FPGA-Accelerated Machine Learning Inference as a Service for Particle Physics Computing

Javier Duarte, Philip Harris, Scott Hauck, Burt Holzman, Shih Chieh Hsu, Sergo Jindariani, Suffian Khan, Benjamin Kreis, Brian Lee, Mia Liu, Vladimir Lončar, Jennifer Ngadiuba, Kevin Pedro, Brandon Perez, Maurizio Pierini, Dylan Rankin, Nhan Tran, Matthew Trahms, Aristeidis Tsaris, Colin VersteegTed W. Way, Dustin Werran, Zhenbin Wu

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

49 Scopus citations

Abstract

Large-scale particle physics experiments face challenging demands for high-throughput computing resources both now and in the future. New heterogeneous computing paradigms on dedicated hardware with increased parallelization, such as Field Programmable Gate Arrays (FPGAs), offer exciting solutions with large potential gains. The growing applications of machine learning algorithms in particle physics for simulation, reconstruction, and analysis are naturally deployed on such platforms. We demonstrate that the acceleration of machine learning inference as a web service represents a heterogeneous computing solution for particle physics experiments that potentially requires minimal modification to the current computing model. As examples, we retrain the ResNet-50 convolutional neural network to demonstrate state-of-the-art performance for top quark jet tagging at the LHC and apply a ResNet-50 model with transfer learning for neutrino event classification. Using Project Brainwave by Microsoft to accelerate the ResNet-50 image classification model, we achieve average inference times of 60 (10) ms with our experimental physics software framework using Brainwave as a cloud (edge or on-premises) service, representing an improvement by a factor of approximately 30 (175) in model inference latency over traditional CPU inference in current experimental hardware. A single FPGA service accessed by many CPUs achieves a throughput of 600–700 inferences per second using an image batch of one, comparable to large batch-size GPU throughput and significantly better than small batch-size GPU throughput. Deployed as an edge or cloud service for the particle physics computing model, coprocessor accelerators can have a higher duty cycle and are potentially much more cost-effective.

Original languageEnglish
Article number13
JournalComputing and Software for Big Science
Volume3
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2019
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • FPGA
  • Heterogeneous computing
  • Machine learning
  • Particle physics

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