Carl E. Busart

2papers

2 Papers

DCMay 10, 2022
An Edge-Cloud Integrated Framework for Flexible and Dynamic Stream Analytics

Xin Wang, Azim Khan, Jianwu Wang et al.

With the popularity of Internet of Things (IoT), edge computing and cloud computing, more and more stream analytics applications are being developed including real-time trend prediction and object detection on top of IoT sensing data. One popular type of stream analytics is the recurrent neural network (RNN) deep learning model based time series or sequence data prediction and forecasting. Different from traditional analytics that assumes data are available ahead of time and will not change, stream analytics deals with data that are being generated continuously and data trend/distribution could change (a.k.a. concept drift), which will cause prediction/forecasting accuracy to drop over time. One other challenge is to find the best resource provisioning for stream analytics to achieve good overall latency. In this paper, we study how to best leverage edge and cloud resources to achieve better accuracy and latency for stream analytics using a type of RNN model called long short-term memory (LSTM). We propose a novel edge-cloud integrated framework for hybrid stream analytics that supports low latency inference on the edge and high capacity training on the cloud. To achieve flexible deployment, we study different approaches of deploying our hybrid learning framework including edge-centric, cloud-centric and edge-cloud integrated. Further, our hybrid learning framework can dynamically combine inference results from an LSTM model pre-trained based on historical data and another LSTM model re-trained periodically based on the most recent data. Using real-world and simulated stream datasets, our experiments show the proposed edge-cloud deployment is the best among all three deployment types in terms of latency. For accuracy, the experiments show our dynamic learning approach performs the best among all learning approaches for all three concept drift scenarios.

DCDec 17, 2021Code
Reproducible and Portable Big Data Analytics in the Cloud

Xin Wang, Pei Guo, Xingyan Li et al.

Cloud computing has become a major approach to help reproduce computational experiments. Yet there are still two main difficulties in reproducing batch based big data analytics (including descriptive and predictive analytics) in the cloud. The first is how to automate end-to-end scalable execution of analytics including distributed environment provisioning, analytics pipeline description, parallel execution, and resource termination. The second is that an application developed for one cloud is difficult to be reproduced in another cloud, a.k.a. vendor lock-in problem. To tackle these problems, we leverage serverless computing and containerization techniques for automated scalable execution and reproducibility, and utilize the adapter design pattern to enable application portability and reproducibility across different clouds. We propose and develop an open-source toolkit that supports 1) fully automated end-to-end execution and reproduction via a single command, 2) automated data and configuration storage for each execution, 3) flexible client modes based on user preferences, 4) execution history query, and 5) simple reproduction of existing executions in the same environment or a different environment. We did extensive experiments on both AWS and Azure using four big data analytics applications that run on virtual CPU/GPU clusters. The experiments show our toolkit can achieve good execution performance, scalability, and efficient reproducibility for cloud-based big data analytics.