I am trying to run several sessions of TensorFlow concurrently on a CentOS 7 machine with 64 CPUs. My colleague reports that he can use the following two blocks of code to produce a parallel speedup on his machine using 4 cores:
mnist.py
import numpy as np
import input_data
from PIL import Image
import tensorflow as tf
import time
def main(randint):
print 'Set new seed:', randint
np.random.seed(randint)
tf.set_random_seed(randint)
mnist = input_data.read_data_sets("MNIST_data/", one_hot=True)
# Setting up the softmax architecture
x = tf.placeholder("float", [None, 784])
W = tf.Variable(tf.zeros([784, 10]))
b = tf.Variable(tf.zeros([10]))
y = tf.nn.softmax(tf.matmul(x, W) + b)
# Setting up the cost function
y_ = tf.placeholder("float", [None, 10])
cross_entropy = -tf.reduce_sum(y_*tf.log(y))
train_step = tf.train.GradientDescentOptimizer(0.01).minimize(cross_entropy)
# Initialization
init = tf.initialize_all_variables()
sess = tf.Session(
config=tf.ConfigProto(
inter_op_parallelism_threads=1,
intra_op_parallelism_threads=1
)
)
sess.run(init)
for i in range(1000):
batch_xs, batch_ys = mnist.train.next_batch(100)
sess.run(train_step, feed_dict={x: batch_xs, y_: batch_ys})
correct_prediction = tf.equal(tf.argmax(y, 1), tf.argmax(y_, 1))
accuracy = tf.reduce_mean(tf.cast(correct_prediction, "float"))
print sess.run(accuracy, feed_dict={x: mnist.test.images, y_: mnist.test.labels})
if __name__ == "__main__":
t1 = time.time()
main(0)
t2 = time.time()
print "time spent: {0:.2f}".format(t2 - t1)
parallel.py
import multiprocessing
import numpy as np
import mnist
import time
t1 = time.time()
p1 = multiprocessing.Process(target=mnist.main,args=(np.random.randint(10000000),))
p2 = multiprocessing.Process(target=mnist.main,args=(np.random.randint(10000000),))
p3 = multiprocessing.Process(target=mnist.main,args=(np.random.randint(10000000),))
p1.start()
p2.start()
p3.start()
p1.join()
p2.join()
p3.join()
t2 = time.time()
print "time spent: {0:.2f}".format(t2 - t1)
In particular, he says that he observes
Running a single process took: 39.54 seconds
Running three processes took: 54.16 seconds
However, when I run the code:
python mnist.py
==> Time spent: 5.14
python parallel.py
==> Time spent: 37.65
As you can see, I get a significant slowdown by using multiprocessing whereas my colleague does not. Does anyone have any insight as to why this could be occurring and what can be done to fix it?
EDIT
Here is some example output. Notice that loading the data seems to occur in parallel, but training the individual models has a very sequential look in the output (and which can be verified by looking at CPU usage in top
as the program executes)
#$ python parallel.py
Set new seed: 9672406
Extracting MNIST_data/train-images-idx3-ubyte.gz
Set new seed: 4790824
Extracting MNIST_data/train-images-idx3-ubyte.gz
Set new seed: 8011659
Extracting MNIST_data/train-images-idx3-ubyte.gz
Extracting MNIST_data/train-labels-idx1-ubyte.gz
Extracting MNIST_data/t10k-images-idx3-ubyte.gz
Extracting MNIST_data/t10k-labels-idx1-ubyte.gz
Extracting MNIST_data/train-labels-idx1-ubyte.gz
Extracting MNIST_data/train-labels-idx1-ubyte.gz
Extracting MNIST_data/t10k-images-idx3-ubyte.gz
Extracting MNIST_data/t10k-images-idx3-ubyte.gz
Extracting MNIST_data/t10k-labels-idx1-ubyte.gz
Extracting MNIST_data/t10k-labels-idx1-ubyte.gz
I tensorflow/core/common_runtime/local_device.cc:25] Local device intra op parallelism threads: 1
I tensorflow/core/common_runtime/local_session.cc:45] Local session inter op parallelism threads: 1
0.9136
I tensorflow/core/common_runtime/local_device.cc:25] Local device intra op parallelism threads: 1
I tensorflow/core/common_runtime/local_session.cc:45] Local session inter op parallelism threads: 1
0.9149
I tensorflow/core/common_runtime/local_device.cc:25] Local device intra op parallelism threads: 1
I tensorflow/core/common_runtime/local_session.cc:45] Local session inter op parallelism threads: 1
0.8931
time spent: 41.36
Another EDIT
Suppose we wish to confirm that the issue is seemingly with TensorFlow and not with multiprocessing. I replaced the contents of mnist.py
with a big loop as follows:
def main(randint):
c = 0
for i in xrange(100000000):
c += i
For output:
#$ python mnist.py
==> time spent: 5.16
#$ python parallel.py
==> time spent: 4.86
Hence I think the problem here is not with multiprocessing itself.
From comment by OP (user1936768):
I have good news: It turns out, on my system at least, my trial programs didn't execute long enough for the other instances of TF to start up. When I put a longer running example program in main, I do indeed see concurrent computations
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