Dimmwitted: A study of main-memory statistical analytics
We perform the first study of the tradeoff space of access methods and replication to support
statistical analytics using first-order methods executed in the main memory of a Non-Uniform
Memory Access (NUMA) machine. Statistical analytics systems differ from conventional SQL-
analytics in the amount and types of memory incoherence they can tolerate. Our goal is to
understand tradeoffs in accessing the data in row-or column-order and at what granularity
one should share the model and data for a statistical task. We study this new tradeoff space …
statistical analytics using first-order methods executed in the main memory of a Non-Uniform
Memory Access (NUMA) machine. Statistical analytics systems differ from conventional SQL-
analytics in the amount and types of memory incoherence they can tolerate. Our goal is to
understand tradeoffs in accessing the data in row-or column-order and at what granularity
one should share the model and data for a statistical task. We study this new tradeoff space …
We perform the first study of the tradeoff space of access methods and replication to support statistical analytics using first-order methods executed in the main memory of a Non-Uniform Memory Access (NUMA) machine. Statistical analytics systems differ from conventional SQL-analytics in the amount and types of memory incoherence they can tolerate. Our goal is to understand tradeoffs in accessing the data in row- or column-order and at what granularity one should share the model and data for a statistical task. We study this new tradeoff space, and discover there are tradeoffs between hardware and statistical efficiency. We argue that our tradeoff study may provide valuable information for designers of analytics engines: for each system we consider, our prototype engine can run at least one popular task at least 100x faster. We conduct our study across five architectures using popular models including SVMs, logistic regression, Gibbs sampling, and neural networks.
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