In mllib, the weight, and gradient are dense. Only feature is sparse.

Sincerely,

DB Tsai
-------------------------------------------------------
My Blog: https://www.dbtsai.com
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dbtsai


On Wed, Apr 23, 2014 at 10:16 PM, David Hall <d...@cs.berkeley.edu> wrote:
> Was the weight vector sparse? The gradients? Or just the feature vectors?
>
>
> On Wed, Apr 23, 2014 at 10:08 PM, DB Tsai <dbt...@dbtsai.com> wrote:
>>
>> The figure showing the Log-Likelihood vs Time can be found here.
>>
>>
>> https://github.com/dbtsai/spark-lbfgs-benchmark/raw/fd703303fb1c16ef5714901739154728550becf4/result/a9a11M.pdf
>>
>> Let me know if you can not open it.
>>
>> Sincerely,
>>
>> DB Tsai
>> -------------------------------------------------------
>> My Blog: https://www.dbtsai.com
>> LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dbtsai
>>
>>
>> On Wed, Apr 23, 2014 at 9:34 PM, Shivaram Venkataraman <
>> shiva...@eecs.berkeley.edu> wrote:
>>
>> > I don't think the attachment came through in the list. Could you upload
>> > the results somewhere and link to them ?
>> >
>> >
>> > On Wed, Apr 23, 2014 at 9:32 PM, DB Tsai <dbt...@dbtsai.com> wrote:
>> >
>> >> 123 features per rows, and in average, 89% are zeros.
>> >> On Apr 23, 2014 9:31 PM, "Evan Sparks" <evan.spa...@gmail.com> wrote:
>> >>
>> >> > What is the number of non zeroes per row (and number of features) in
>> >> > the
>> >> > sparse case? We've hit some issues with breeze sparse support in the
>> >> past
>> >> > but for sufficiently sparse data it's still pretty good.
>> >> >
>> >> > > On Apr 23, 2014, at 9:21 PM, DB Tsai <dbt...@stanford.edu> wrote:
>> >> > >
>> >> > > Hi all,
>> >> > >
>> >> > > I'm benchmarking Logistic Regression in MLlib using the newly added
>> >> > optimizer LBFGS and GD. I'm using the same dataset and the same
>> >> methodology
>> >> > in this paper, http://www.csie.ntu.edu.tw/~cjlin/papers/l1.pdf
>> >> > >
>> >> > > I want to know how Spark scale while adding workers, and how
>> >> optimizers
>> >> > and input format (sparse or dense) impact performance.
>> >> > >
>> >> > > The benchmark code can be found here,
>> >> > https://github.com/dbtsai/spark-lbfgs-benchmark
>> >> > >
>> >> > > The first dataset I benchmarked is a9a which only has 2.2MB. I
>> >> > duplicated the dataset, and made it 762MB to have 11M rows. This
>> >> > dataset
>> >> > has 123 features and 11% of the data are non-zero elements.
>> >> > >
>> >> > > In this benchmark, all the dataset is cached in memory.
>> >> > >
>> >> > > As we expect, LBFGS converges faster than GD, and at some point, no
>> >> > matter how we push GD, it will converge slower and slower.
>> >> > >
>> >> > > However, it's surprising that sparse format runs slower than dense
>> >> > format. I did see that sparse format takes significantly smaller
>> >> > amount
>> >> of
>> >> > memory in caching RDD, but sparse is 40% slower than dense. I think
>> >> sparse
>> >> > should be fast since when we compute x wT, since x is sparse, we can
>> >> > do
>> >> it
>> >> > faster. I wonder if there is anything I'm doing wrong.
>> >> > >
>> >> > > The attachment is the benchmark result.
>> >> > >
>> >> > > Thanks.
>> >> > >
>> >> > > Sincerely,
>> >> > >
>> >> > > DB Tsai
>> >> > > -------------------------------------------------------
>> >> > > My Blog: https://www.dbtsai.com
>> >> > > LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dbtsai
>> >> >
>> >>
>> >
>> >
>
>

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