchronous Stochastic Gradient Descent (SGD) achieves good accuracy for a wide variety of tasks, but relies on global synchronization to accumulate the gradients at every training step. In this paper, we propose eager-SGD, which relaxes the global synchronization for decentralized accumulation. To implement eager-SGD, we propose to use two partial collectives: solo and majority. With solo allreduce, the faster processes contribute their gradients eagerly without waiting for the slower processes, whereas with majority allreduce, at least half of the participants must contribute gradients before continuing, all without using a central parameter server. We theoretically prove the convergence of the algorithms and describe the partial collectives in detail. Experiments are conducted on a variety of neural networks and datasets. The results on load-imbalanced environments show that eager-SGD achieves 2.64 X speedup (ResNet-50 on ImageNet) over the asynchronous centralized SGD, and achieves 1.29 X speedup (ResNet-50 on ImageNet) and 1.27X speedup (LSTM on UCF101) over the state-of-the-art synchronous decentralized SGDs, without losing accuracy.

Topics & Concepts

SpeedupStochastic gradient descentComputer scienceAsynchronous communicationVariety (cybernetics)Synchronization (alternating current)Artificial intelligenceConvergence (economics)Training (meteorology)Machine learningGradient descentDistributed computingArtificial neural networkParallel computingComputer networkMeteorologyChannel (broadcasting)PhysicsEconomicsEconomic growthAdvanced Neural Network ApplicationsStochastic Gradient Optimization TechniquesBrain Tumor Detection and Classification