LGOct 30, 2021

Optimizing Sparse Matrix Multiplications for Graph Neural Networks

arXiv:2111.00352v123 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses a domain-specific problem for GNN practitioners by improving computational efficiency, though it is incremental as it builds on existing storage format techniques.

The paper tackles the performance bottleneck in Graph Neural Networks (GNNs) caused by inefficient sparse matrix multiplication (SpMM) operations, achieving an average speedup of 1.17x (up to 3x) in GNN running time by dynamically selecting optimal sparse matrix storage formats.

Graph neural networks (GNNs) are emerging as a powerful technique for modeling graph structures. Due to the sparsity of real-world graph data, GNN performance is limited by extensive sparse matrix multiplication (SpMM) operations involved in computation. While the right sparse matrix storage format varies across input data, existing deep learning frameworks employ a single, static storage format, leaving much room for improvement. This paper investigates how the choice of sparse matrix storage formats affect the GNN performance. We observe that choosing a suitable sparse matrix storage format can significantly improve the GNN training performance, but the right format depends on the input workloads and can change as the GNN iterates over the input graph. We then develop a predictive model to dynamically choose a sparse matrix storage format to be used by a GNN layer based on the input matrices. Our model is first trained offline using training matrix samples, and the trained model can be applied to any input matrix and GNN kernels with SpMM computation. We implement our approach on top of PyTorch and apply it to 5 representative GNN models running on a multi-core CPU using real-life and synthetic datasets. Experimental results show that our approach gives an average speedup of 1.17x (up to 3x) for GNN running time.

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