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BO4CO License

Introduction

Configuration Optimization Tool for Big Data Systems

Bayesian Optimization for Configuration Optimization (BO4CO) is an auto-tuning algorithm for Big Data applications. Big data applications typically are developed with several technologies (e.g., Apache Storm, Hadoop, Spark, Cassandra) each of which has typically dozens of configurable parameters that should be carefully tuned in order to perform optimally. BO4CO helps end users of big data systems such as data scientists or SMEs to automatically tune the system.

Architecture

The following figure illustrates components of BO4CO: (i) optimization component, (ii) experimental suite, (iii) and a data broker.

BO4CO architecture

Automated installation with Chef

We provide an automated installation of the BO4CO via a Chef cookbook.

In a dedicated Ubuntu 14.04 host, first install the Chef Development Kit, e.g.:

$ wget https://packages.chef.io/stable/ubuntu/12.04/chefdk_0.15.16-1_amd64.deb
$ sudo dpkg -i chefdk_0.15.16-1_amd64.deb

Then obtain this cookbook repository:

$ git clone https://github.com/dice-project/DICE-Chef-Repository.git
$ cd DICE-Chef-Repository

Before we run the installation, we just need to provide the configuration, pointing to the external services that the Configuration Optimization relies on. We provide this configuration in a json file. Let us name it configuration-optimization.json:

{
  "dice-h2020": {
    "conf-optim": {
      "ds-container": "4a7459f7-914e-4e83-ab40-b04fd1975542"
    },
    "deployment-service": {
      "url": "http://10.10.50.3:8000",
      "username": "admin",
      "password": "LetJustMeIn"
    },
    "d-mon": {
      "url": "http://10.10.50.20:5001"
    }
  }
}

Here, the parameters represent:

  • ds-container is the UUID of the DICE deployment service container dedicated to the application to run and optimize,
  • deployment-service contain the access point and credentials of the DICE Deployment Service to be used by the CO,
  • d-mon contains parameters used by the CO to connect to the DICE monitoring framework.

Now we can start the Chef process:

$ sudo chef-client -z \
    -o recipe[apt::default],recipe[java::default],recipe[dice-h2020::deployment-service-tool],recipe[dice-h2020::conf-optim],recipe[storm-cluster::common] \
    -j configuration-optimization.json

When the execution succeeds, the Configuration Optimization will be installed in /opt/co/ by default. The command will also install the Storm client (thanks to the recipe[storm-cluster::common] provided at the end of the runlist above).

Notes about tool configuration: the Chef recipe creates three configuration files in the /opt/co/conf folder. The config.yaml contains the parameters transferred from the configuration-optimization.json listed above. The app-config.yaml is an example experiment declaration file like it should be supplied with the application. The expconfig.yaml is an assembled configuration file as defined later in the document and will be the one used by the BO4CO. The recipe employs configuration merge tool to create the expconfig.yaml.

Manual installation

The configuration tool works in deployed and MATLAB mode. The deployed mode does not need any MATLAB installation and only is dependent on a royalty free MATLAB Runtime (MCR).

Getting BO4CO

Regardless of the method, first download the tool using git, a package download, or a pre-compiled binary downloads.

Git:

$ mkdir -p ~/myrepos ; cd ~/myrepos
$ git clone https://github.com/dice-project/DICE-Configuration-BO4CO.git
$ cd DICE-Configuration-BO4CO

Package:

$ mkdir -p ~/myrepos ; cd ~/myrepos
$ wget https://github.com/dice-project/DICE-Configuration-BO4CO/archive/master.zip
$ unzip DICE-Configuration-BO4CO-master.zip
# This step is only to unify the result with the one from the git download
$ mv DICE-Configuration-BO4CO-master DICE-Configuration-BO4CO
$ cd DICE-Configuration-BO4CO

Binary releases:

$ wget https://github.com/dice-project/DICE-Configuration-BO4CO/releases/download/v0.1.1/bin.zip
$ unzip bin.zip

Installation

First, install MCR on the platform you intends to run the tool, e.g., here is the instructions for ubuntu:

$ cd install/
$ ./install_mcr.sh

Compilation

We already prepared the compiled versions for ubuntu64 and maci64 deployment target, for this you need to download the bin.zip from the latest tool release. So only the compiled files needs to get copied into the target folder, where BO4CO will be deployed:

$ cd DICE-Configuration-BO4CO/
$ wget https://github.com/dice-project/DICE-Configuration-BO4CO/releases/download/v0.1.1/bin.zip
$ unzip bin.zip
$ cp bin/ubuntu64/* target
$ cp deploy/run_bo4co.sh target
$ cp -r src/conf target

It is also possible to prepare a new compiled version for a new target architecture such as windows64. You only need to run the following command in MATLAB on the target environment (i.e., target architecture and MCR version) in order to compile the source files:

cd DICE-Configuration-BO4CO/src
run compile.m

Note that it is essential to run compile.m in the target environment otherwise the execution of the compiled version will fail. We are happy to provide compiled version for a target environment, you only need to drop us an email, see contact bellow.

Tool configuration

The user of the tool needs to configure BO4CO by specifying the configuration parameters in expconfig.yaml:

$ cd target/
$ vim conf/expconfig.yaml

expconfig.yaml comprises several important parts: runexp specifies the experimental parameters, services comprises the detals of the services which BO4CO uses, application is the details of the application, e.g., storm topology and the associated Java classes, and most importantly the details of the configuration parameters are specified in vars field.

For example, the following parameters specify the experimental budget (i.e., total number of iterations), the number of initial samples, the experimental time, polling interval and the interval time between each experimental iterations, all in milliseconds:

runexp:
  numIter: 100
  initialDesign: 10
  ...
  expTime: 300000
  metricPoll: 1000
  sleep_time: 10000

The following parameters specify the name of the configuration parameter, the node for which it is going to be used, possible values for the parameter and lower bound and upper bound if it is integer, otherwise it would be categorical.

vars:
  - paramname: "topology.max.spout.pending" 
    node: ["storm", "nimbus"] 
    options: [1 2 10 100 1000 10000]
    lowerbound: 0
    upperbound: 0
    integer: 0
    categorical: 1

The experimental suite component of BO4CO is depdent on DICE Deployment service, so before starting BO4CO, the deployment service needs to be installed:

$ mkdir -p ~/myrepos ; cd ~/myrepos
$ git clone https://github.com/dice-project/DICE-Deployment-Service.git

Moreover, the DICE deployment service needs to be running somewhere (see the guideline) and the associated filed in expconfig.yaml needs to be updated accordingly:

services:    
  - servicename: "deployment.service"
    URL: "http://xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx:8000"
    container: "CONTAINER ID"
    username: "your username"
    password: "your password"
    tools: "/Repos/DICE-Deployment-Service/tools"

In the services field in expconfig.yaml the location of the deployment services tools needs to be updated accordingly, i.e., ~/myrepos/DICE-Deployment-Service/tools.

Starting BO4CO

To run BO4CO you just need to execute the following bash script, make sure the configuration parameters are set properly before running this:

$ cd target/
$ ./run_bo4co.sh

Performance Data

The experimental data are stored in a performance repository located inside the target folder. integrated/reports stores the detailed measurements separated by each configuration setting in csv format. integrated/summary stores the summary of measurements in terms of average latency and throughput separated by each experiment. After the experimental budget is finished, a MAT-File will be dumped into the integrated/summary folder.

Demo

It is also possible to optimize arbitrary functions with BO4CO where each measurement corresponds to a function evaluation in MATLAB. For runnig BO4CO demo follow these instructions:

run setup.m
edit conf/config.m # set nMinGridPoints, istestfun, visualize, maxExp, maxIter, nInit
run demo/demo_bo4co.m

Visualization

GP estimate ... GP estimate

Output

Grid point is better than previous hyperparameter
Function evaluation      0;  Value -1.375336e+02
Function evaluation      9;  Value -4.517219e+02
Function evaluation     13;  Value -5.702309e+02
Function evaluation     15;  Value -5.872137e+02
Function evaluation     18;  Value -5.929673e+02
Function evaluation     21;  Value -6.039209e+02
Function evaluation     24;  Value -6.069675e+02
Function evaluation     27;  Value -6.071938e+02

Grid point is better than previous hyperparameter
Function evaluation      0;  Value -1.395701e+02
Function evaluation      9;  Value -4.609277e+02
Function evaluation     19;  Value -5.797697e+02
Function evaluation     20;  Value -6.006878e+02
Function evaluation     23;  Value -6.072819e+02
Function evaluation     25;  Value -6.145497e+02
Function evaluation     28;  Value -6.161177e+02
Function evaluation     35;  Value -6.169813e+02

Minimum value: -0.636812 found at:
-1.0131

True minimum value: -0.636816 at:
-1.0127    1.0127

Complementary materials

  • Paper is the key paper about BO4CO.
  • Wiki provides more details about the tool and setting up the environment.
  • Data is the experimental datasets.
  • Presentation is a presentation about the tool and our experimental results.
  • Gitxiv is all research materials about the tool in one link.
  • TL4CO is the DevOps enabled configuration optimization tool.

Paper

For more technical details about the approach that has been implemented in the tool please refer to:

P. Jamshidi, G. Casale, "An Uncertainty-Aware Approach to Optimal Configuration of Stream Processing Systems", in Proc. of IEEE MASCOTS, (September 2016).

Contact

If you notice a bug, want to request a feature, or have a question or feedback, please send an email to the tool maintainer:

Pooyan Jamshidi, [email protected]

Licence

The code is published under the FreeBSD License.