DCMar 16Code
Cuckoo-GPU: Accelerating Cuckoo Filters on Modern GPUsTim Dortmann, Markus Vieth, Bertil Schmidt
Approximate Membership Query (AMQ) structures are essential for high-throughput systems in databases, networking, and bioinformatics. While Bloom filters offer speed, they lack support for deletions. Existing GPU-based dynamic alternatives, such as the Two-Choice Filter (TCF) and GPU Quotient Filter (GQF), enable deletions but incur severe performance penalties. We present Cuckoo-GPU, an open-source, high-performance Cuckoo filter library for GPUs. Instead of prioritizing cache locality, Cuckoo-GPU embraces the inherently random access pattern of Cuckoo hashing to fully saturate global memory bandwidth. Our design features a lock-free architecture built on atomic compare-and-swap operations, paired with a novel breadth-first search-based eviction heuristic that minimizes thread divergence and bounds sequential memory accesses during high-load insertions. Evaluated on NVIDIA GH200 (HBM3) and RTX PRO 6000 Blackwell (GDDR7) systems, Cuckoo-GPU closes the performance gap between append-only and dynamic AMQ structures. It achieves insertion, query, and deletion throughputs up to 378x (4.1x), 6x (34.7x), and 258x (107x) higher than GQF (TCF) on the same hardware, respectively, and delivers up to a 350x speedup over the fastest available multi-threaded CPU-based Cuckoo filter implementation. Moreover, its query throughput rivals that of the append-only GPU-based Blocked Bloom filter - demonstrating that dynamic AMQ structures can be deployed on modern accelerators without sacrificing performance.
LGMar 31, 2022
Traffic4cast at NeurIPS 2021 -- Temporal and Spatial Few-Shot Transfer Learning in Gridded Geo-Spatial ProcessesChristian Eichenberger, Moritz Neun, Henry Martin et al.
The IARAI Traffic4cast competitions at NeurIPS 2019 and 2020 showed that neural networks can successfully predict future traffic conditions 1 hour into the future on simply aggregated GPS probe data in time and space bins. We thus reinterpreted the challenge of forecasting traffic conditions as a movie completion task. U-Nets proved to be the winning architecture, demonstrating an ability to extract relevant features in this complex real-world geo-spatial process. Building on the previous competitions, Traffic4cast 2021 now focuses on the question of model robustness and generalizability across time and space. Moving from one city to an entirely different city, or moving from pre-COVID times to times after COVID hit the world thus introduces a clear domain shift. We thus, for the first time, release data featuring such domain shifts. The competition now covers ten cities over 2 years, providing data compiled from over 10^12 GPS probe data. Winning solutions captured traffic dynamics sufficiently well to even cope with these complex domain shifts. Surprisingly, this seemed to require only the previous 1h traffic dynamic history and static road graph as input.
LGFeb 11, 2022
A Graph-based U-Net Model for Predicting Traffic in unseen CitiesLuca Hermes, Barbara Hammer, Andrew Melnik et al.
Accurate traffic prediction is a key ingredient to enable traffic management like rerouting cars to reduce road congestion or regulating traffic via dynamic speed limits to maintain a steady flow. A way to represent traffic data is in the form of temporally changing heatmaps visualizing attributes of traffic, such as speed and volume. In recent works, U-Net models have shown SOTA performance on traffic forecasting from heatmaps. We propose to combine the U-Net architecture with graph layers which improves spatial generalization to unseen road networks compared to a Vanilla U-Net. In particular, we specialize existing graph operations to be sensitive to geographical topology and generalize pooling and upsampling operations to be applicable to graphs.