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# Design Doc: Distributed Lookup Table Operator
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A distribute lookup table operator in PaddlePaddle where the table could be out
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of the memory of a computer.
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## Background

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A lookup table operator is well-used in deep learning for learning the
representation, or the
[*embedding*](http://www.cs.toronto.edu/~fritz/absps/ieee-lre.pdf), of
symbols.

### The Forward Algorithm

The forward algorithm of the lookup table is a multiplication of the
input vector x and the lookup table matrix W:
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$$y = x * W$$
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When x is a sparse vector of symbols, the above multiplication
simplifies into looking up rows in W that correspond to symbols in x,
denoted by W(x).  Please be aware that W could be huge and out of the
memory, so we'd need a distributed storage service, which supports the
lookup of rows.

The following figure illustrates the multiplication of x with two
non-zero elements, or say, two symbols, and a lookup table W:
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![lookup table](./src/lookup_table.png)
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### The Backward Algorithm

The backward algorithm computes W'(x) using W(x).  W'(x) has the same
scale of size as W(x) and is much smaller than W.

To optimize W given W', we can do simple SGD update:

$$W = f(W') = \lambda * W'$$

or some more sophisticated algorithms that rely on both W' and W:

$$W = f(W, W')$$

The following figure illustrates the backward pass of the lookup
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operator: ![lookup table training](./src/lookup_table_training.png)
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## Distributed Lookup Table
### Problem 1: The lookup table may be very large.

 In condition like search engien and recommendation system, the number of feature ID may be very large, see 1000000000, then for a lookup table of size 8, the total size of the table is:

 ```
 100000000000 * 8 * 4.0 = 2980.23 GB
 ```

### Solution: Distributed storage

1. Paddle use SelectedRows as the storage format for the lookup table, the lookup table parameter will be splited to multi machine according to the hash of the feature ID, and data will also be splited and send to the same machine to prefetch the parameter.

1. For common parameters, trainer will get the whole parameter for training, but for the big lookup table, trainer can not store the whole parameter, but the input data feature is very sparse, so every time we only need a few parameter for training, so we use `prefetch_op` to only prefetch the parameter needed to trainer.

### Problem 2. The Id in the lookup table is not sure before training.

 The feature Id is calculated by hash function, because the feature data source is so large, we can not get all the id before training. So we can not initialize the table before training.
 

### Solution: Id auto growth

At the beginning of training, paddle only malloc the memory for the lookup table at pserver side, the id and the data will not be initialized. During training, when a pserver recived a Id, if the is is already in the lookup table, it will return the exist parameter, if the id is not exist, paddle will add it into the lookup table and initialize the value for it.


## Architecture
The whole architecture of the distribute lookup table is as below:

### Training steps:
1. Read a batch of data, the data is feature ids.
1. The input ids will be splited by `split_ids_op` with the same hash function of the lookup table.
1. The `prefetch_op` use the splited result to prefetch parameters back from lookup table.
1. Run forward backward to get the the gradient of the lookup table.
1. `split_ids_op` split the gradient and then use `send_op` to parameter server.
1. parameter server update the table with the received gradient.

![distribute lookup table](./src/distributed_lookup_table.jpeg)