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arxiv 1905.13348 v6 pith:PF55LC7K submitted 2019-05-30 cs.DC cs.LG

INFaaS: A Model-less and Managed Inference Serving System

classification cs.DC cs.LG
keywords developersinferencemodel-variantshardwareinfaasqueryservingacross
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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Despite existing work in machine learning inference serving, ease-of-use and cost efficiency remain challenges at large scales. Developers must manually search through thousands of model-variants -- versions of already-trained models that differ in hardware, resource footprints, latencies, costs, and accuracies -- to meet the diverse application requirements. Since requirements, query load, and applications themselves evolve over time, these decisions need to be made dynamically for each inference query to avoid excessive costs through naive autoscaling. To avoid navigating through the large and complex trade-off space of model-variants, developers often fix a variant across queries, and replicate it when load increases. However, given the diversity across variants and hardware platforms in the cloud, a lack of understanding of the trade-off space can incur significant costs to developers. This paper introduces INFaaS, a managed and model-less system for distributed inference serving, where developers simply specify the performance and accuracy requirements for their applications without needing to specify a specific model-variant for each query. INFaaS generates model-variants, and efficiently navigates the large trade-off space of model-variants on behalf of developers to meet application-specific objectives: (a) for each query, it selects a model, hardware architecture, and model optimizations, (b) it combines VM-level horizontal autoscaling with model-level autoscaling, where multiple, different model-variants are used to serve queries within each machine. By leveraging diverse variants and sharing hardware resources across models, INFaaS achieves 1.3x higher throughput, violates latency objectives 1.6x less often, and saves up to 21.6x in cost (8.5x on average) compared to state-of-the-art inference serving systems on AWS EC2.

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