DCAIOct 16, 2024

Boosting Asynchronous Decentralized Learning with Model Fragmentation

arXiv:2410.12918v26 citationsh-index: 54WWW
Originality Highly original
AI Analysis

This addresses a key bottleneck in decentralized learning for distributed systems, offering practical improvements but is incremental relative to existing methods.

The paper tackles the problem of communication stragglers in decentralized learning by proposing DivShare, an asynchronous algorithm that fragments models into subsets for parallel transfer, achieving up to 3.9x faster time-to-accuracy and up to 19.4% better accuracy compared to baselines.

Decentralized learning (DL) is an emerging technique that allows nodes on the web to collaboratively train machine learning models without sharing raw data. Dealing with stragglers, i.e., nodes with slower compute or communication than others, is a key challenge in DL. We present DivShare, a novel asynchronous DL algorithm that achieves fast model convergence in the presence of communication stragglers. DivShare achieves this by having nodes fragment their models into parameter subsets and send, in parallel to computation, each subset to a random sample of other nodes instead of sequentially exchanging full models. The transfer of smaller fragments allows more efficient usage of the collective bandwidth and enables nodes with slow network links to quickly contribute with at least some of their model parameters. By theoretically proving the convergence of DivShare, we provide, to the best of our knowledge, the first formal proof of convergence for a DL algorithm that accounts for the effects of asynchronous communication with delays. We experimentally evaluate DivShare against two state-of-the-art DL baselines, AD-PSGD and Swift, and with two standard datasets, CIFAR-10 and MovieLens. We find that DivShare with communication stragglers lowers time-to-accuracy by up to 3.9x compared to AD-PSGD on the CIFAR-10 dataset. Compared to baselines, DivShare also achieves up to 19.4% better accuracy and 9.5% lower test loss on the CIFAR-10 and MovieLens datasets, respectively.

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