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Shared Memory Parallelization of Decision
Tree Construction Using a General
Middleware
Ruoming Jin
Gagan Agrawal
Department of Computer and Information
Sciences
Ohio State University
Motivation


Can the algorithms for a variety of mining tasks be
parallelized using a common parallelization structure
?
If so, we can



Have a common set of parallelization techniques
Develop general runtime / middleware support
Parallelize starting from a high-level interface
Context

Part of the FREERIDE (Framework for Rapid
Implementation of Datamining Engines) system



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Support parallelization on shared-nothing configurations
Support parallelization on shared memory configurations
Support processing of large datasets
Previously reported our work for


Distributed memory parallelization and processing of diskresident datasets (SDM 01, IPDPS 01 workshop)
Shared memory parallelization applied to association mining
and clustering (SDM 02, IPDPS 02 workshop, SIGMETRICS
02)
Decision Tree Construction


One of the key mining problems
Previous parallel algorithms have had a significantly
different structure than parallel algorithms for
association mining, clustering, etc.

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Frequently require sorting of data (SPRINT, SLIQ etc.)
Require attributes to be written back
Difficult to obtain very high speedups
Can we perform shared memory parallelization of
decision tree construction using the same techniques
that were used for association mining and clustering
?
Outline

Previous work on shared memory parallelization



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Observation from major mining algorithms
Parallelization Techniques
Decision tree construction problem and algorithms
RainForest Based Approach
Parallelization methods
Experimental Results
Common Processing Structure

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
Structure of Common Data Mining Algorithms
{* Outer Sequential Loop *}
While () {
{ * Reduction Loop* }
Foreach (element e) {
(i,val) = process(e);
Reduc(i) = Reduc(i) op val;
}
}
Applies to major association mining, clustering and
decision tree construction algorithms
How to parallelize it on a shared memory machine?
Challenges in Parallelization


Statically partitioning the reduction object to avoid
race conditions is generally impossible.
Runtime preprocessing or scheduling also cannot be
applied



Can’t tell what you need to update w/o processing the
element
The size of reduction object means significant
memory overheads for replication
Locking and synchronization costs could be
significant because of the fine-grained updates to the
reduction object.
Parallelization Techniques


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Full Replication: create a copy of the reduction object
for each thread
Full Locking: associate a lock with each element
Optimized Full Locking: put the element and
corresponding lock on the same cache block
Fixed Locking: use a fixed number of locks
Cache Sensitive Locking: one lock for all elements in
a cache block
Memory Layout for Various Locking Schemes
Full Locking
Optimized Full Locking
Lock
Fixed Locking
Cache-Sensitive Locking
Reduction Element
Trade-offs between Techniques


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Memory requirements: high memory requirements
can cause memory thrashing
Contention: if the number of reduction elements is
small, contention for locks can be a significant factor
Coherence cache misses and false sharing: more
likely with a small number of reduction elements
Summary of Results on Association Mining
and Clustering



Applied techniques on apriori association mining
and k-means clustering
Each of full replication, optimized full locking, and
cache-sensitive locking can outperform each other,
depending upon the size of the reduction object
Near-linear speedups obtained in all our
experiments
Decision Tree Construction Problem


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Input: a set of training records, each with several
attributes
One attribute is special, called the class label, others
are predictor attributes
The goal is to construct a prediction model, which
predicts the class model for a new record, using
values of its predictor attributes
A tree is constructed in a top-down fashion
Existing Algorithms


Initial algorithms: required training records to fit in
memory
SLIQ: scalable, but

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Requires sorting of numerical attributes
Separation of attribute lists
A data-structure called class list to be maintained in main
memory (size proportional to the number of training
records)
SPRINT: scalable and parallelizable, but


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Requires sorting of numerical attributes
Separation of attribute lists
Partitioning of attribute lists while splitting a node
RainForest Based Decision Tree
Construction

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A general approach to scaling decision tree
construction
Key idea: AVC-set (Attribute Value, Classlabel)

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Sufficient information for deciding on split condition
For an attribute and node, size is proportional to the number
of distinct values and class labels
Easily constructed by taking one pass on data
A number of different algorithms: RF-read, RF-Write,
RF-hybrid
RF-read has a structure that fits in very well with
canonical loop presented earlier
RF-read Algorithm

High-level structure of the algorithm
 While the stop condition is not satisfied

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read the data
build the AVC-group for nodes
choose the splitting attributes to split nodes
select a new set of node to process as long as the main
memory could hold it
Never need to write-back any data to disks
May require multiple passes to process one levels
of the tree
Overall Parallelization Approach

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Training records can be processed independently by
processors
AVC-sets of nodes are reduction objects : race
conditions can arise in updating the values
Use the different parallelization techniques we have
for avoiding race conditions
Higher memory requirements can mean more passes
to process one level of the tree
Parallelization Strategies


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Pure approach: only apply one of full replication,
optimized full locking and cache-sensitive locking
Vertical approach: use replication at top levels,
locking at lower
Horizontal: use replication for attributes with a small
number of distinct values, locking otherwise
Mixed approach: combine the above two
Experimental Setup

SMP Machine
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SunFire 6800
24 750 MHz processors (only up to 8 for our experiments)
64 KB L1 cache, 8 MG L2 cache, 24 GB memory
Dataset
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1.3 GB dataset with 32 million records
Synthetic data, using a tool available from IBM almaden
9 attributes, 3 categorical, 6 numerical
Used functions 1 and 7 (1 in paper)
Results
3500
3000
Time(s)
2500
fr
2000
ofl
1500
csl
1000
500
0
1
2
4
8
No. of Nodes
Performance of pure versions, 1.3GB dataset with 32 million records in the
training set, function 7, the depth of decision tree = 16.
Results
3000
Time(s)
2500
2000
horizontal
1500
vertical
1000
mixed
500
0
1
2
4
8
No. of Nodes
Combining full replication and optimized full locking
Results
3000
Time(s)
2500
2000
horizontal
1500
vertical
1000
mixed
500
0
1
2
4
8
No. of Nodes
Combining full replication and cache-sensitive locking
Summary

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
A set of common techniques can be used for shared
memory parallelization of different mining algorithms
Combination of parallelization techniques gives the
best performance for decision tree construction
Best speedup of 5.9 on 8 processors – comparable
with other results on shared memory and distributed
memory parallelization