Jointly Optimizing Preprocessing and Inference for DNN-based Visual Analytics
This work addresses performance issues in visual analytics for users handling large datasets, though it is incremental as it builds on existing trade-off methods.
The paper tackles the bottleneck of data preprocessing in DNN-based visual analytics systems by introducing optimizations that use low-resolution data and an efficient runtime engine, achieving up to 5.9x throughput improvements at fixed accuracy.
While deep neural networks (DNNs) are an increasingly popular way to query large corpora of data, their significant runtime remains an active area of research. As a result, researchers have proposed systems and optimizations to reduce these costs by allowing users to trade off accuracy and speed. In this work, we examine end-to-end DNN execution in visual analytics systems on modern accelerators. Through a novel measurement study, we show that the preprocessing of data (e.g., decoding, resizing) can be the bottleneck in many visual analytics systems on modern hardware. To address the bottleneck of preprocessing, we introduce two optimizations for end-to-end visual analytics systems. First, we introduce novel methods of achieving accuracy and throughput trade-offs by using natively present, low-resolution visual data. Second, we develop a runtime engine for efficient visual DNN inference. This runtime engine a) efficiently pipelines preprocessing and DNN execution for inference, b) places preprocessing operations on the CPU or GPU in a hardware- and input-aware manner, and c) efficiently manages memory and threading for high throughput execution. We implement these optimizations in a novel system, Smol, and evaluate Smol on eight visual datasets. We show that its optimizations can achieve up to 5.9x end-to-end throughput improvements at a fixed accuracy over recent work in visual analytics.