dag_dependencies.rst
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r3624 | .. _dag_dependencies: | ||
================ | ||||
DAG Dependencies | ||||
================ | ||||
Often, parallel workflow is described in terms of a `Directed Acyclic Graph | ||||
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Directed_acyclic_graph>`_ or DAG. A popular library | ||||
for working with Graphs is NetworkX_. Here, we will walk through a demo mapping | ||||
a nx DAG to task dependencies. | ||||
The full script that runs this demo can be found in | ||||
Paul Ivanov
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r11998 | :file:`examples/parallel/dagdeps.py`. | ||
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Why are DAGs good for task dependencies? | ||||
---------------------------------------- | ||||
The 'G' in DAG is 'Graph'. A Graph is a collection of **nodes** and **edges** that connect | ||||
the nodes. For our purposes, each node would be a task, and each edge would be a | ||||
dependency. The 'D' in DAG stands for 'Directed'. This means that each edge has a | ||||
direction associated with it. So we can interpret the edge (a,b) as meaning that b depends | ||||
on a, whereas the edge (b,a) would mean a depends on b. The 'A' is 'Acyclic', meaning that | ||||
there must not be any closed loops in the graph. This is important for dependencies, | ||||
because if a loop were closed, then a task could ultimately depend on itself, and never be | ||||
able to run. If your workflow can be described as a DAG, then it is impossible for your | ||||
dependencies to cause a deadlock. | ||||
A Sample DAG | ||||
------------ | ||||
Here, we have a very simple 5-node DAG: | ||||
MinRK
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r5169 | .. figure:: figs/simpledag.* | ||
:width: 600px | ||||
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With NetworkX, an arrow is just a fattened bit on the edge. Here, we can see that task 0 | ||||
depends on nothing, and can run immediately. 1 and 2 depend on 0; 3 depends on | ||||
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r3663 | 1 and 2; and 4 depends only on 1. | ||
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A possible sequence of events for this workflow: | ||||
0. Task 0 can run right away | ||||
1. 0 finishes, so 1,2 can start | ||||
2. 1 finishes, 3 is still waiting on 2, but 4 can start right away | ||||
3. 2 finishes, and 3 can finally start | ||||
Further, taking failures into account, assuming all dependencies are run with the default | ||||
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r3664 | `success=True,failure=False`, the following cases would occur for each node's failure: | ||
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0. fails: all other tasks fail as Impossible | ||||
1. 2 can still succeed, but 3,4 are unreachable | ||||
2. 3 becomes unreachable, but 4 is unaffected | ||||
3. and 4. are terminal, and can have no effect on other nodes | ||||
The code to generate the simple DAG: | ||||
.. sourcecode:: python | ||||
import networkx as nx | ||||
G = nx.DiGraph() | ||||
# add 5 nodes, labeled 0-4: | ||||
map(G.add_node, range(5)) | ||||
# 1,2 depend on 0: | ||||
G.add_edge(0,1) | ||||
G.add_edge(0,2) | ||||
# 3 depends on 1,2 | ||||
G.add_edge(1,3) | ||||
G.add_edge(2,3) | ||||
# 4 depends on 1 | ||||
G.add_edge(1,4) | ||||
# now draw the graph: | ||||
pos = { 0 : (0,0), 1 : (1,1), 2 : (-1,1), | ||||
3 : (0,2), 4 : (2,2)} | ||||
nx.draw(G, pos, edge_color='r') | ||||
For demonstration purposes, we have a function that generates a random DAG with a given | ||||
number of nodes and edges. | ||||
Brian E. Granger
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r9200 | .. literalinclude:: ../../../examples/parallel/dagdeps.py | ||
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r3624 | :language: python | ||
:lines: 20-36 | ||||
So first, we start with a graph of 32 nodes, with 128 edges: | ||||
.. sourcecode:: ipython | ||||
In [2]: G = random_dag(32,128) | ||||
Now, we need to build our dict of jobs corresponding to the nodes on the graph: | ||||
.. sourcecode:: ipython | ||||
In [3]: jobs = {} | ||||
# in reality, each job would presumably be different | ||||
# randomwait is just a function that sleeps for a random interval | ||||
In [4]: for node in G: | ||||
...: jobs[node] = randomwait | ||||
Once we have a dict of jobs matching the nodes on the graph, we can start submitting jobs, | ||||
and linking up the dependencies. Since we don't know a job's msg_id until it is submitted, | ||||
which is necessary for building dependencies, it is critical that we don't submit any jobs | ||||
before other jobs it may depend on. Fortunately, NetworkX provides a | ||||
:meth:`topological_sort` method which ensures exactly this. It presents an iterable, that | ||||
guarantees that when you arrive at a node, you have already visited all the nodes it | ||||
on which it depends: | ||||
.. sourcecode:: ipython | ||||
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r3666 | In [5]: rc = Client() | ||
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r3664 | In [5]: view = rc.load_balanced_view() | ||
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In [6]: results = {} | ||||
In [7]: for node in G.topological_sort(): | ||||
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r5169 | ...: # get list of AsyncResult objects from nodes | ||
...: # leading into this one as dependencies | ||||
...: deps = [ results[n] for n in G.predecessors(node) ] | ||||
...: # submit and store AsyncResult object | ||||
...: with view.temp_flags(after=deps, block=False): | ||||
...: results[node] = view.apply_with_flags(jobs[node]) | ||||
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Now that we have submitted all the jobs, we can wait for the results: | ||||
.. sourcecode:: ipython | ||||
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r3664 | In [8]: view.wait(results.values()) | ||
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Now, at least we know that all the jobs ran and did not fail (``r.get()`` would have | ||||
raised an error if a task failed). But we don't know that the ordering was properly | ||||
respected. For this, we can use the :attr:`metadata` attribute of each AsyncResult. | ||||
These objects store a variety of metadata about each task, including various timestamps. | ||||
We can validate that the dependencies were respected by checking that each task was | ||||
started after all of its predecessors were completed: | ||||
Brian E. Granger
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r9200 | .. literalinclude:: ../../../examples/parallel/dagdeps.py | ||
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r3624 | :language: python | ||
:lines: 64-70 | ||||
We can also validate the graph visually. By drawing the graph with each node's x-position | ||||
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r3663 | as its start time, all arrows must be pointing to the right if dependencies were respected. | ||
For spreading, the y-position will be the runtime of the task, so long tasks | ||||
will be at the top, and quick, small tasks will be at the bottom. | ||||
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.. sourcecode:: ipython | ||||
In [10]: from matplotlib.dates import date2num | ||||
In [11]: from matplotlib.cm import gist_rainbow | ||||
In [12]: pos = {}; colors = {} | ||||
In [12]: for node in G: | ||||
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r5169 | ....: md = results[node].metadata | ||
....: start = date2num(md.started) | ||||
....: runtime = date2num(md.completed) - start | ||||
....: pos[node] = (start, runtime) | ||||
....: colors[node] = md.engine_id | ||||
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In [13]: nx.draw(G, pos, node_list=colors.keys(), node_color=colors.values(), | ||||
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r5169 | ....: cmap=gist_rainbow) | ||
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r5169 | .. figure:: figs/dagdeps.* | ||
:width: 600px | ||||
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Time started on x, runtime on y, and color-coded by engine-id (in this case there | ||||
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r3663 | were four engines). Edges denote dependencies. | ||
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.. _NetworkX: http://networkx.lanl.gov/ | ||||