Welcome to OGeek Q&A Community for programmer and developer-Open, Learning and Share
Welcome To Ask or Share your Answers For Others

Categories

0 votes
571 views
in Technique[技术] by (71.8m points)

python - How to efficiently submit tasks with large arguments in Dask distributed?

I want to submit functions with Dask that have large (gigabyte scale) arguments. What is the best way to do this? I want to run this function many times with different (small) parameters.

Example (bad)

This uses the concurrent.futures interface. We could use the dask.delayed interface just as easily.

x = np.random.random(size=100000000)  # 800MB array
params = list(range(100))             # 100 small parameters

def f(x, param):
    pass

from dask.distributed import Client
c = Client()

futures = [c.submit(f, x, param) for param in params]

But this is slower than I would expect or results in memory errors.

See Question&Answers more detail:os

与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…
Welcome To Ask or Share your Answers For Others

1 Reply

0 votes
by (71.8m points)

OK, so what's wrong here is that each task contains the numpy array x, which is large. For each of the 100 tasks that we submit we need to serialize x, send it up to the scheduler, send it over to the worker, etc..

Instead, we'll send the array up to the cluster once:

[future] = c.scatter([x])

Now future is a token that points to an array x that lives on the cluster. Now we can submit tasks that refer to this remote future, instead of the numpy array on our local client.

# futures = [c.submit(f, x, param) for param in params]  # sends x each time
futures = [c.submit(f, future, param) for param in params]  # refers to remote x already on cluster

This is now much faster, and lets Dask control data movement more effectively.

Scatter data to all workers

If you expect to need to move the array x to all workers eventually then you may want to broadcast the array to start

[future] = c.scatter([x], broadcast=True)

Use Dask Delayed

Futures work fine with dask.delayed as well. There is no performance benefit here, but some people prefer this interface:

# futures = [c.submit(f, future, param) for param in params]

from dask import delayed
lazy_values = [delayed(f)(future, param) for param in params]
futures = c.compute(lazy_values)

与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…
OGeek|极客中国-欢迎来到极客的世界,一个免费开放的程序员编程交流平台!开放,进步,分享!让技术改变生活,让极客改变未来! Welcome to OGeek Q&A Community for programmer and developer-Open, Learning and Share
Click Here to Ask a Question

...