208 research outputs found
Lagrange Coded Computing: Optimal Design for Resiliency, Security and Privacy
We consider a scenario involving computations over a massive dataset stored
distributedly across multiple workers, which is at the core of distributed
learning algorithms. We propose Lagrange Coded Computing (LCC), a new framework
to simultaneously provide (1) resiliency against stragglers that may prolong
computations; (2) security against Byzantine (or malicious) workers that
deliberately modify the computation for their benefit; and (3)
(information-theoretic) privacy of the dataset amidst possible collusion of
workers. LCC, which leverages the well-known Lagrange polynomial to create
computation redundancy in a novel coded form across workers, can be applied to
any computation scenario in which the function of interest is an arbitrary
multivariate polynomial of the input dataset, hence covering many computations
of interest in machine learning. LCC significantly generalizes prior works to
go beyond linear computations. It also enables secure and private computing in
distributed settings, improving the computation and communication efficiency of
the state-of-the-art. Furthermore, we prove the optimality of LCC by showing
that it achieves the optimal tradeoff between resiliency, security, and
privacy, i.e., in terms of tolerating the maximum number of stragglers and
adversaries, and providing data privacy against the maximum number of colluding
workers. Finally, we show via experiments on Amazon EC2 that LCC speeds up the
conventional uncoded implementation of distributed least-squares linear
regression by up to , and also achieves a
- speedup over the state-of-the-art straggler
mitigation strategies
Trading Communication for Computation in Byzantine-Resilient Gradient Coding
We consider gradient coding in the presence of an adversary, controlling
so-called malicious workers trying to corrupt the computations. Previous works
propose the use of MDS codes to treat the inputs of the malicious workers as
errors and correct them using the error-correction properties of the code. This
comes at the expense of increasing the replication, i.e., the number of workers
each partial gradient is computed by. In this work, we reduce replication by
proposing a method that detects the erroneous inputs from the malicious
workers, hence transforming them into erasures. For malicious workers, our
solution can reduce the replication to instead of for each partial
gradient at the expense of only additional computations at the main node
and additional rounds of light communication between the main node and the
workers. We give fundamental limits of the general framework for fractional
repetition data allocation. Our scheme is optimal in terms of replication and
local computation but incurs a communication cost that is asymptotically, in
the size of the dataset, a multiplicative factor away from the derived bound
Lagrange Coded Computing: Optimal Design for Resiliency, Security, and Privacy
We consider a scenario involving computations over a massive dataset stored distributedly across multiple workers, which is at the core of distributed learning algorithms. We propose Lagrange Coded Computing (LCC), a new framework to simultaneously provide (1) resiliency against stragglers that may prolong computations; (2) security against Byzantine (or malicious) workers that deliberately modify the computation for their benefit; and (3) (information-theoretic) privacy of the dataset amidst possible collusion of workers. LCC, which leverages the well-known Lagrange polynomial to create computation redundancy in a novel coded form across workers, can be applied to any computation scenario in which the function of interest is an arbitrary multivariate polynomial of the input dataset, hence covering many computations of interest in machine learning. LCC significantly generalizes prior works to go beyond linear computations. It also enables secure and private computing in distributed settings, improving the computation and communication efficiency of the state-of-the-art. Furthermore, we prove the optimality of LCC by showing that it achieves the optimal tradeoff between resiliency, security, and privacy, i.e., in terms of tolerating the maximum number of stragglers and adversaries, and providing data privacy against the maximum number of colluding workers. Finally, we show via experiments on Amazon EC2 that LCC speeds up the conventional uncoded implementation of distributed least-squares linear regression by up to 13.43×, and also achieves a 2.36×-12.65× speedup over the state-of-the-art straggler mitigation strategies
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