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Simple and fast way to get started with Dask

Project description

Coiled Runtime

Tests Linting Benchmarks

The Coiled Runtime is a conda metapackage which makes it easy to get started with Dask.

Install

coiled-runtime can be installed with conda:

conda install -c conda-forge coiled-runtime

or with pip:

pip install coiled-runtime

Nightly builds

coiled-runtime has nightly conda packages for testing purposes. You can install a nightly version of coiled-runtime with:

conda install -c coiled/label/dev -c dask/label/dev coiled-runtime 

Build

To build and install coiled-runtime locally, use the following steps:

# Have a local copy of the `coiled-runtime` repository
git clone https://github.com/coiled/coiled-runtime
cd coiled-runtime

# Make sure conda-build is installed
conda install -c conda-forge conda-build

# Build the metapackage
conda build recipe -c conda-forge --output-folder dist/conda --no-anaconda-upload

# Install the built `coiled-runtime` metapackage
conda install -c ./dist/conda/ -c conda-forge coiled-runtime

Test

The coiled-runtime test suite can be run locally with the following steps:

  1. Ensure your local machine is authenticated to use the dask-engineering Coiled account and the Coiled Dask Engineering AWS S3 account.
  2. Create a Python environment and install development dependencies as specified in ci/environment.yml.
  3. Install a coiled runtime environment. This might be from one of the environments listed in environments/, or it could be a development environment if you are testing feature branches of dask or distributed. This test suite is configured to run Coiled's package_sync feature, so your local environment should be copied to the cluster.
  4. Run tests with python -m pytest tests

Additionally, tests are automatically run on pull requests to this repository. See the section below on creating pull requests.

Benchmarking

The coiled-runtime test suite contains a series of pytest fixtures which enable benchmarking metrics to be collected and stored for historical and regression analysis. By default, these metrics are not collected and stored, but they can be enabled by including the --benchmark flag in your pytest invocation.

From a high level, here is how the benchmarking works:

  • Data from individual test runs are collected and stored in a local sqlite database. The schema for this database is stored in benchmark_schema.py
  • The local sqlite databases are appended to a global historical record, stored in S3.
  • The historical data can be analyzed using any of a number of tools. dashboard.py creates a set of static HTML documents showing historical data for the tests.

Running the benchmarks locally

You can collect benchmarking data by running pytest with the --benchmark flag. This will create a local benchmark.db sqlite file in the root of the repository. If you run a test suite multiple times with benchmarking, the data will be appended to the database.

You can compare with historical data by downloading the global database from S3 first:

aws s3 cp s3://coiled-runtime-ci/benchmarks/benchmark.db ./benchmark.db
pytest --benchmark

Changing the benchmark schema

You can add, remove, or modify columns by editing the SQLAlchemy schema in benchmark_schema.py. However, if you have a database of historical data, then the schemas of the new and old data will not match. In order to account for this, you must provide a migration for the data and commit it to the repository. We use alembic to manage SQLAlchemy migrations. In the simple case of simply adding or removing a column to the schema, you can do the following:

# First, edit the `benchmark_schema.py` and commit the changes.

alembic revision --autogenerate -m "Description of migration"
git add alembic/versions/name_of_new_migration.py
git commit -m "Added a new migration"

Migrations are automatically applied in the pytest runs, so you needn't run them yourself.

Deleting old test data

At times you might change a specific test that makes older benchmarking data irrelevant. In that case, you can discard old benchmarking data for that test by applying a data migration removing that data:

alembic revision -m "Declare bankruptcy for <test-name>"
# Edit the migration here to do what you want.
git add alembic/versions/name_of_new_migration.py
git commit -m "Bankruptcy migration for <test-name>"

An example of a migration that does this is here.

Using the benchmark fixtures

We have a number of pytest fixtures defined which can be used to automatically track certain metrics in the benchmark database. The most relevant ones are summarized here:

benchmark_time: Record wall clock time duration.

benchmark_memory: Record memory usage.

benchmark_task_durations: Record time spent computing, transferring data, spilling to disk, and deserializing data.

auto_benchmark_time: Include this fixture to measure the wall clock time of the whole test automatically.

benchmark_all: Record all available metrics.

For more information on all available fixtures and examples on how to use them, please refer to their documentation.

Writing a new benchmark fixture would generally look like:

  1. Requesting the test_run_benchmark fixture, which yields an ORM object.
  2. Doing whatever setup work you need.
  3. yielding to the test
  4. Collecting whatever information you need after the test is done.
  5. Setting the appropriate attributes on the ORM object.

The benchmark_time fixture provides a fairly simple example.

Investigating performance regressions

It is not always obvious what the cause of a seeming performance regression is. It could be due to a new version of a direct or transitive dependency, and it could be due to a change in the Coiled platform. But often it is due to a change in dask or distributed. If you suspect that is the case, Coiled's package_sync feature combines well with the benchmarking infrastructure here and git bisect.

The following is an example workflow which could be used to identify a specific commit in dask which introduced a performance regression. This workflow presumes you have two terminal windows open, one with the coiled-runtime test suite, and one with a dask repository with which to drive bisecting.

Create your software environment

You should create a software environment which can run this test suite, but with an editable install of dask. You can do this in any of a number of ways, but one approach coule be

conda env create -n test-env --file ci/environment.yml  # Create a test environment
conda activate test-env  # Activate your test environment
pip install .  # Install the `coiled-runtime` metapackage dependencies.
(cd <your-dask-dir> && pip install -e .)  # Do an editable install for dask

Start bisecting

Let's say the current HEAD of dask is known to be bad, and $REF is known to be good. If you are looking at an upstream run where you have access to the static page, you can check the dates reported for each run and do a git log with the corresponding dates to get a list of commits to use in the bisecting process.

git log --since='2022-08-15 14:15' --until='2022-08-18 14:15' --pretty=oneline In the terminal opened to your dask repository you can initialize a bisect workflow with

cd <your-dask-dir>
git bisect start
git bisect bad
git bisect good $REF

Test for regressions

Now that your editable install is bisecting, run a test or subset of tests which demonstrate the regression in your coiled-runtime terminal. Presume that tests/benchmarks/test_parquet.py::test_write_wide_data is such a test:

pytest tests/benchmarks/test_parquet.py::test_write_wide_data --benchmark

Once the test is done, it will have written a new entry to a local sqlite file benchmark.db. You will want to check whether that entry displays the regression. Exactly what that check will look like will depend on the test and the regression. You might have a script that builds a chart from benchmark.db similar to dashboard.py, or a script that performs some kind of statistical analysis. But let's assume a simpler case where you can recognize it from the average_memory. You can query that with

sqlite3 benchmark.db "select dask_version, average_memory from test_run where name = 'test_write_wide_data';"

If the last entry displays the regression, mark the commit in your dask terminal as bad:

git bisect bad

If the last entry doesn't display the regression, mark the commit in your dask terminal as good:

git bisect good

Proceed with this process until you have narrowed it down to a single commit. Congratulations! You've identified the source of your regression.

A/B testing

It's possible to run the Coiled Runtime benchmarks for A/B comparisons. Read full documentation.

Contribute

This repository uses GitHub Actions secrets for managing authentication tokens used to access resources like Coiled clusters, S3 buckets, etc. However, because GitHub Actions doesn't grant access to secrets for forked repositories, please submit pull requests directly from the coiled/coiled-runtime repository, not a personal fork.

Release

To issue a new coiled-runtime release:

  1. Locally update the coiled-runtime version and package pinnings specified in recipe/meta.yaml.
    • When updating package version pinnings (in particular dask and distributed) confirm there are no reported large scale stability issues (e.g. deadlocks) or performance regressions on the dask / distributed issue trackers or offline reports.
  2. Open a pull request to the coiled-runtime repository titled "Release X.Y.Z" with these changes (where X.Y.Z is replaced with the actual version for the release).
  3. After all CI builds have passed the release pull request can be merged.
  4. Add a new git tag for the release by following the steps below on your local machine:
# Pull in changes from the Release X.Y.Z PR
git checkout main
git pull origin main

# Set release version number
export RELEASE=X.Y.Z
# Create and push release tag
git tag -a $RELEASE -m "Version $RELEASE"
git push origin main --tags
  1. Update the coiled-runtime package on conda-forge by opening a pull request to the coiled-runtime conda-forge feedstock which updates the coiled-runtime version and package version pinnings.
    • Note that pull requests to conda-forge feedstocks must come from a fork.
    • Reset the build number back to 0 if it isn't already.
    • For more information on updating conda-forge packages, see the conda-forge docs.

License

BSD-3

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