23,748 research outputs found
Serving deep learning models in a serverless platform
Serverless computing has emerged as a compelling paradigm for the development
and deployment of a wide range of event based cloud applications. At the same
time, cloud providers and enterprise companies are heavily adopting machine
learning and Artificial Intelligence to either differentiate themselves, or
provide their customers with value added services. In this work we evaluate the
suitability of a serverless computing environment for the inferencing of large
neural network models. Our experimental evaluations are executed on the AWS
Lambda environment using the MxNet deep learning framework. Our experimental
results show that while the inferencing latency can be within an acceptable
range, longer delays due to cold starts can skew the latency distribution and
hence risk violating more stringent SLAs
StreamLearner: Distributed Incremental Machine Learning on Event Streams: Grand Challenge
Today, massive amounts of streaming data from smart devices need to be
analyzed automatically to realize the Internet of Things. The Complex Event
Processing (CEP) paradigm promises low-latency pattern detection on event
streams. However, CEP systems need to be extended with Machine Learning (ML)
capabilities such as online training and inference in order to be able to
detect fuzzy patterns (e.g., outliers) and to improve pattern recognition
accuracy during runtime using incremental model training. In this paper, we
propose a distributed CEP system denoted as StreamLearner for ML-enabled
complex event detection. The proposed programming model and data-parallel
system architecture enable a wide range of real-world applications and allow
for dynamically scaling up and out system resources for low-latency,
high-throughput event processing. We show that the DEBS Grand Challenge 2017
case study (i.e., anomaly detection in smart factories) integrates seamlessly
into the StreamLearner API. Our experiments verify scalability and high event
throughput of StreamLearner.Comment: Christian Mayer, Ruben Mayer, and Majd Abdo. 2017. StreamLearner:
Distributed Incremental Machine Learning on Event Streams: Grand Challenge.
In Proceedings of the 11th ACM International Conference on Distributed and
Event-based Systems (DEBS '17), 298-30
Oblivion: Mitigating Privacy Leaks by Controlling the Discoverability of Online Information
Search engines are the prevalently used tools to collect information about
individuals on the Internet. Search results typically comprise a variety of
sources that contain personal information -- either intentionally released by
the person herself, or unintentionally leaked or published by third parties,
often with detrimental effects on the individual's privacy. To grant
individuals the ability to regain control over their disseminated personal
information, the European Court of Justice recently ruled that EU citizens have
a right to be forgotten in the sense that indexing systems, must offer them
technical means to request removal of links from search results that point to
sources violating their data protection rights. As of now, these technical
means consist of a web form that requires a user to manually identify all
relevant links upfront and to insert them into the web form, followed by a
manual evaluation by employees of the indexing system to assess if the request
is eligible and lawful.
We propose a universal framework Oblivion to support the automation of the
right to be forgotten in a scalable, provable and privacy-preserving manner.
First, Oblivion enables a user to automatically find and tag her disseminated
personal information using natural language processing and image recognition
techniques and file a request in a privacy-preserving manner. Second, Oblivion
provides indexing systems with an automated and provable eligibility mechanism,
asserting that the author of a request is indeed affected by an online
resource. The automated ligibility proof ensures censorship-resistance so that
only legitimately affected individuals can request the removal of corresponding
links from search results. We have conducted comprehensive evaluations, showing
that Oblivion is capable of handling 278 removal requests per second, and is
hence suitable for large-scale deployment
Scalable discovery of hybrid process models in a cloud computing environment
Process descriptions are used to create products and deliver services. To lead better processes and services, the first step
is to learn a process model. Process discovery is such a technique which can automatically extract process models from event logs.
Although various discovery techniques have been proposed, they focus on either constructing formal models which are very powerful
but complex, or creating informal models which are intuitive but lack semantics. In this work, we introduce a novel method that returns
hybrid process models to bridge this gap. Moreover, to cope with today’s big event logs, we propose an efficient method, called f-HMD,
aims at scalable hybrid model discovery in a cloud computing environment. We present the detailed implementation of our approach
over the Spark framework, and our experimental results demonstrate that the proposed method is efficient and scalabl
Revisiting Actor Programming in C++
The actor model of computation has gained significant popularity over the
last decade. Its high level of abstraction makes it appealing for concurrent
applications in parallel and distributed systems. However, designing a
real-world actor framework that subsumes full scalability, strong reliability,
and high resource efficiency requires many conceptual and algorithmic additives
to the original model.
In this paper, we report on designing and building CAF, the "C++ Actor
Framework". CAF targets at providing a concurrent and distributed native
environment for scaling up to very large, high-performance applications, and
equally well down to small constrained systems. We present the key
specifications and design concepts---in particular a message-transparent
architecture, type-safe message interfaces, and pattern matching
facilities---that make native actors a viable approach for many robust,
elastic, and highly distributed developments. We demonstrate the feasibility of
CAF in three scenarios: first for elastic, upscaling environments, second for
including heterogeneous hardware like GPGPUs, and third for distributed runtime
systems. Extensive performance evaluations indicate ideal runtime behaviour for
up to 64 cores at very low memory footprint, or in the presence of GPUs. In
these tests, CAF continuously outperforms the competing actor environments
Erlang, Charm++, SalsaLite, Scala, ActorFoundry, and even the OpenMPI.Comment: 33 page
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