LGJul 2, 2021
ResIST: Layer-Wise Decomposition of ResNets for Distributed TrainingChen Dun, Cameron R. Wolfe, Christopher M. Jermaine et al.
We propose ResIST, a novel distributed training protocol for Residual Networks (ResNets). ResIST randomly decomposes a global ResNet into several shallow sub-ResNets that are trained independently in a distributed manner for several local iterations, before having their updates synchronized and aggregated into the global model. In the next round, new sub-ResNets are randomly generated and the process repeats until convergence. By construction, per iteration, ResIST communicates only a small portion of network parameters to each machine and never uses the full model during training. Thus, ResIST reduces the per-iteration communication, memory, and time requirements of ResNet training to only a fraction of the requirements of full-model training. In comparison to common protocols, like data-parallel training and data-parallel training with local SGD, ResIST yields a decrease in communication and compute requirements, while being competitive with respect to model performance.
LGOct 4, 2019
Distributed Learning of Deep Neural Networks using Independent Subnet TrainingBinhang Yuan, Cameron R. Wolfe, Chen Dun et al.
Distributed machine learning (ML) can bring more computational resources to bear than single-machine learning, thus enabling reductions in training time. Distributed learning partitions models and data over many machines, allowing model and dataset sizes beyond the available compute power and memory of a single machine. In practice though, distributed ML is challenging when distribution is mandatory, rather than chosen by the practitioner. In such scenarios, data could unavoidably be separated among workers due to limited memory capacity per worker or even because of data privacy issues. There, existing distributed methods will utterly fail due to dominant transfer costs across workers, or do not even apply. We propose a new approach to distributed fully connected neural network learning, called independent subnet training (IST), to handle these cases. In IST, the original network is decomposed into a set of narrow subnetworks with the same depth. These subnetworks are then trained locally before parameters are exchanged to produce new subnets and the training cycle repeats. Such a naturally "model parallel" approach limits memory usage by storing only a portion of network parameters on each device. Additionally, no requirements exist for sharing data between workers (i.e., subnet training is local and independent) and communication volume and frequency are reduced by decomposing the original network into independent subnets. These properties of IST can cope with issues due to distributed data, slow interconnects, or limited device memory, making IST a suitable approach for cases of mandatory distribution. We show experimentally that IST results in training times that are much lower than common distributed learning approaches.