Re: Questions about the V-C Iteration in Gelly
Hi Xingcan, that's my bad, I was thinking of scatter-gather iterations in my previous reply. You're right, in VertexCentricIteration a vertex is only active in the next superstep if it has received at least one message in the current superstep. Updating its value does not impact the activation. This is intentional in the vertex-centric model. I agree that the current design of the iterative models is restrictive and doesn't allow for the expression of complex iterative algorithms that require updating edges or defining phases. We have discussed this before, e.g. in [1]. The outcome of that discussion was that we should use for-loop iterations for such cases, as the closed-loop iteration operators of Flink might not provide the necessary flexibility. As you will see in the thread though, that proposal didn't work out, as efficiently supporting for-loops in Flink is not possible right now. -Vasia. [1]: http://apache-flink-mailing-list-archive.1008284.n3.nabble.com/DISCUSS-Gelly-iteration-abstractions-td3949.html On 14 February 2017 at 08:10, Xingcan Cuiwrote: > Hi Greg, > > I also found that in VertexCentricIteration.java, the message set is taken > as the workset while the vertex set is taken as the delta for solution set. > By doing like that, the setNewVertex method will not actually active a > vertex. In other words, if no message is generated (the workset is empty) > the "pact.runtime.workset-empty-aggregator" will judge convergence of the > delta iteration and then the iteration just terminates. Is this a bug? > > Best, > Xingcan > > > On Mon, Feb 13, 2017 at 5:24 PM, Xingcan Cui wrote: > >> Hi Greg, >> >> Thanks for your attention. >> >> It takes me a little time to read the old PR on FLINK-1885. Though >> the VertexCentricIteration, as well as its related classes, has been >> refactored, I understand what Markus want to achieve. >> >> I am not sure if using a bulk iteration instead of a delta one could >> eliminate the "out of memory" problem. Except for that, I think the "auto >> update" has nothing to do with the bulk mode. Considering the compatible >> guarantee, here is my suggestions to improve gelly's iteration API: >> >> 1) Add an "autoHalt" flag to the ComputeFunction. >> >> 2) If the flag is set true (default), apply the current mechanism . >> >> 3) If the flag is set false, call out.collect() to update the vertex >> value whether the setNewVertexValue() method is called or not, unless the >> user explicitly call a (new added) voteToHalt() method in the >> ComputeFunction. >> >> By adding these, users can decide when to halt a vertex themselves. What >> do you think? >> >> As for the "update edge values during vertex iterations" problem, I think >> it needs a redesign for the gelly framework (Maybe merge the vertices and >> edges into a single data set? Or just change the iterations' >> implementation? I can't think it clearly now.), so that's it for now. >> Besides, I don't think there will be someone who really would love to write >> a graph algorithm with Flink native operators and that's why gelly is >> designed, isn't it? >> >> Best, >> Xingcan >> >> On Fri, Feb 10, 2017 at 10:31 PM, Greg Hogan wrote: >> >>> Hi Xingcan, >>> >>> FLINK-1885 looked into adding a bulk mode to Gelly's iterative models. >>> >>> As an alternative you could implement your algorithm with Flink >>> operators and a bulk iteration. Most of the Gelly library is written with >>> native operators. >>> >>> Greg >>> >>> On Fri, Feb 10, 2017 at 5:02 AM, Xingcan Cui wrote: >>> Hi Vasia, b) As I said, when some vertices finished their work in current phase, they have nothing to do (no value updates, no message received, just like slept) but to wait for other vertices that have not finished (the current phase) yet. After that in the next phase, all the vertices should go back to work again and if there are some vertices become inactive in last phase, it could be hard to reactive them again by message since we even don't know which vertices to send to. The only solution is to keep all vertices active, whether by updating vertices values in each super step or sending heartbeat messages to vertices themselves (which will bring a lot of extra work to the MessageCombiner). c) I know it's not elegant or even an awful idea to store the edge info into vertex values. However, we can not change edge values or maintain states (even a pick or unpick mark) in edges during a vertex-centric iteration. Then what can we do if an algorithm really need that? Thanks for your patience. Best, Xingcan On Fri, Feb 10, 2017 at 4:50 PM, Vasiliki Kalavri < vasilikikala...@gmail.com> wrote: > Hi Xingcan, > > On 9 February 2017 at 18:16, Xingcan Cui wrote: > >> Hi Vasia, >> >> thanks
Re: Questions about the V-C Iteration in Gelly
Hi Greg, I also found that in VertexCentricIteration.java, the message set is taken as the workset while the vertex set is taken as the delta for solution set. By doing like that, the setNewVertex method will not actually active a vertex. In other words, if no message is generated (the workset is empty) the "pact.runtime.workset-empty-aggregator" will judge convergence of the delta iteration and then the iteration just terminates. Is this a bug? Best, Xingcan On Mon, Feb 13, 2017 at 5:24 PM, Xingcan Cuiwrote: > Hi Greg, > > Thanks for your attention. > > It takes me a little time to read the old PR on FLINK-1885. Though > the VertexCentricIteration, as well as its related classes, has been > refactored, I understand what Markus want to achieve. > > I am not sure if using a bulk iteration instead of a delta one could > eliminate the "out of memory" problem. Except for that, I think the "auto > update" has nothing to do with the bulk mode. Considering the compatible > guarantee, here is my suggestions to improve gelly's iteration API: > > 1) Add an "autoHalt" flag to the ComputeFunction. > > 2) If the flag is set true (default), apply the current mechanism . > > 3) If the flag is set false, call out.collect() to update the vertex value > whether the setNewVertexValue() method is called or not, unless the user > explicitly call a (new added) voteToHalt() method in the ComputeFunction. > > By adding these, users can decide when to halt a vertex themselves. What > do you think? > > As for the "update edge values during vertex iterations" problem, I think > it needs a redesign for the gelly framework (Maybe merge the vertices and > edges into a single data set? Or just change the iterations' > implementation? I can't think it clearly now.), so that's it for now. > Besides, I don't think there will be someone who really would love to write > a graph algorithm with Flink native operators and that's why gelly is > designed, isn't it? > > Best, > Xingcan > > On Fri, Feb 10, 2017 at 10:31 PM, Greg Hogan wrote: > >> Hi Xingcan, >> >> FLINK-1885 looked into adding a bulk mode to Gelly's iterative models. >> >> As an alternative you could implement your algorithm with Flink operators >> and a bulk iteration. Most of the Gelly library is written with native >> operators. >> >> Greg >> >> On Fri, Feb 10, 2017 at 5:02 AM, Xingcan Cui wrote: >> >>> Hi Vasia, >>> >>> b) As I said, when some vertices finished their work in current phase, >>> they have nothing to do (no value updates, no message received, just like >>> slept) but to wait for other vertices that have not finished (the current >>> phase) yet. After that in the next phase, all the vertices should go back >>> to work again and if there are some vertices become inactive in last phase, >>> it could be hard to reactive them again by message since we even don't know >>> which vertices to send to. The only solution is to keep all vertices >>> active, whether by updating vertices values in each super step or sending >>> heartbeat messages to vertices themselves (which will bring a lot of extra >>> work to the MessageCombiner). >>> >>> c) I know it's not elegant or even an awful idea to store the edge info >>> into vertex values. However, we can not change edge values or maintain >>> states (even a pick or unpick mark) in edges during a vertex-centric >>> iteration. Then what can we do if an algorithm really need that? >>> >>> Thanks for your patience. >>> >>> Best, >>> Xingcan >>> >>> On Fri, Feb 10, 2017 at 4:50 PM, Vasiliki Kalavri < >>> vasilikikala...@gmail.com> wrote: >>> Hi Xingcan, On 9 February 2017 at 18:16, Xingcan Cui wrote: > Hi Vasia, > > thanks for your reply. It helped a lot and I got some new ideas. > > a) As you said, I did use the getPreviousIterationAggregate() method > in preSuperstep() of the next superstep. > However, if the (only?) global (aggregate) results can not be guaranteed > to be consistency, what should we > do with the postSuperstep() method? > The postSuperstep() method is analogous to the close() method in a RichFunction, which is typically used for cleanup. > > b) Though we can active vertices by update method or messages, IMO, it > may be more proper for users > themselves to decide when to halt a vertex's iteration. Considering a > complex algorithm that contains different > phases inside a vertex-centric iteration. Before moving to the next > phase (that should be synchronized), > there may be some vertices that already finished their work in current > phase and they just wait for others. > Users may choose the finished vertices to idle until the next phase, > but rather than to halt them. > Can we consider adding the voteToHalt() method and some internal > variables to the Vertex/Edge class >
Re: Questions about the V-C Iteration in Gelly
Hi Greg, Thanks for your attention. It takes me a little time to read the old PR on FLINK-1885. Though the VertexCentricIteration, as well as its related classes, has been refactored, I understand what Markus want to achieve. I am not sure if using a bulk iteration instead of a delta one could eliminate the "out of memory" problem. Except for that, I think the "auto update" has nothing to do with the bulk mode. Considering the compatible guarantee, here is my suggestions to improve gelly's iteration API: 1) Add an "autoHalt" flag to the ComputeFunction. 2) If the flag is set true (default), apply the current mechanism . 3) If the flag is set false, call out.collect() to update the vertex value whether the setNewVertexValue() method is called or not, unless the user explicitly call a (new added) voteToHalt() method in the ComputeFunction. By adding these, users can decide when to halt a vertex themselves. What do you think? As for the "update edge values during vertex iterations" problem, I think it needs a redesign for the gelly framework (Maybe merge the vertices and edges into a single data set? Or just change the iterations' implementation? I can't think it clearly now.), so that's it for now. Besides, I don't think there will be someone who really would love to write a graph algorithm with Flink native operators and that's why gelly is designed, isn't it? Best, Xingcan On Fri, Feb 10, 2017 at 10:31 PM, Greg Hoganwrote: > Hi Xingcan, > > FLINK-1885 looked into adding a bulk mode to Gelly's iterative models. > > As an alternative you could implement your algorithm with Flink operators > and a bulk iteration. Most of the Gelly library is written with native > operators. > > Greg > > On Fri, Feb 10, 2017 at 5:02 AM, Xingcan Cui wrote: > >> Hi Vasia, >> >> b) As I said, when some vertices finished their work in current phase, >> they have nothing to do (no value updates, no message received, just like >> slept) but to wait for other vertices that have not finished (the current >> phase) yet. After that in the next phase, all the vertices should go back >> to work again and if there are some vertices become inactive in last phase, >> it could be hard to reactive them again by message since we even don't know >> which vertices to send to. The only solution is to keep all vertices >> active, whether by updating vertices values in each super step or sending >> heartbeat messages to vertices themselves (which will bring a lot of extra >> work to the MessageCombiner). >> >> c) I know it's not elegant or even an awful idea to store the edge info >> into vertex values. However, we can not change edge values or maintain >> states (even a pick or unpick mark) in edges during a vertex-centric >> iteration. Then what can we do if an algorithm really need that? >> >> Thanks for your patience. >> >> Best, >> Xingcan >> >> On Fri, Feb 10, 2017 at 4:50 PM, Vasiliki Kalavri < >> vasilikikala...@gmail.com> wrote: >> >>> Hi Xingcan, >>> >>> On 9 February 2017 at 18:16, Xingcan Cui wrote: >>> Hi Vasia, thanks for your reply. It helped a lot and I got some new ideas. a) As you said, I did use the getPreviousIterationAggregate() method in preSuperstep() of the next superstep. However, if the (only?) global (aggregate) results can not be guaranteed to be consistency, what should we do with the postSuperstep() method? >>> >>> The postSuperstep() method is analogous to the close() method in a >>> RichFunction, which is typically used for cleanup. >>> >>> >>> b) Though we can active vertices by update method or messages, IMO, it may be more proper for users themselves to decide when to halt a vertex's iteration. Considering a complex algorithm that contains different phases inside a vertex-centric iteration. Before moving to the next phase (that should be synchronized), there may be some vertices that already finished their work in current phase and they just wait for others. Users may choose the finished vertices to idle until the next phase, but rather than to halt them. Can we consider adding the voteToHalt() method and some internal variables to the Vertex/Edge class (or just create an "advanced" version of them) to make the halting more controllable? >>> >>> >>> I suppose adding a voteToHalt() method is possible, but I'm not sure I >>> see how that would make halting more controllable. If a vertex hasn't >>> changed value or hasn't received a message, it has no work to do in the >>> next iteration, so why keep it active? If in a later superstep, a >>> previously inactive vertex receives a message, it will become active again. >>> Is this what you're looking for or am I missing something? >>> >>> >>> c) Sorry that I didn't make it clear before. Here the initialization means a "global" one that executes
Re: Questions about the V-C Iteration in Gelly
Hi Xingcan, FLINK-1885 looked into adding a bulk mode to Gelly's iterative models. As an alternative you could implement your algorithm with Flink operators and a bulk iteration. Most of the Gelly library is written with native operators. Greg On Fri, Feb 10, 2017 at 5:02 AM, Xingcan Cuiwrote: > Hi Vasia, > > b) As I said, when some vertices finished their work in current phase, > they have nothing to do (no value updates, no message received, just like > slept) but to wait for other vertices that have not finished (the current > phase) yet. After that in the next phase, all the vertices should go back > to work again and if there are some vertices become inactive in last phase, > it could be hard to reactive them again by message since we even don't know > which vertices to send to. The only solution is to keep all vertices > active, whether by updating vertices values in each super step or sending > heartbeat messages to vertices themselves (which will bring a lot of extra > work to the MessageCombiner). > > c) I know it's not elegant or even an awful idea to store the edge info > into vertex values. However, we can not change edge values or maintain > states (even a pick or unpick mark) in edges during a vertex-centric > iteration. Then what can we do if an algorithm really need that? > > Thanks for your patience. > > Best, > Xingcan > > On Fri, Feb 10, 2017 at 4:50 PM, Vasiliki Kalavri < > vasilikikala...@gmail.com> wrote: > >> Hi Xingcan, >> >> On 9 February 2017 at 18:16, Xingcan Cui wrote: >> >>> Hi Vasia, >>> >>> thanks for your reply. It helped a lot and I got some new ideas. >>> >>> a) As you said, I did use the getPreviousIterationAggregate() method in >>> preSuperstep() of the next superstep. >>> However, if the (only?) global (aggregate) results can not be guaranteed >>> to be consistency, what should we >>> do with the postSuperstep() method? >>> >> >> The postSuperstep() method is analogous to the close() method in a >> RichFunction, which is typically used for cleanup. >> >> >> >>> >>> b) Though we can active vertices by update method or messages, IMO, it >>> may be more proper for users >>> themselves to decide when to halt a vertex's iteration. Considering a >>> complex algorithm that contains different >>> phases inside a vertex-centric iteration. Before moving to the next >>> phase (that should be synchronized), >>> there may be some vertices that already finished their work in current >>> phase and they just wait for others. >>> Users may choose the finished vertices to idle until the next phase, but >>> rather than to halt them. >>> Can we consider adding the voteToHalt() method and some internal >>> variables to the Vertex/Edge class >>> (or just create an "advanced" version of them) to make the halting more >>> controllable? >>> >> >> >> I suppose adding a voteToHalt() method is possible, but I'm not sure I >> see how that would make halting more controllable. If a vertex hasn't >> changed value or hasn't received a message, it has no work to do in the >> next iteration, so why keep it active? If in a later superstep, a >> previously inactive vertex receives a message, it will become active again. >> Is this what you're looking for or am I missing something? >> >> >> >>> >>> c) Sorry that I didn't make it clear before. Here the initialization >>> means a "global" one that executes once >>> before the iteration. For example, users may want to initialize the >>> vertices' values by their adjacent edges >>> before the iteration starts. Maybe we can add an extra coGroupFunction >>> to the configuration parameters >>> and apply it before the iteration? >>> >> >> >> You can initialize the graph by using any Gelly transformation methods >> before starting the iteration, e.g. mapVertices, mapEdges, reduceOnEdges, >> etc. >> Btw, a vertex can iterate over its edges inside the ComputeFunction using >> the getEdges() method. Initializing the vertex values with neighboring >> edges might not be a good idea if you have vertices with high degrees. >> >> >> Cheers, >> -Vasia. >> >> >> >>> >>> What do you think? >>> >>> (BTW, I started a PR on FLINK-1526(MST Lib). Considering the >>> complexity, the example is not >>> provided.) >>> >>> Really appreciate for all your help. >>> >>> Best, >>> Xingcan >>> >>> On Thu, Feb 9, 2017 at 5:36 PM, Vasiliki Kalavri < >>> vasilikikala...@gmail.com> wrote: >>> Hi Xingcan, On 7 February 2017 at 10:10, Xingcan Cui wrote: > Hi all, > > I got some question about the vertex-centric iteration in Gelly. > > a) It seems the postSuperstep method is called before the superstep > barrier (I got different aggregate values of the same superstep in this > method). Is this a bug? Or the design is just like that? > The postSuperstep() method is called inside the close() method of a RichCoGroupFunction that wraps the
Re: Questions about the V-C Iteration in Gelly
Hi Vasia, b) As I said, when some vertices finished their work in current phase, they have nothing to do (no value updates, no message received, just like slept) but to wait for other vertices that have not finished (the current phase) yet. After that in the next phase, all the vertices should go back to work again and if there are some vertices become inactive in last phase, it could be hard to reactive them again by message since we even don't know which vertices to send to. The only solution is to keep all vertices active, whether by updating vertices values in each super step or sending heartbeat messages to vertices themselves (which will bring a lot of extra work to the MessageCombiner). c) I know it's not elegant or even an awful idea to store the edge info into vertex values. However, we can not change edge values or maintain states (even a pick or unpick mark) in edges during a vertex-centric iteration. Then what can we do if an algorithm really need that? Thanks for your patience. Best, Xingcan On Fri, Feb 10, 2017 at 4:50 PM, Vasiliki Kalavriwrote: > Hi Xingcan, > > On 9 February 2017 at 18:16, Xingcan Cui wrote: > >> Hi Vasia, >> >> thanks for your reply. It helped a lot and I got some new ideas. >> >> a) As you said, I did use the getPreviousIterationAggregate() method in >> preSuperstep() of the next superstep. >> However, if the (only?) global (aggregate) results can not be guaranteed >> to be consistency, what should we >> do with the postSuperstep() method? >> > > The postSuperstep() method is analogous to the close() method in a > RichFunction, which is typically used for cleanup. > > > >> >> b) Though we can active vertices by update method or messages, IMO, it >> may be more proper for users >> themselves to decide when to halt a vertex's iteration. Considering a >> complex algorithm that contains different >> phases inside a vertex-centric iteration. Before moving to the next phase >> (that should be synchronized), >> there may be some vertices that already finished their work in current >> phase and they just wait for others. >> Users may choose the finished vertices to idle until the next phase, but >> rather than to halt them. >> Can we consider adding the voteToHalt() method and some internal >> variables to the Vertex/Edge class >> (or just create an "advanced" version of them) to make the halting more >> controllable? >> > > > I suppose adding a voteToHalt() method is possible, but I'm not sure I > see how that would make halting more controllable. If a vertex hasn't > changed value or hasn't received a message, it has no work to do in the > next iteration, so why keep it active? If in a later superstep, a > previously inactive vertex receives a message, it will become active again. > Is this what you're looking for or am I missing something? > > > >> >> c) Sorry that I didn't make it clear before. Here the initialization >> means a "global" one that executes once >> before the iteration. For example, users may want to initialize the >> vertices' values by their adjacent edges >> before the iteration starts. Maybe we can add an extra coGroupFunction >> to the configuration parameters >> and apply it before the iteration? >> > > > You can initialize the graph by using any Gelly transformation methods > before starting the iteration, e.g. mapVertices, mapEdges, reduceOnEdges, > etc. > Btw, a vertex can iterate over its edges inside the ComputeFunction using > the getEdges() method. Initializing the vertex values with neighboring > edges might not be a good idea if you have vertices with high degrees. > > > Cheers, > -Vasia. > > > >> >> What do you think? >> >> (BTW, I started a PR on FLINK-1526(MST Lib). Considering the >> complexity, the example is not >> provided.) >> >> Really appreciate for all your help. >> >> Best, >> Xingcan >> >> On Thu, Feb 9, 2017 at 5:36 PM, Vasiliki Kalavri < >> vasilikikala...@gmail.com> wrote: >> >>> Hi Xingcan, >>> >>> On 7 February 2017 at 10:10, Xingcan Cui wrote: >>> Hi all, I got some question about the vertex-centric iteration in Gelly. a) It seems the postSuperstep method is called before the superstep barrier (I got different aggregate values of the same superstep in this method). Is this a bug? Or the design is just like that? >>> >>> The postSuperstep() method is called inside the close() method of a >>> RichCoGroupFunction that wraps the ComputeFunction. The close() method >>> It is called after the last call to the coGroup() after each iteration >>> superstep. >>> The aggregate values are not guaranteed to be consistent during the same >>> superstep when they are computed. To retrieve an aggregate value for >>> superstep i, you should use the getPreviousIterationAggregate() method >>> in superstep i+1. >>> >>> b) There is not setHalt method for vertices. When no message received, a vertex just
Re: Questions about the V-C Iteration in Gelly
Hi Xingcan, On 9 February 2017 at 18:16, Xingcan Cuiwrote: > Hi Vasia, > > thanks for your reply. It helped a lot and I got some new ideas. > > a) As you said, I did use the getPreviousIterationAggregate() method in > preSuperstep() of the next superstep. > However, if the (only?) global (aggregate) results can not be guaranteed > to be consistency, what should we > do with the postSuperstep() method? > The postSuperstep() method is analogous to the close() method in a RichFunction, which is typically used for cleanup. > > b) Though we can active vertices by update method or messages, IMO, it may > be more proper for users > themselves to decide when to halt a vertex's iteration. Considering a > complex algorithm that contains different > phases inside a vertex-centric iteration. Before moving to the next phase > (that should be synchronized), > there may be some vertices that already finished their work in current > phase and they just wait for others. > Users may choose the finished vertices to idle until the next phase, but > rather than to halt them. > Can we consider adding the voteToHalt() method and some internal variables > to the Vertex/Edge class > (or just create an "advanced" version of them) to make the halting more > controllable? > I suppose adding a voteToHalt() method is possible, but I'm not sure I see how that would make halting more controllable. If a vertex hasn't changed value or hasn't received a message, it has no work to do in the next iteration, so why keep it active? If in a later superstep, a previously inactive vertex receives a message, it will become active again. Is this what you're looking for or am I missing something? > > c) Sorry that I didn't make it clear before. Here the initialization means > a "global" one that executes once > before the iteration. For example, users may want to initialize the > vertices' values by their adjacent edges > before the iteration starts. Maybe we can add an extra coGroupFunction to > the configuration parameters > and apply it before the iteration? > You can initialize the graph by using any Gelly transformation methods before starting the iteration, e.g. mapVertices, mapEdges, reduceOnEdges, etc. Btw, a vertex can iterate over its edges inside the ComputeFunction using the getEdges() method. Initializing the vertex values with neighboring edges might not be a good idea if you have vertices with high degrees. Cheers, -Vasia. > > What do you think? > > (BTW, I started a PR on FLINK-1526(MST Lib). Considering the > complexity, the example is not > provided.) > > Really appreciate for all your help. > > Best, > Xingcan > > On Thu, Feb 9, 2017 at 5:36 PM, Vasiliki Kalavri < > vasilikikala...@gmail.com> wrote: > >> Hi Xingcan, >> >> On 7 February 2017 at 10:10, Xingcan Cui wrote: >> >>> Hi all, >>> >>> I got some question about the vertex-centric iteration in Gelly. >>> >>> a) It seems the postSuperstep method is called before the superstep >>> barrier (I got different aggregate values of the same superstep in this >>> method). Is this a bug? Or the design is just like that? >>> >> >> The postSuperstep() method is called inside the close() method of a >> RichCoGroupFunction that wraps the ComputeFunction. The close() method >> It is called after the last call to the coGroup() after each iteration >> superstep. >> The aggregate values are not guaranteed to be consistent during the same >> superstep when they are computed. To retrieve an aggregate value for >> superstep i, you should use the getPreviousIterationAggregate() method >> in superstep i+1. >> >> >>> >>> b) There is not setHalt method for vertices. When no message received, a >>> vertex just quit the next iteration. Should I manually send messages (like >>> heartbeat) to keep the vertices active? >>> >> >> That's because vertex halting is implicitly controlled by the underlying >> delta iterations of Flink. A vertex will remain active as long as it >> receives a message or it updates its value, otherwise it will become >> inactive. The documentation on Gelly iterations [1] and DataSet iterations >> [2] might be helpful. >> >> >> >>> >>> c) I think we may need an initialization method in the ComputeFunction. >>> >> >> >> There exists a preSuperstep() method for initialization. This one will >> be executed once per superstep before the compute function is invoked for >> every vertex. Would this work for you? >> >> >> >>> >>> Any opinions? Thanks. >>> >>> Best, >>> Xingcan >>> >>> >>> >> I hope this helps, >> -Vasia. >> >> >> [1]: https://ci.apache.org/projects/flink/flink-docs-release-1.2/ >> dev/libs/gelly/iterative_graph_processing.html#vertex-centric-iterations >> [2]: https://ci.apache.org/projects/flink/flink-docs-release-1.2/ >> dev/batch/iterations.html >> >> >
Re: Questions about the V-C Iteration in Gelly
Hi Vasia, thanks for your reply. It helped a lot and I got some new ideas. a) As you said, I did use the getPreviousIterationAggregate() method in preSuperstep() of the next superstep. However, if the (only?) global (aggregate) results can not be guaranteed to be consistency, what should we do with the postSuperstep() method? b) Though we can active vertices by update method or messages, IMO, it may be more proper for users themselves to decide when to halt a vertex's iteration. Considering a complex algorithm that contains different phases inside a vertex-centric iteration. Before moving to the next phase (that should be synchronized), there may be some vertices that already finished their work in current phase and they just wait for others. Users may choose the finished vertices to idle until the next phase, but rather than to halt them. Can we consider adding the voteToHalt() method and some internal variables to the Vertex/Edge class (or just create an "advanced" version of them) to make the halting more controllable? c) Sorry that I didn't make it clear before. Here the initialization means a "global" one that executes once before the iteration. For example, users may want to initialize the vertices' values by their adjacent edges before the iteration starts. Maybe we can add an extra coGroupFunction to the configuration parameters and apply it before the iteration? What do you think? (BTW, I started a PR on FLINK-1526(MST Lib). Considering the complexity, the example is not provided.) Really appreciate for all your help. Best, Xingcan On Thu, Feb 9, 2017 at 5:36 PM, Vasiliki Kalavriwrote: > Hi Xingcan, > > On 7 February 2017 at 10:10, Xingcan Cui wrote: > >> Hi all, >> >> I got some question about the vertex-centric iteration in Gelly. >> >> a) It seems the postSuperstep method is called before the superstep >> barrier (I got different aggregate values of the same superstep in this >> method). Is this a bug? Or the design is just like that? >> > > The postSuperstep() method is called inside the close() method of a > RichCoGroupFunction that wraps the ComputeFunction. The close() method It > is called after the last call to the coGroup() after each iteration > superstep. > The aggregate values are not guaranteed to be consistent during the same > superstep when they are computed. To retrieve an aggregate value for > superstep i, you should use the getPreviousIterationAggregate() method in > superstep i+1. > > >> >> b) There is not setHalt method for vertices. When no message received, a >> vertex just quit the next iteration. Should I manually send messages (like >> heartbeat) to keep the vertices active? >> > > That's because vertex halting is implicitly controlled by the underlying > delta iterations of Flink. A vertex will remain active as long as it > receives a message or it updates its value, otherwise it will become > inactive. The documentation on Gelly iterations [1] and DataSet iterations > [2] might be helpful. > > > >> >> c) I think we may need an initialization method in the ComputeFunction. >> > > > There exists a preSuperstep() method for initialization. This one will be > executed once per superstep before the compute function is invoked for > every vertex. Would this work for you? > > > >> >> Any opinions? Thanks. >> >> Best, >> Xingcan >> >> >> > I hope this helps, > -Vasia. > > > [1]: https://ci.apache.org/projects/flink/flink-docs- > release-1.2/dev/libs/gelly/iterative_graph_processing. > html#vertex-centric-iterations > [2]: https://ci.apache.org/projects/flink/flink-docs- > release-1.2/dev/batch/iterations.html > >
Re: Questions about the V-C Iteration in Gelly
Hi Xingcan, On 7 February 2017 at 10:10, Xingcan Cuiwrote: > Hi all, > > I got some question about the vertex-centric iteration in Gelly. > > a) It seems the postSuperstep method is called before the superstep > barrier (I got different aggregate values of the same superstep in this > method). Is this a bug? Or the design is just like that? > The postSuperstep() method is called inside the close() method of a RichCoGroupFunction that wraps the ComputeFunction. The close() method It is called after the last call to the coGroup() after each iteration superstep. The aggregate values are not guaranteed to be consistent during the same superstep when they are computed. To retrieve an aggregate value for superstep i, you should use the getPreviousIterationAggregate() method in superstep i+1. > > b) There is not setHalt method for vertices. When no message received, a > vertex just quit the next iteration. Should I manually send messages (like > heartbeat) to keep the vertices active? > That's because vertex halting is implicitly controlled by the underlying delta iterations of Flink. A vertex will remain active as long as it receives a message or it updates its value, otherwise it will become inactive. The documentation on Gelly iterations [1] and DataSet iterations [2] might be helpful. > > c) I think we may need an initialization method in the ComputeFunction. > There exists a preSuperstep() method for initialization. This one will be executed once per superstep before the compute function is invoked for every vertex. Would this work for you? > > Any opinions? Thanks. > > Best, > Xingcan > > > I hope this helps, -Vasia. [1]: https://ci.apache.org/projects/flink/flink-docs-release-1.2/dev/libs/gelly/iterative_graph_processing.html#vertex-centric-iterations [2]: https://ci.apache.org/projects/flink/flink-docs-release-1.2/dev/batch/iterations.html
Questions about the V-C Iteration in Gelly
Hi all, I got some question about the vertex-centric iteration in Gelly. a) It seems the postSuperstep method is called before the superstep barrier (I got different aggregate values of the same superstep in this method). Is this a bug? Or the design is just like that? b) There is not setHalt method for vertices. When no message received, a vertex just quit the next iteration. Should I manually send messages (like heartbeat) to keep the vertices active? c) I think we may need an initialization method in the ComputeFunction. Any opinions? Thanks. Best, Xingcan