# Design Doc: Concurrent Programming with Fluid With PaddlePaddle Fluid, users describe a program other than a model. The program is a [`ProgramDesc`](https://github.com/PaddlePaddle/Paddle/blob/develop/paddle/framework/framework.proto) protobuf message. TensorFlow/MxNet/Caffe2 applications generate protobuf messages too, but their protobuf messages represent the model, a graph of operators, but not the program that trains/uses the model. Many know that when we program TensorFlow, we can specify the device on which each operator runs. This allows us to create a concurrent/parallel AI application. An interesting questions is **how does a `ProgramDesc` represents a concurrent program?** The answer relies on the fact that a `ProgramDesc` is similar to an abstract syntax tree (AST) that describes a program. So users just program a concurrent program that they do with any concurrent programming language, e.g., [Go](https://golang.org). ## An Analogy The following table compares concepts in Fluid and Go
Go Fluid
user-defined functions layers
control-flow and built-in functions intrinsics/operators
goroutines, channels class ThreadPool
runtime class Executor
## An Example Concurrent Program To review all above concepts in an example, let us take a simple program and writes its distributed version. Suppose that we want to parallelize a naive Fluid program (written in Go and calling Fluid's Go binding) that multiplies two tensors. ```go import "fluid" func paddlepaddle() { X = fluid.read(...) W = fluid.Tensor(...) Y = fluid.mult(X, W) } ``` Please be aware that the Fluid's Go binding provides the default `main` function, which calls the `paddlepaddle` function, which, in this case, is defined in above program and creates the following `ProgramDesc` message. ```protobuf message ProgramDesc { block[0] = Block { vars = [X, W, Y], ops = [ read(output = X) assign(input = ..., output = W) mult(input = {X, W}, output = Y) ], } } ``` Then, the default `main` function calls `fluid.run()`, which creates an instance of the [`class Executor`](https://github.com/PaddlePaddle/Paddle/blob/develop/paddle/framework/executor.h) and calls `Executor.Run(block[0])`, where `block[0]` is the first and only block defined in above `ProgramDesc` message. The default `main` function is defined as follows: ```go func main() { paddlepaddle() fluid.run() } ``` ## The Concurrent Version By parallelizing the above program, we could support very big tensor X by splitting into small pieces {x_1, x_2, ...} and sent each piece to worker process/node for parallel multiplication. In this case, we can write a transpiler that takes a `ProgramDesc` message that represents the above example program and outputs two `ProgramDesc` messages, one for running on the master process/node, and the other one for worker processes/nodes. ### The Master Program The master program could look like the following: ```protobuf message ProgramDesc { block[0] = Block { vars = [X, L, Y], ops = [ read(output = X) kube_get_workers_addrs(output = L) Y = tensor_array(len(L)) parallel_for(input = X, output = Y, attrs = {L, block_id(1)}) # referring to block 1 ] } block[1] = Block { parent = 0, vars = [x, y, index], ops = [ slice(input = [X, index], output = x) # index is initialized by parallel_for send(input = x, attrs = L[index]) recv(outputs = y, attrs = L[index]) assign(input = y, output = Y[index]) ] } } ``` The equivalent Fluid program (calling the Go binding) is: ```go func main() { //// block 0 X = fluid.read(...) L = fluid.k8s.get_worker_addrs() Y = fluid.tensor_array(len(L)) fluid.parallel_for(X, L, func(index int) { //// block 1 x = X[index] fluid.send(L[index], x) y = fluid.recv(L[index]) Y[index] = y }) } ``` An explanation of the above program: - `fluid.k8s` is a package that provides access to Kubernetes API. - `fluid.k8s.get_worker_addrs` returns the list of IP and ports of all pods of the current job except for the current one (the master pod). - `fluid.tensor_array` creates a [tensor array](https://github.com/PaddlePaddle/Paddle/blob/develop/paddle/framework/lod_tensor_array.h). `fluid.parallel_for` creates a `ParallelFor` intrinsic, which, when executed, 1. creates `len(L)` scopes, each for the concurrent running of the sub-block (block 1 in this case), and initializes a variable named "index" in the scope to an integer value in the range `[0, len(L)-1]`, and 2. creates `len(L)` threads by calling into the `ThreadPool` singleton, each thread 1. creates an Executor instance, and 2. calls `Executor.Run(block)`, where `block` is block 1 as explained above. 1. Please be aware that block 1 is a sub-block of block 0, so ops in block 1 could refer to variables defined in block 0. ### The Worker Program The worker program looks like ```go func main() { W = Tensor(...) x = fluid.listen_and_do( fluid.k8s.self_addr(), func(input Tensor) { output = fluid.mult(input, W) }) } ``` where - `fluid.listen_and_do` creates a `ListenAndDo` intrinsic, which, when executed, 1. listens on the current pod's IP address, as returned by `fliud.k8s.self_addr()`, 2. once a connection is established, 1. creates a scope of two parameters, "input" and "output", 2. reads a [Fluid variable](https://github.com/PaddlePaddle/Paddle/blob/develop/paddle/framework/variable.h) and saves it into "input", 3. creates an Executor instance and calls `Executor.Run(block)`, where the block is generated by running the lambda specified as the second parameter of `fluid.listen_and_do`. ## Summarization From the above example, we see that: 1. Fluid enables the imperative programming paradigm by: 1. letting users describe a program, but not a model (a sequence of layers, or a graph of operators), and 2. call the `fluid.run` function that runs the program implicitly. 1. The program is described as a `ProgramDesc` protobuf message. 2. Function `Executor.Run` takes a block, instead of a `ProgramDesc`, as its parameter. 3. `fluid.run` calls `Executor.Run` to run the first block in the `ProgramDesc` message. 4. `Executor.Run`'s implementation is extremely simple -- it doesn't plan the execution nor create threads; instead, it runs on the current thread and execute intrinsics/operators' `Run` method sequentially as they appear in the `Block.ops` array. 5. Intrinsics/operators' `Run` method might create threads. For example, the `ListenAndDo` operator creates a thread to handle each incoming request. 6. Threads are not necessarily OS thread; instead, they could be [green threads](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Green_threads) managed by ThreadPool. Multiple green threads might run on the same OS thread. An example green threads is Go's [goroutines](https://tour.golang.org/concurrency/1).