30
15
v1v2 (latest)

Avoiding communication in primal and dual block coordinate descent methods

Abstract

Primal and dual block coordinate descent methods are iterative methods for solving regularized and unregularized optimization problems. Distributed-memory parallel implementations of these methods have become popular in analyzing large machine learning datasets. However, existing implementations communicate at every iteration which, on modern data center and supercomputing architectures, often dominates the cost of floating-point computation. Recent results on communication-avoiding Krylov subspace methods suggest that large speedups are possible by re-organizing iterative algorithms to avoid communication. We show how applying similar algorithmic transformations can lead to primal and dual block coordinate descent methods that only communicate every ss iterations--where ss is a tuning parameter--instead of every iteration for the \textit{regularized least-squares problem}. We show that the communication-avoiding variants reduce the number of synchronizations by a factor of ss on distributed-memory parallel machines without altering the convergence rate and attains strong scaling speedups of up to 6.1×6.1\times on a Cray XC30 supercomputer.

View on arXiv
Comments on this paper