How can I speed up deep learning on a non-NVIDIA setup?

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野趣味
野趣味 2021-02-08 12:26

Since I only have an AMD A10-7850 APU, and do not have the funds to spend on a $800-$1200 NVIDIA graphics card, I am trying to make due with the resources I have in order to spe

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  •  北恋
    北恋 (楼主)
    2021-02-08 12:56

    After researching this topic for a few months, I can see 3.5 possible paths forward:

    1.) Tensorflow + OpenCl as mentioned in the comments above:

    There seems to be some movement going on this field. Over at Codeplay, Lukasz Iwanski just posted a comprehensive answer on how to get tensorflow to run with opencl here (I will only provide a link as stated above because the information might change there): https://www.codeplay.com/portal/03-30-17-setting-up-tensorflow-with-opencl-using-sycl

    The potential to use integrated graphics is alluring. It's also worth exploring the use of this combination with APUs. But I am not sure how well this will work since OpenCl support is still early in development, and hardware support is very limited. Furthermore, OpenCl is not the same as a handcrafted library of optimized code. (UPDATE 2017-04-24: I have gotten the code to compile after running into some issues here!) Unfortunately, the hoped for speed improvements ON MY SETUP (iGPU) did not materialize.

    CIFAR 10 Dataset:

    1. Tensorflow (via pip ak unoptimized): 1700sec/epoch at 390% CPU utilization.
    2. Tensorflow (SSE4, AVX): 1100sec/epoch at 390% CPU utilization.
    3. Tensorflow (opencl + iGPU): 5800sec/epoch at 150% CPU and 100% GPU utilization.

    Your mileage may vary significantly. So I am wondering what are other people getting relatively speaking (unoptimized vs optimized vs opencl) on your setups?

    What should be noted: opencl implementation means that all the heavy computation should be done on the GPU. (Updated on 2017/4/29) But in reality this is not the case yet because some functions have not been implemented yet. This leads to unnecessary copying back and forth of data between CPU and GPU ram. Again, imminent changes should improve the situation. And furthermore, for those interested in helping out and those wanting to speed things up, we can do something that will have a measurable impact on the performance of tensorflow with opencl.

    But as it stands for now: 1 iGPU << 4 CPUS with SSE+AVX. Perhaps beefier GPUs with larger RAM and/or opencl 2.0 implementation could have made a larger difference.

    At this point, I should add that similar efforts have been going on with at least Caffe and/or Theano + OpenCl. The limiting step in all cases appears to be the manual porting of CUDA/cuDNN functionality to the openCl paradigm.

    2.) RocM + MIOpen

    RocM stands for Radeon Open Compute and seems to be a hodgepodge of initiatives that is/will make deep-learning possible on non-NVIDIA (mostly Radeon devices). It includes 3 major components:

    • HIP: A tool that converts CUDA code to code that can be consumed by AMD GPUs.
    • ROCk: a 64-bit linux kernel driver for AMD CPU+GPU devices.
    • HCC: A C/C++ compiler that compiles code into code for a heterogeneous system architecture environment (HSA).

    Apparently, RocM is designed to play to AMDs strenghts of having both CPU and GPU technology. Their approach to speeding up deep-learning make use of both components. As an APU owner, I am particularly interested in this possibility. But as a cautionary note: Kaveri APUs have limited support (only integrated graphcs is supported). Future APUs have not been released yet. And it appears, there is still a lot of work that is being done here to bring this project to a mature state. A lot of work will hopefully make this approach viable within a year given that AMD has announced their Radeon Instinct cards will be released this year (2017).

    The problem here for me is that that RocM is providing tools for building deep learning libraries. They do not themselves represent deep learning libraries. As a data scientist who is not focused on tools development, I just want something that works. and am not necessarily interested in building what I want to then do the learning. There are not enough hours in the day to do both well at the company I am at.

    NVIDIA has of course CUDA and cuDNN which are libaries of hand-crafted assembler code optimized for NVIDIA GPUs. All major deep learning frameworks build on top of these proprietary libraries. AMD currently does not have anything like that at all.

    I am uncertain how successfully AMD will get to where NVIDIA is in this regard. But there is some light being shone on what AMDs intentions are in an article posted by Carlos Perez on 4/3/2017 here. A recent lecture at Stanford also talks in general terms about Ryzen, Vega and deep learning fit together. In essence, the article states that MIOpen will represent this hand-crafted library of optimized deep learning functions for AMD devices. This library is set to be released in H1 of 2017. I am uncertain how soon these libraries would be incorporated into the major deep learning frameworks and what the scope of functional implementation will be then at this time.

    But apparently, AMD has already worked with the developers of Caffe to "hippify" the code basis. Basically, CUDA code is converted automatically to C code via HIP. The automation takes care of the vast majority of the code basis, leaving only less than 0.5% of code had to be changed and required manual attention. Compare that to the manual translation into openCl code, and one starts getting the feeling that this approach might be more sustainable. What I am not clear about is where the lower-level assembler language optimization come in.

    (Update 2017-05-19) But with the imminent release of AMD Vega cards (the professional Frontier Edition card not for consumers will be first), there are hints that major deep learning frameworks will be supported through the MIOpen framework. A Forbes article released today shows the progress MiOpen has taken over just the last couple of months in terms of performance: it appears significant. (Update 2017-08-25) MiOpen has officially been released. We are no longer talking in hypotheticals here. Now we just need to try out how well this framework works.

    3.) Neon

    Neon is Nervana's (now acquired by Intel) open-source deep-learning framework. The reason I mention this framework is that it seems to be fairly straightforward to use. The syntax is about as easy and intuitive as Keras. More importantly though, this framework has achieved speeds up to 2x faster than Tensorflow on some benchmarks due to some hand-crafted assembler language optimization for those computations. Potentially, cutting computation times from 500 secs/epoch down to 300 secs/epoch is nothing to sneeze at. 300 secs = 5 minutes. So one could get 15 epochs in in an hour. and about 50 epochs in about 3.5 hours! But ideally, I want to do these kinds of calculations in under an hour. To get to those levels, I need to use a GPU, and at this point, only NVIDIA offers full support in this regard: Neon also uses CUDA and cuDNN when a GPU is available (and of course, it has to be an NVIDIA GPU). If you have access other Intel hardware this is of course a valid way to pursue. Afterall, Neon was developed out of a motivation to get things to work optimally also on non-NVIDIA setups (like Nervana's custom CPUs, and now Intel FPGAs or Xeon Phis).

    3.5.) Intel Movidius

    Update 2017-08-25: I came across this article. Intel has released a USB3.0-stick-based "deep learning" accelerator. Apparently, it works with Cafe and allows the user perform common Cafe-based fine-tuning of networks and inference. This is important stressing: If you want to train your own network from scratch, the wording is very ambiguous here. I will therefore assume, that apart from fine-tuning a network, training itself should still be done on something with more parallel compute. The real kicker though is this: When I checked for the pricing this stick costs a mere $79. That's nothing compared to the cost of your average NVIDIA 1070-80(ti) card. If you merely want to tackle some vision problems using common network topologies already available for some related tasks, you can use this stick to fine tune it to your own use, then compile the code and put it into this stick to do inference quickly. Many use cases can be covered with this stick, and for again $79 it could be worth it. This being Intel, they are proposing to go all out on Intel. Their model is to use the cloud (i.e. Nervana Cloud) for training. Then, use this chip for prototype inference or inference where energy consumption matters. Whether this is the right approach or not is left for the reader to answer.

    At this time, it looks like deep learning without NVIDIA is still difficult to realize. Some limited speed gains are difficult but potentially possible through the use of opencl. Other initiatives sound promising but it will take time to sort out the real impact that these initiatives will have.

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