Upgrade to Pro — share decks privately, control downloads, hide ads and more …

Next Generation Indexes For Big Data Engineerin...

Next Generation Indexes For Big Data Engineering (ODSC East 2018)

Maximizing performance in data engineering is a daunting challenge. We present some of our work on designing faster indexes, with a particular emphasis on compressed indexes. Some of our prior work includes (1) Roaring indexes which are part of multiple big-data systems such as Spark, Hive, Druid, Atlas, Pinot, Kylin, (2) EWAH indexes are part of Git (GitHub) and included in major Linux distributions.

We will present ongoing and future work on how we can process data faster while supporting the diverse systems found in the cloud (with upcoming ARM processors) and under multiple programming languages (e.g., Java, C++, Go, Python). We seek to minimize shared resources (e.g., RAM) while exploiting algorithms designed for the single-instruction-multiple-data (SIMD) instructions available on commodity processors. Our end goal is to process billions of records per second per core.

The talk will be aimed at programmers who want to better understand the performance characteristics of current big-data systems as well as their evolution. The following specific topics will be addressed:

1. The various types of indexes and their performance characteristics and trade-offs: hashing, sorted arrays, bitsets and so forth.

2. Index and table compression techniques: binary packing, patched coding, dictionary coding, frame-of-reference.

Daniel Lemire

April 18, 2018
Tweet

More Decks by Daniel Lemire

Other Decks in Technology

Transcript

  1. Next Generation Indexes For Big Data Engineering Daniel Lemire and

    collaborators blog: https://lemire.me twitter: @lemire Université du Québec (TÉLUQ) Montreal
  2. Rediscover Unix In 2018, Big Data Engineering is made of

    several specialized and re‑usable components: Calcite : SQL + optimization Hadoop etc. 4
  3. "Make your own database engine from parts" We are in

    a Cambrian explosion, with thousands of organizations and companies building their custom high‑speed systems. Specialized used cases Heterogeneous data (not everything is in your Oracle DB) 5
  4. For high‑speed in data engineering you need... Front‑end (data frame,

    SQL, visualisation) High‑level optimizations Indexes (e.g., Pilosa, Elasticsearch) Great compression routines Specialized data structures .... 6
  5. Sets A fundamental concept (sets of documents, identifiers, tuples...) →

    For performance, we often work with sets of integers (identifiers). 7
  6. tests : x ∈ S? intersections : S ∩ S

    , unions : S ∪ S , differences : S ∖ S Similarity (Jaccard/Tanimoto): ∣S ∩ S ∣/∣S ∪ S ∣ Iteration f o r x i n S d o p r i n t ( x ) 2 1 2 1 2 1 1 1 1 2 8
  7. How to implement sets? sorted arrays ( s t d

    : : v e c t o r < u i n t 3 2 _ t > ) hash tables ( j a v a . u t i l . H a s h S e t < I n t e g e r > , s t d : : u n o r d e r e d _ s e t < u i n t 3 2 _ t > ) … bitmap ( j a v a . u t i l . B i t S e t ) compressed bitmaps 9
  8. Arrays are your friends w h i l e (

    l o w < = h i g h ) { i n t m I = ( l o w + h i g h ) > > > 1 ; i n t m = a r r a y . g e t ( m I ) ; i f ( m < k e y ) { l o w = m I + 1 ; } e l s e i f ( m > k e y ) { h i g h = m I - 1 ; } e l s e { r e t u r n m I ; } } r e t u r n - ( l o w + 1 ) ; 10
  9. Hash tables value x at index h(x) random access to

    a value in expected constant‑time much faster than arrays 11
  10. in‑order access is kind of terrible [15, 3, 0, 6,

    11, 4, 5, 9, 12, 13, 8, 2, 1, 14, 10, 7] [15, 3, 0, 6, 11, 4, 5, 9, 12, 13, 8, 2, 1, 14, 10, 7] [15, 3, 0, 6, 11, 4, 5, 9, 12, 13, 8, 2, 1, 14, 10, 7] [15, 3, 0, 6, 11, 4, 5, 9, 12, 13, 8, 2, 1, 14, 10, 7] [15, 3, 0, 6, 11, 4, 5, 9, 12, 13, 8, 2, 1, 14, 10, 7] [15, 3, 0, 6, 11, 4, 5, 9, 12, 13, 8, 2, 1, 14, 10, 7] (Robin Hood, linear probing, MurmurHash3 hash function) 12
  11. Set operations on hash tables h 1 < - h

    a s h s e t h 2 < - h a s h s e t . . . f o r ( x i n h 1 ) { i n s e r t x i n h 2 / / c a c h e m i s s ? } 13
  12. "Crash" Swift v a r S 1 = S e

    t < I n t > ( 1 . . . s i z e ) v a r S 2 = S e t < I n t > ( ) f o r i i n d { S 2 . i n s e r t ( i ) } 14
  13. Some numbers: half an hour for 64M keys size time

    (s) 1M 0.8 8M 22 64M 1400 Maps and sets can have quadratic‑time performance https://lemire.me/blog/2017/01/30/maps‑and‑sets‑can‑have‑quadratic‑time‑performance/ Rust hash iteration+reinsertion https://accidentallyquadratic.tumblr.com/post/153545455987/rust‑hash‑iteration‑reinsertion 15
  14. 16

  15. Bitmaps Efficient way to represent sets of integers. For example,

    0, 1, 3, 4 becomes 0 b 1 1 0 1 1 or "27". {0} → 0 b 0 0 0 0 1 {0, 3} → 0 b 0 1 0 0 1 {0, 3, 4} → 0 b 1 1 0 0 1 {0, 1, 3, 4} → 0 b 1 1 0 1 1 17
  16. Manipulate a bitmap 64‑bit processor. Given x , word index

    is x / 6 4 and bit index x % 6 4 . a d d ( x ) { a r r a y [ x / 6 4 ] | = ( 1 < < ( x % 6 4 ) ) } 18
  17. How fast is it? i n d e x =

    x / 6 4 - > a s h i f t m a s k = 1 < < ( x % 6 4 ) - > a s h i f t a r r a y [ i n d e x ] | - m a s k - > a O R w i t h m e m o r y One bit every ≈ 1.65 cycles because of superscalarity 19
  18. Bit parallelism Intersection between {0, 1, 3} and {1, 3}

    a single AND operation between 0 b 1 0 1 1 and 0 b 1 0 1 0 . Result is 0 b 1 0 1 0 or {1, 3}. No branching! 20
  19. Bitmaps love wide registers SIMD: Single Intruction Multiple Data SSE

    (Pentium 4), ARM NEON 128 bits AVX/AVX2 (256 bits) AVX‑512 (512 bits) AVX‑512 is now available (e.g., from Dell!) with Skylake‑X processors. 21
  20. Bitsets can take too much memory {1, 32000, 64000} :

    1000 bytes for three values We use compression! 22
  21. Git (GitHub) utilise EWAH Run‑length encoding Example: 000000001111111100 est 00000000

    − 11111111 − 00 Code long runs of 0s or 1s efficiently. https://github.com/git/git/blob/master/ewah/bitmap.c 23
  22. Complexity Intersection : O(∣S ∣ + ∣S ∣) or O(min(∣S

    ∣, ∣S ∣)) In‑place union (S ← S ∪ S ): O(∣S ∣ + ∣S ∣) or O(∣S ∣) 1 2 1 2 2 1 2 1 2 2 24
  23. Roaring Bitmaps http://roaringbitmap.org/ Apache Lucene, Solr et Elasticsearch, Metamarkets’ Druid,

    Apache Spark, Apache Hive, Apache Tez, Netflix Atlas, LinkedIn Pinot, InfluxDB, Pilosa, Microsoft Visual Studio Team Services (VSTS), Couchbase's Bleve, Intel’s Optimized Analytics Package (OAP), Apache Hivemall, eBay’s Apache Kylin. Java, C, Go (interoperable) Roaring bitmaps 25
  24. Hybrid model Set of containers sorted arrays ({1,20,144}) bitset (0b10000101011)

    runs ([0,10],[15,20]) Related to: O'Neil's RIDBit + BitMagic Roaring bitmaps 26
  25. Roaring All containers are small (8 kB), fit in CPU

    cache We predict the output container type during computations E.g., when array gets too large, we switch to a bitset Union of two large arrays is materialized as a bitset... Dozens of heuristics... sorting networks and so on Roaring bitmaps 28
  26. Use Roaring for bitmap compression whenever possible. Do not use

    other bitmap compression methods (Wang et al., SIGMOD 2017) Roaring bitmaps 29
  27. Unions of 200 bitmaps bits per stored value bitset array

    hash table Roaring census1881 524 32 195 15.1 weather 15.3 32 195 5.38 cycles per input value: bitset array hash table Roaring census1881 9.85 542 1010 2.6 weather 0.35 94 237 0.16 Roaring bitmaps 30
  28. Integer compression "Standard" technique: VByte, VarInt, VInt Use 1, 2,

    3, 4, ... byte per integer Use one bit per byte to indicate the length of the integers in bytes Lucene, Protocol Buffers, etc. Integer compression 31
  29. varint‑GB from Google VByte: one branch per integer varint‑GB: one

    branch per 4 integers each 4‑integer block is preceded byte a control byte Integer compression 32
  30. Vectorisation Stepanov (STL in C++) working for Amazon proposed varint‑G8IU

    Use vectorization (SIMD) P atented Fastest byte‑oriented compression technique (until recently) SIMD‑Based Decoding of Posting Lists, CIKM 2011 https://stepanovpapers.com/SIMD_Decoding_TR.pdf Integer compression 33
  31. Observations from Stepanov et al. We can vectorize Google's varint‑GB,

    but it is not as fast as varint‑G8IU Integer compression 34
  32. Stream VByte Reuse varint‑GB from Google But instead of mixing

    control bytes and data bytes, ... We store control bytes separately and consecutively... Daniel Lemire, Nathan Kurz, Christoph Rupp Stream VByte: Faster Byte‑Oriented Integer Compression Information Processing Letters 130, 2018 Integer compression 35
  33. Stream VByte is used by... Redis (within RediSearch) https://redislabs.com upscaledb

    https://upscaledb.com Trinity https://github.com/phaistos‑networks/Trinity Integer compression 37
  34. Dictionary coding Use, e.g., by Apache Arrow Given a list

    of values: "Montreal", "Toronto", "Boston", "Montreal", "Boston"... Map to integers 0, 1, 2, 0, 2 Compress integers: Given 2 distinct values... Can use n‑bit per values (binary packing, patched coding, frame‑of‑reference) n Integer compression 38
  35. Dictionary coding + SIMD dict. size bits per value scalar

    AVX2 (256‑bit) AVX‑512 (512‑bit) 32 5 8 3 1.5 1024 10 8 3.5 2 65536 16 12 5.5 4.5 (cycles per value decoded) https://github.com/lemire/dictionary Integer compression 39
  36. To learn more... Blog (twice a week) : https://lemire.me/blog/ GitHub:

    https://github.com/lemire Home page : https://lemire.me/en/ CRSNG : F aster C ompressed I ndexes O n N ext‑G eneration H ardware (2017‑2022) Twitter @lemire @lemire 40