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Reusable Accelerated Functions & Tools Dask Infrastructure

Project description

 RAFT: Reusable Accelerated Functions and Tools for Vector Search and More

[!IMPORTANT] The vector search and clustering algorithms in RAFT are being migrated to a new library dedicated to vector search called cuVS. We will continue to support the vector search algorithms in RAFT during this move, but will no longer update them after the RAPIDS 24.06 (June) release. We plan to complete the migration by RAPIDS 24.10 (October) release and will be removing them altogether in the 24.12 (December) release.

RAFT tech stack

Contents


  1. Useful Resources
  2. What is RAFT?
  3. Use cases
  4. Is RAFT right for me?
  5. Getting Started
  6. Installing RAFT
  7. Codebase structure and contents
  8. Contributing
  9. References

Useful Resources

What is RAFT?

RAFT contains fundamental widely-used algorithms and primitives for machine learning and data mining. The algorithms are CUDA-accelerated and form building blocks for more easily writing high performance applications.

By taking a primitives-based approach to algorithm development, RAFT

  • accelerates algorithm construction time
  • reduces the maintenance burden by maximizing reuse across projects, and
  • centralizes core reusable computations, allowing future optimizations to benefit all algorithms that use them.

While not exhaustive, the following general categories help summarize the accelerated functions in RAFT:

Category Accelerated Functions in RAFT
Data Formats sparse & dense, conversions, data generation
Dense Operations linear algebra, matrix and vector operations, reductions, slicing, norms, factorization, least squares, svd & eigenvalue problems
Sparse Operations linear algebra, eigenvalue problems, slicing, norms, reductions, factorization, symmetrization, components & labeling
Solvers combinatorial optimization, iterative solvers
Statistics sampling, moments and summary statistics, metrics, model evaluation
Tools & Utilities common tools and utilities for developing CUDA applications, multi-node multi-gpu infrastructure

RAFT is a C++ header-only template library with an optional shared library that

  1. can speed up compile times for common template types, and
  2. provides host-accessible "runtime" APIs, which don't require a CUDA compiler to use

In addition being a C++ library, RAFT also provides 2 Python libraries:

  • pylibraft - lightweight Python wrappers around RAFT's host-accessible "runtime" APIs.
  • raft-dask - multi-node multi-GPU communicator infrastructure for building distributed algorithms on the GPU with Dask.

RAFT is a C++ header-only template library with optional shared library and lightweight Python wrappers

Is RAFT right for me?

RAFT contains low-level primitives for accelerating applications and workflows. Data source providers and application developers may find specific tools -- like ANN algorithms -- very useful. RAFT is not intended to be used directly by data scientists for discovery and experimentation. For data science tools, please see the RAPIDS website.

Getting started

RAPIDS Memory Manager (RMM)

RAFT relies heavily on RMM which eases the burden of configuring different allocation strategies globally across the libraries that use it.

Multi-dimensional Arrays

The APIs in RAFT accept the mdspan multi-dimensional array view for representing data in higher dimensions similar to the ndarray in the Numpy Python library. RAFT also contains the corresponding owning mdarray structure, which simplifies the allocation and management of multi-dimensional data in both host and device (GPU) memory.

The mdarray forms a convenience layer over RMM and can be constructed in RAFT using a number of different helper functions:

#include <raft/core/device_mdarray.hpp>

int n_rows = 10;
int n_cols = 10;

auto scalar = raft::make_device_scalar<float>(handle, 1.0);
auto vector = raft::make_device_vector<float>(handle, n_cols);
auto matrix = raft::make_device_matrix<float>(handle, n_rows, n_cols);

C++ Example

Most of the primitives in RAFT accept a raft::device_resources object for the management of resources which are expensive to create, such CUDA streams, stream pools, and handles to other CUDA libraries like cublas and cusolver.

The example below demonstrates creating a RAFT handle and using it with device_matrix and device_vector to allocate memory, generating random clusters, and computing pairwise Euclidean distances:

#include <raft/core/device_resources.hpp>
#include <raft/core/device_mdarray.hpp>
#include <raft/random/make_blobs.cuh>
#include <raft/distance/distance.cuh>

raft::device_resources handle;

int n_samples = 5000;
int n_features = 50;

auto input = raft::make_device_matrix<float, int>(handle, n_samples, n_features);
auto labels = raft::make_device_vector<int, int>(handle, n_samples);
auto output = raft::make_device_matrix<float, int>(handle, n_samples, n_samples);

raft::random::make_blobs(handle, input.view(), labels.view());

auto metric = raft::distance::DistanceType::L2SqrtExpanded;
raft::distance::pairwise_distance(handle, input.view(), input.view(), output.view(), metric);

It's also possible to create raft::device_mdspan views to invoke the same API with raw pointers and shape information:

#include <raft/core/device_resources.hpp>
#include <raft/core/device_mdspan.hpp>
#include <raft/random/make_blobs.cuh>
#include <raft/distance/distance.cuh>

raft::device_resources handle;

int n_samples = 5000;
int n_features = 50;

float *input;
int *labels;
float *output;

...
// Allocate input, labels, and output pointers
...

auto input_view = raft::make_device_matrix_view(input, n_samples, n_features);
auto labels_view = raft::make_device_vector_view(labels, n_samples);
auto output_view = raft::make_device_matrix_view(output, n_samples, n_samples);

raft::random::make_blobs(handle, input_view, labels_view);

auto metric = raft::distance::DistanceType::L2SqrtExpanded;
raft::distance::pairwise_distance(handle, input_view, input_view, output_view, metric);

Python Example

The pylibraft package contains a Python API for RAFT algorithms and primitives. pylibraft integrates nicely into other libraries by being very lightweight with minimal dependencies and accepting any object that supports the __cuda_array_interface__, such as CuPy's ndarray. The number of RAFT algorithms exposed in this package is continuing to grow from release to release.

The example below demonstrates computing the pairwise Euclidean distances between CuPy arrays. Note that CuPy is not a required dependency for pylibraft.

import cupy as cp

from pylibraft.distance import pairwise_distance

n_samples = 5000
n_features = 50

in1 = cp.random.random_sample((n_samples, n_features), dtype=cp.float32)
in2 = cp.random.random_sample((n_samples, n_features), dtype=cp.float32)

output = pairwise_distance(in1, in2, metric="euclidean")

The output array in the above example is of type raft.common.device_ndarray, which supports cuda_array_interface making it interoperable with other libraries like CuPy, Numba, PyTorch and RAPIDS cuDF that also support it. CuPy supports DLPack, which also enables zero-copy conversion from raft.common.device_ndarray to JAX and Tensorflow.

Below is an example of converting the output pylibraft.device_ndarray to a CuPy array:

cupy_array = cp.asarray(output)

And converting to a PyTorch tensor:

import torch

torch_tensor = torch.as_tensor(output, device='cuda')

Or converting to a RAPIDS cuDF dataframe:

cudf_dataframe = cudf.DataFrame(output)

When the corresponding library has been installed and available in your environment, this conversion can also be done automatically by all RAFT compute APIs by setting a global configuration option:

import pylibraft.config
pylibraft.config.set_output_as("cupy")  # All compute APIs will return cupy arrays
pylibraft.config.set_output_as("torch") # All compute APIs will return torch tensors

You can also specify a callable that accepts a pylibraft.common.device_ndarray and performs a custom conversion. The following example converts all output to numpy arrays:

pylibraft.config.set_output_as(lambda device_ndarray: return device_ndarray.copy_to_host())

pylibraft also supports writing to a pre-allocated output array so any __cuda_array_interface__ supported array can be written to in-place:

import cupy as cp

from pylibraft.distance import pairwise_distance

n_samples = 5000
n_features = 50

in1 = cp.random.random_sample((n_samples, n_features), dtype=cp.float32)
in2 = cp.random.random_sample((n_samples, n_features), dtype=cp.float32)
output = cp.empty((n_samples, n_samples), dtype=cp.float32)

pairwise_distance(in1, in2, out=output, metric="euclidean")

Installing

RAFT's C++ and Python libraries can both be installed through Conda and the Python libraries through Pip.

Installing C++ and Python through Conda

The easiest way to install RAFT is through conda and several packages are provided.

  • libraft-headers C++ headers
  • libraft (optional) C++ shared library containing pre-compiled template instantiations and runtime API.
  • pylibraft (optional) Python library
  • raft-dask (optional) Python library for deployment of multi-node multi-GPU algorithms that use the RAFT raft::comms abstraction layer in Dask clusters.
  • raft-ann-bench (optional) Benchmarking tool for easily producing benchmarks that compare RAFT's vector search algorithms against other state-of-the-art implementations.
  • raft-ann-bench-cpu (optional) Reproducible benchmarking tool similar to above, but doesn't require CUDA to be installed on the machine. Can be used to test in environments with competitive CPUs.

Use the following command, depending on your CUDA version, to install all of the RAFT packages with conda (replace rapidsai with rapidsai-nightly to install more up-to-date but less stable nightly packages). mamba is preferred over the conda command.

# for CUDA 11.8
mamba install -c rapidsai -c conda-forge -c nvidia raft-dask pylibraft cuda-version=11.8
# for CUDA 12.5
mamba install -c rapidsai -c conda-forge -c nvidia raft-dask pylibraft cuda-version=12.5

Note that the above commands will also install libraft-headers and libraft.

You can also install the conda packages individually using the mamba command above. For example, if you'd like to install RAFT's headers and pre-compiled shared library to use in your project:

# for CUDA 12.5
mamba install -c rapidsai -c conda-forge -c nvidia libraft libraft-headers cuda-version=12.5

If installing the C++ APIs please see using libraft for more information on using the pre-compiled shared library. You can also refer to the example C++ template project for a ready-to-go CMake configuration that you can drop into your project and build against installed RAFT development artifacts above.

Installing Python through Pip

pylibraft and raft-dask both have experimental packages that can be installed through pip:

pip install pylibraft-cu11 --extra-index-url=https://pypi.nvidia.com
pip install raft-dask-cu11 --extra-index-url=https://pypi.nvidia.com

These packages statically build RAFT's pre-compiled instantiations and so the C++ headers and pre-compiled shared library won't be readily available to use in your code.

The build instructions contain more details on building RAFT from source and including it in downstream projects. You can also find a more comprehensive version of the above CPM code snippet the Building RAFT C++ and Python from source section of the build instructions.

You can find an example RAFT project template in the cpp/template directory, which demonstrates how to build a new application with RAFT or incorporate RAFT into an existing CMake project.

Contributing

If you are interested in contributing to the RAFT project, please read our Contributing guidelines. Refer to the Developer Guide for details on the developer guidelines, workflows, and principals.

References

When citing RAFT generally, please consider referencing this Github project.

@misc{rapidsai,
  title={Rapidsai/raft: RAFT contains fundamental widely-used algorithms and primitives for data science, Graph and machine learning.},
  url={https://github.com/rapidsai/raft},
  journal={GitHub},
  publisher={Nvidia RAPIDS},
  author={Rapidsai},
  year={2022}
}

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