Raghu Ramakrishnan

DB
h-index5
5papers
269citations
Novelty47%
AI Score30

5 Papers

LGDec 14, 2023
MotherNet: Fast Training and Inference via Hyper-Network Transformers

Andreas Müller, Carlo Curino, Raghu Ramakrishnan

Foundation models are transforming machine learning across many modalities, with in-context learning replacing classical model training. Recent work on tabular data hints at a similar opportunity to build foundation models for classification for numerical data. However, existing meta-learning approaches can not compete with tree-based methods in terms of inference time. In this paper, we propose MotherNet, a hypernetwork architecture trained on synthetic classification tasks that, once prompted with a never-seen-before training set generates the weights of a trained ``child'' neural-network by in-context learning using a single forward pass. In contrast to most existing hypernetworks that are usually trained for relatively constrained multi-task settings, MotherNet can create models for multiclass classification on arbitrary tabular datasets without any dataset specific gradient descent. The child network generated by MotherNet outperforms neural networks trained using gradient descent on small datasets, and is comparable to predictions by TabPFN and standard ML methods like Gradient Boosting. Unlike a direct application of TabPFN, MotherNet generated networks are highly efficient at inference time. We also demonstrate that HyperFast is unable to perform effective in-context learning on small datasets, and heavily relies on dataset specific fine-tuning and hyper-parameter tuning, while MotherNet requires no fine-tuning or per-dataset hyper-parameters.

DBNov 1, 2019
Extending Relational Query Processing with ML Inference

Konstantinos Karanasos, Matteo Interlandi, Doris Xin et al.

The broadening adoption of machine learning in the enterprise is increasing the pressure for strict governance and cost-effective performance, in particular for the common and consequential steps of model storage and inference. The RDBMS provides a natural starting point, given its mature infrastructure for fast data access and processing, along with support for enterprise features (e.g., encryption, auditing, high-availability). To take advantage of all of the above, we need to address a key concern: Can in-RDBMS scoring of ML models match (outperform?) the performance of dedicated frameworks? We answer the above positively by building Raven, a system that leverages native integration of ML runtimes (i.e., ONNX Runtime) deep within SQL Server, and a unified intermediate representation (IR) to enable advanced cross-optimizations between ML and DB operators. In this optimization space, we discover the most exciting research opportunities that combine DB/Compiler/ML thinking. Our initial evaluation on real data demonstrates performance gains of up to 5.5x from the native integration of ML in SQL Server, and up to 24x from cross-optimizations--we will demonstrate Raven live during the conference talk.

DBAug 30, 2019
Cloudy with high chance of DBMS: A 10-year prediction for Enterprise-Grade ML

Ashvin Agrawal, Rony Chatterjee, Carlo Curino et al.

Machine learning (ML) has proven itself in high-value web applications such as search ranking and is emerging as a powerful tool in a much broader range of enterprise scenarios including voice recognition and conversational understanding for customer support, autotuning for videoconferencing, intelligent feedback loops in large-scale sysops, manufacturing and autonomous vehicle management, complex financial predictions, just to name a few. Meanwhile, as the value of data is increasingly recognized and monetized, concerns about securing valuable data and risks to individual privacy have been growing. Consequently, rigorous data management has emerged as a key requirement in enterprise settings. How will these trends (ML growing popularity, and stricter data governance) intersect? What are the unmet requirements for applying ML in enterprise settings? What are the technical challenges for the DB community to solve? In this paper, we present our vision of how ML and database systems are likely to come together, and early steps we take towards making this vision a reality.

DCMar 13, 2013
Iterative MapReduce for Large Scale Machine Learning

Joshua Rosen, Neoklis Polyzotis, Vinayak Borkar et al.

Large datasets ("Big Data") are becoming ubiquitous because the potential value in deriving insights from data, across a wide range of business and scientific applications, is increasingly recognized. In particular, machine learning - one of the foundational disciplines for data analysis, summarization and inference - on Big Data has become routine at most organizations that operate large clouds, usually based on systems such as Hadoop that support the MapReduce programming paradigm. It is now widely recognized that while MapReduce is highly scalable, it suffers from a critical weakness for machine learning: it does not support iteration. Consequently, one has to program around this limitation, leading to fragile, inefficient code. Further, reliance on the programmer is inherently flawed in a multi-tenanted cloud environment, since the programmer does not have visibility into the state of the system when his or her program executes. Prior work has sought to address this problem by either developing specialized systems aimed at stylized applications, or by augmenting MapReduce with ad hoc support for saving state across iterations (driven by an external loop). In this paper, we advocate support for looping as a first-class construct, and propose an extension of the MapReduce programming paradigm called {\em Iterative MapReduce}. We then develop an optimizer for a class of Iterative MapReduce programs that cover most machine learning techniques, provide theoretical justifications for the key optimization steps, and empirically demonstrate that system-optimized programs for significant machine learning tasks are competitive with state-of-the-art specialized solutions.

DBMar 1, 2012
Scaling Datalog for Machine Learning on Big Data

Yingyi Bu, Vinayak Borkar, Michael J. Carey et al.

In this paper, we present the case for a declarative foundation for data-intensive machine learning systems. Instead of creating a new system for each specific flavor of machine learning task, or hardcoding new optimizations, we argue for the use of recursive queries to program a variety of machine learning systems. By taking this approach, database query optimization techniques can be utilized to identify effective execution plans, and the resulting runtime plans can be executed on a single unified data-parallel query processing engine. As a proof of concept, we consider two programming models--Pregel and Iterative Map-Reduce-Update---from the machine learning domain, and show how they can be captured in Datalog, tuned for a specific task, and then compiled into an optimized physical plan. Experiments performed on a large computing cluster with real data demonstrate that this declarative approach can provide very good performance while offering both increased generality and programming ease.