Versions Compared

Key

  • This line was added.
  • This line was removed.
  • Formatting was changed.

Status

Current state"Under Discussion"

...

JIRA: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/FLINK-22915

Released: 1.1415

Please keep the discussion on the mailing list rather than commenting on the wiki (wiki discussions get unwieldy fast).


Table of Contents


NOTE: we have decided to replace this option with the design proposed here. This design doc will be deleted later.

Motivation and Use-cases

The existing Flink ML library allows users to compose an Estimator/Transformer from a pipeline (i.e. linear sequence) of Estimator/Transformer, and each Estimator/Transformer has one input and one output.

...

For example, some graph embedding algorithms (e.g., MetaPath2Vec) need to take two tables as inputs. These two tables represent nodes labels and edges of the graph respectively. This logic can be expressed as an Estimator with 2 input tables.

And some workflow may need to split 1 table into 2 tables, and use these tables for training and validation respectively. This logic can be expressed by a Transformer with 1 input table and 2 output tables.

2) Compose a directed-acyclic-graph Estimator/Transformer into an Estimator/TransformerExpress a generic machine learning function that has multiple inputs/outputs and make sure the class used for this purpose does not have any historical association with Estimator/Model concepts.

For example, the workflow may involve the join of 2 tables, where each table could be generated by a chain of Estimator/Transformer. The entire workflow is therefore a DAG of Estimator/Transformer.some machine learning-related algorithms like model evaluation, computation of some statistics (e.g., ChiSquareTest), graph algorithms (e.g., PageRank) also take tables as input and produce tables as output. Though the functionality of Transformer API

can express this algorithm, some machine learning practitioners have the concern that Transformer is historically associated with the Estimator/Model/Feature Engineering concepts such that it feels weird to use Transformer for these use-cases.  

3) Online learning where a long-running instance Transformer 3) Online learning where a long-running instance Transformer needs to be updated by the latest model data generated by another long-running instance of Estimator.

In this scenario, we need to allow the Estimator to be run on a different machine than the Transformer. So that Estimator could consume sufficient computation resource in a cluster while the Transformer could be deployed on edge devices.In addition to addressing the above use-cases, this FLIP also proposes a few more changes to simplify the class hierarchy and improve API usability. The existing Flink ML library has the following usability issues:
4) The Model interface does not provide any added value (given that we already have Transformer). The added class hierarchy complexity is not justified.

5) fit/transform API requires users to explicitly provide the TableEnvironment, where the TableEnvironment could be retrieved from the Table instance given to the fit/transform.

6) A Pipeline is both a Transformer and an Estimator. The experience of using Pipeline is therefore different from the experience of using Estimator (with the needFit API).

7) There is no API provided by the Estimator/Transformer interface to validate the schema consistency of a Pipeline. Users would have to instantiate Tables (with I/O logics) and run fit/transform to know whether the stages in the Pipeline are compatible with each other.

Public Interfaces

This FLIP proposes quite a few changes and addition to the existing Flink ML APIs. We first describe the proposed API additions and changes, followed by the API code of interfaces and classes after making the proposed changes.

API additions and changes

Here we list the additions and the changes to the Flink ML API.

1) Removed TableEnvironment from the parameter list of fit/transform APIs.

This change simplifies the usage of fit/transform APIs.

2) Added PipelineModel and let Pipeline implement only the Estimator. Pipeline is no longer a Transformer.

This change makes the experience of using Pipeline consistent with the experience of using Estimator/Transformer, where a class is either an Estimator or a Transformer.

3) Removed Pipeline::appendStage from the Pipeline class.

This change makes the concept of Pipeline consistent with that of Graph/GraphBuilder. Neither Graph nor Pipeline provides the API to construct themselves.

4) Removed the Model interface.

This change simplifies the class hierarchy by removing a redundant class. It follows the philosophy of only adding complexity when we have explicit use-case for it.

5) Renamed PipelineStage to Stage and add the PublicEvolving tag to the Stage interface.

This change is reasonable because we will now compose Graph (not just Pipeline) using this class.

6) Added transformSchemas()  to the Stage interface.

This is needed to validate the compatibility of input schemas with a given Estimator/Transformer instance.

7) Updated Transformer/Estimator to take list of tables as inputs and return list of tables as output.

This change addresses the use-cases described in the motivation section, e.g. a graph embedding Estimator needs to take 2 tables as inputs.

8) Added setStateStreams and getStateStreams to the Transformer interface.

This change addresses the use-cases described in the motivation section, where a running Transformer needs to ingest the model state streams emitted by a Estimator, which could be running on a different machine.

9) Added Graph, GraphModel and GraphBuilder.

This change addresses the use-cases described in the motivation section, where we need to compose an Estimator from a DAG of Estimator/Transformer.

Interfaces and classes after the proposed API changes

The following code block shows the interface of Stage, Transformer, Estimator, Pipeline and PipelineModel after the proposed changes.

4) Provide APIs to allow Estimator/Transformer to be efficiently saved/loaded even if state (e.g. model data) of Estimator/Transformer is more than 10s of GBs.

The existing PipelineStage::toJson basically requires developer of Transformer/Estimator to serialize all model data into an in-memory string, which could be very inefficient (or practically impossible) if the model data is very large (e.g 10s of GBs).


In addition to addressing the above use-cases, this FLIP also proposes a few more changes to simplify the class hierarchy and improve API usability. The existing Flink ML library has the following usability issues:

5) The Model interface (which currently simply extends the Transformer interface without adding any extra logic) does not provide any added value. The added class hierarchy complexity is not justified.

6) fit/transform API requires users to explicitly provide the TableEnvironment, where the TableEnvironment could be retrieved from the Table instance given to the fit/transform.

7) A Pipeline is both a Transformer and an Estimator. The experience of using Pipeline is therefore different from the experience of using Estimator (with the needFit API).

Background

Note: Readers who are familiar with the existing Estimator/Transformer/Pipeline APIs can skip this section.

The design proposed in this doc is built on top of the design proposed in FLIP-39: Flink ML pipeline and ML libs, which in turn is motivated by the Estimator/Transformer/Pipeline design proposed in Scikit-learn. Please feel free to read FLIP-39 and Scikit-learn paper for more detail. In this section, we explain the key background information to help better understand the motivation and benefits of the proposed design, as well as the definition of some terminology.

1) What is the motivation of defining the Estimator and the Transformer interfaces? How are these interfaces related to machine learning?

We expect most classic machine learning algorithms to have a training logic and inference logic. The training logic of the algorithm reads data (e.g. labeled data) and updates its variables. The inference logic of the algorithm makes prediction (e.g. label) for the unseen data.

The inference logic of this algorithm could be represented as a subclass of Transformer (say TransformerA). The Transformer subclass has a transform() method, which reads data (as Table) and outputs data (as Table).

The training logic of this algorithm could be represented as a subclass of Estimator (say EstimatorA). The Estimator subclass has a fit() method, which reads data (as Table) and outputs an instance of Transformer (e.g. TransformerA in this case). The TransformerA instance could be constructed using variables from the EstimatorA instance.

Then, in order to do training and prediction using this algorithm, a user could write the following code:

Code Block
languagejava
Estimator estimator = new EstimatorA(...)

Table prediction_result = estimator.fit(training_data).transform(inference_data)


2) How does Pipeline work? What is the motivation of the Pipeline class?

The Pipeline is created from a linear chain of Estimator/Transformer (referred to as stage below). And it is used as an Estimator (since it implements Estimator). 

The execution of Pipeline::fit is a bit more complicated than it looks, since the output of an Estimator stage is not used directly as the input of the next stage in the Pipeline.

We highlight the key execution detail of Pipeline::fit below:

  • The input of Pipeline::fit is given to the first stage in the Pipeline.
  • If a stage is Transformer, the given input is used to invoke Transformer::transform(...), whose output is used as the input of the next stage.
  • If a stage is Estimator, the given input is used to invoke Estimator::fit(...), which produces a Transformer instance. The same input is then given to the Transformer::transform of the fitted instance, whose output is used as the input of the next stage.
  • Eventually, any Estimator stage of this Pipeline will produce a Transformer, which are combined with the original Transformer stage of the Pipeline into a linear chain of Transformers. This linear chain of Transformers are composed into an instance of Transformer.

The motivation of the Pipeline class is to enable user to do the following:

  • Compose an Estimator from a linear chain of Estimator/Transformer
  • Use the Transformer instance fitted by this linear chain of Estimator/Transformer without additionally defining this Transformer instance (which should itself be a linear chain of Transformer) again.

It is important to make the following observation: if we don't provide the Pipeline class, users can still accomplish the same use-cases targeted by Pipeline by explicitly writing the training logic and inference logic separately using Estimator/Transformer APIs. But users would have to construct this chain of Estimator/Transformer twice (for training and inference respectively).

Public Interfaces

This FLIP proposes quite a few changes and additions to the existing Flink ML APIs. We first describe the proposed API additions and changes, followed by the API code of interfaces and classes after making the proposed changes.

API additions and changes

Here we list the additions and the changes to the Flink ML API.

The following changes are the most important changes proposed by this doc:

1) Added the AlgoOperator class. AlgoOperator class has the same interface as the existing Transformer (i.e. has the transform method).

This change address the need to encode a generic multi-input multi-output machine learning function. 

2) Updated Transformer/Estimator to take list of tables as inputs and return list of tables as output.

This change addresses the use-cases described in the motivation section, e.g. a graph embedding Estimator needs to take 2 tables as inputs.

3) Added setStateStreams and getStateStreams to the Transformer interface.

This change addresses the use-cases described in the motivation section, where a running Transformer needs to ingest the model state streams emitted by a Estimator, which could be running on a different machine.

4) Removed the methods PipelineStage::toJson and PipelineStage::loadJson. Add methods save(...) and load(...) to the Stage interface.


The following changes are relatively minor:

5) Removed TableEnvironment from the parameter list of fit/transform APIs.

This change simplifies the usage of fit/transform APIs.

6) Added pipelineTransformer and let Pipeline implement only the Estimator. Pipeline is no longer a Transformer.

This change makes the experience of using Pipeline consistent with the experience of using Estimator/Transformer, where a class is either an Estimator or a Transformer.

7) Removed Pipeline::appendStage from the Pipeline class.

8) Removed the Model interface. And renamed PipelineModel to PipelineTransformer.

This change simplifies the class hierarchy by removing a redundant class. It follows the philosophy of only adding complexity when we have explicit use-case for it.

9) Renamed PipelineStage to Stage and add the PublicEvolving tag to the Stage interface.

Interfaces and classes after the proposed API changes

The following code block shows the interface of Stage, Transformer, Estimator, Pipeline and pipelineTransformer after making the changes listed above.

Code Block
languagejava
/**
 * Base class for a stage in a Pipeline. The interface is only a concept, and does not have any actual
 * functionality. Its subclasses could be Estimator, Transformer or AlgoOperator. No other classes should inherit this
 * interface directly.
 *
 * <p>Each stage is with parameters, and requires a public empty constructor for restoration.
 *
 * @param <T> The class type of the Stage implementation itself.
 * @see WithParams
 */
@PublicEvolving
interface Stage<T extends Stage<T>> extends WithParams<T>, Serializable {
    /**
     * Saves this stage to the given path.
     */
    void save(String path);
Code Block
languagejava
@PublicEvolving
interface Stage<T extends Stage<T>> extends WithParams<T>, Serializable {
    /**
     * This method checks the compatibility between input schemas, stage's parameters and stage's
     * logic. It should raise an exception if there is any mismatch, e.g. the number of input
     * schemas is wrong, or if a required field is missing from a schema.
     *
     * <p>If there is no mismatch, the method derives and returns the output schemas from the input
     * schemas.
     *
     * <p>Note that the output schemas of a given Estimator instance should equal the output schemas
     * of the Transformer instance fitted by this Estimator instance, suppose the same list of input
     * schemas are used as inputs to the fit/transform methods respectively.
     *
     * @param schemas the list of schemas of the input tables.
     * @return the list of schemas of the output tables.
     */
    TableSchema[] transformSchemas(TableSchema... schemas);

    /** Skipped */
    default String toJson() {...}

    /** Skipped */
    default void loadJson(String json) {...}
}

@PublicEvolving
public interface Transformer<T extends Transformer<T>> extends Stage<T> {

    /**
     * Applies the Transformer on the given input tables, and returns the result tables.
     *
     * @param inputs a list of tables
     * @return a list of tables
     */
    Table[] transform(Table... inputs);

    /**
     * Uses the given list of tables to update internal states. This can be useful for e.g. online
     * learning where an Estimator fits an infinite stream of training samples and streams the model
     * diff data to this Transformer.
     *
     * <p>This method may be called at most once.
     *
     * @param inputs a list of tables
     */
    default void setStateStreams(Table... inputs) {
        throw new UnsupportedOperationException("this method is not implemented");
    }

    /**
     * Gets a list of tables representing changes of internal states of this Transformer. These
     * tables might come from the Estimator that instantiated this Transformer.
     *
     * @return a list of tables
     */
    default Table[] getStateStreams() {
        throw new UnsupportedOperationException("this method is not implemented");
    }
}

@PublicEvolving
public interface Estimator<E extends Estimator<E, M>, M extends Transformer<M>> extends Stage<E> {

    /**
     * Loads this Trainsstage onfrom the given inputspath.
 and produces a Transformer. If*/
 this Estimator may bevoid used toload(String path);
}

/**
 * A AlgoOperator is *a composeStage athat Pipeline,takes thea transformlist method of thetables returnedas Transformerinputs shouldand beproduces ablea tolist acceptof
     * atables listas ofresults. tablesIt ofcan thebe sameused lengthto andencode schemasa asgeneric the fit method of this Estimator.
     multi-input multi-output machine learning function.
 *
 * @param <T> The *class @paramtype inputsof athe listAlgoOperator ofimplementation tablesitself.
 */
@PublicEvolving
public interface AlgoOperator<T extends *AlgoOperator<T>> @returnextends aStage<T> Transformer{
     /**/
     * M fit(Table... inputs);
}

@PublicEvolving
public final class Pipeline implements Estimator<Pipeline, PipelineModel> {

    public Pipeline(List<Stage<?>> stages) {...}

    @Override
    public PipelineModel fit(Table... inputs) {...}

    /** Skipped a few methods, including the implementations of the Estimator APIs. */
}

@PublicEvolving
public final class PipelineModel implements Transformer<PipelineModel> {

    public PipelineModel(List<Transformer<?>> transformers) {...}

    /** Skipped a few methods, including the implementations of the Transformer APIs. */
}

The following code block shows the interface of Graph, GraphModel and GraphBuilder that we propose to add.

Code Block
languagejava
/**
 * A Graph acts as an Estimator. It consists of a DAG of stages, each of which is either an
 * Estimator or TransformerApplies the AlgoOperator on the given input tables, and returns the result tables.
     *
     * @param inputs a list of tables
     * @return a list of tables
     */
    Table[] transform(Table... inputs);
}

/**
 * A Transformer is a AlgoOperator with additional support for state streams, which could be set by the Estimator that fitted
 * this Transformer. Unlike AlgoOperator, a Transformer is typically associated with an Estimator.
 *
 * @param <T> The class type of the Transformer implementation itself.
 */
@PublicEvolving
public finalinterface classTransformer<T Graphextends implementsTransformer<T>> Estimator<Graph,extends GraphModel>AlgoOperator<T> {
    public Graph(...) {...}

/**
     * @Override
Uses the given list publicof GraphModel fit(Table... inputs) {...}

tables to update internal states. This can be useful for e.g. online
    @Override
 * learning where publican TableSchema[] transformSchemas(TableSchema... schemas) {
        return schemas;Estimator fits an infinite stream of training samples and streams the model
    }

 * diff data /**to Skippedthis aTransformer.
 few methods, including the implementations*
 of some Estimator APIs. */
}

/** A<p>This GraphModelmethod actsmay asbe acalled Transformer.at Itmost consists of a DAG of Transformers. */
@PublicEvolving
public final class GraphModel implements Transformer<GraphModel> {
    /** Skipped a few methods, including the implementations of the Transformer APIs. */
}

/** A GraphBuilder helps connect Stage instances into a Graph or GraphModel. */
@PublicEvolving
public final class GraphBuilder {once.
     *
     * @param inputs a list of tables
     */
    default void setStateStreams(Table... inputs) {
        throw new UnsupportedOperationException("this method is not implemented");
    }

    /**
     * SpecifiesGets thea upperlist boundof (couldtables berepresenting loose)changes of theinternal numberstates of outputthis tablesTransformer. thatThese
 can be
   * tables *might returnedcome byfrom the Estimator that instantiated Transformer::getStateStreams and Transformer::transform methods, for anythis Transformer.
     *
     * stage@return involveda inlist thisof Graph.tables
     */
     * <p>The default upper bound is 20.
default Table[] getStateStreams() {
        throw  */
    public GraphBuilder setMaxOutputLength(int maxOutputLength) {...}

    new UnsupportedOperationException("this method is not implemented");
    }
}

/**
 * An Estimator is * Createsa Stage that takes a list of TableIdtables associatedas withinputs thisand GraphBuilder.produces Ita can be used to specify the passing of
     * tables between stages, as well as the input/output tables of the Graph/GraphModel generated
     * by this builder.
     */
    public TableId createTableId() {...}
Transformer.
 *
 * @param <E> class type of the Estimator implementation itself.
 * @param <M> class type of the Transformer this Estimator produces.
 */
@PublicEvolving
public interface Estimator<E extends Estimator<E, M>, M extends Transformer<M>> extends Stage<E> {
    /**
     * The Graph::fit and GraphModel::transform should invoke the fit/transform of the corresponding
     * stage with the corresponding inputs.
     *
     * <p>Returns a list of TableIds, which represents outputs of the Transformer::transform
     * invocation.
     */
    public TableId[] getOutputs(Stage<?> stage, TableId... inputs) {...}

    /**
     * The GraphModel::setStateStreams should invoke the setStateStreams of the corresponding stage
     * with the corresponding inputs.
     */
    void setStateStreams(Stage<?> stage, TableId... inputs) {...}

    /**
     * The GraphModel::getStateStreams should invoke the getStateStreams of the corresponding stage.
     *
     * <p>Returns a list of TableIds, which represents outputs of the getStateStreams invocation.
     */
    TableId[] getStateStreams(Stage<?> stage) {...}

    /**
     * Returns a Graph instance which the following API specification: - Graph::fit should take
     * inputs and returns a GraphModel with the following specification. - GraphModel::transform
     * should take inputs and returns outputs. - GraphModel::setStateStreams should take
     * inputStates. - GraphModel::getStateStreams should return outputStates.
     *
     * <p>The fit/transform/setStateStreams/getStateStreams should invoke the APIs of the internal
     * stages in the order specified by the DAG of stages.
     */
    Graph build(] inputs, TableId[] outputs, TableId[] inputStates, TableId[] outputStates) {...}

    /**
     * Returns a GraphModel instance which the following API specification: - GraphModel::transform
     * should take inputs and returns outputs. - GraphModel::setStateStreams should take
     * inputStates. - GraphModel::getStateStreams should return outputStates.
     *
     * <p>The transform/setStateStreams/getStateStreams should invoke the APIs of the internal
     * stages in the order specified by the DAG of stages.
     *
     * <p>This method throws exception if any stage of this graph is an Estimator.
     */
    GraphModel buildModel(TableId[] inputs, TableId[] outputs, TableId[] inputStates, TableId[] outputStates) {...}

    // The TableId is necessary to pass the inputs/outputs of various API calls across the
    // Graph/GraphModel stags.
    static class TableId {}

}

Example Usage

In this section we provide examples code snippets to demonstrate how we can use the APIs proposed in this FLIP to address the use-cases in the motivation section.

Composing an Estimator from a DAG of Estimator/Transformer

Suppose we have the following Transformer and Estimator classes:

  • TransformerA whose transform(...) takes 1 input table and has 1 output table.
  • TransformerB whose transform(...) takes 2 input tables and has 1 output table.
  • EstimatorB whose fit(...) takes 2 input tables and returns an instance of TransformerB.

And we want to compose an Estimator (e.g. Graph) from the following DAG of Transformer/Estimator.

Image Removed

The resulting Graph::fit is expected to have the following behavior:

  • The method takes 2 input tables. The 1st input table is given to a TransformerA instance. And the 2nd input table is given to another TransformerA instance.
  • An EstimatorB instance fits the output tables of these two TransformerA instances and generates a new TransformerB instance.
  • Returns a GraphModel instance which contains 2 TransformerA instance and 1 TransformerB instance, connected using the same DAG as shown above.

...

languagejava

...

Trains on the given inputs and produces a Transformer.
     *
     * @param inputs a list of tables
     * @return a Transformer
     */
    M fit(Table... inputs);
}

/**
 * A Pipeline acts as an Estimator. It consists of an ordered list of stages, each of which could be
 * an Estimator, Transformer or AlgoOperator.
 */
@PublicEvolving
public final class Pipeline implements Estimator<Pipeline, pipelineTransformer> {

    public Pipeline(List<Stage<?>> stages) {...}

    @Override
    public pipelineTransformer fit(Table... inputs) {...}

    /** Skipped a few methods, including the implementations of the Estimator APIs. */
}

/**
 * A pipelineTransformer acts as a Transformer. It consists of an ordered list of Transformers or AlgoOperators.
 */
@PublicEvolving
public final class pipelineTransformer implements Transformer<pipelineTransformer> {

    public pipelineTransformer(List<Transformer<?>> transformers) {...}

    /** Skipped a few methods, including the implementations of the Transformer APIs. */
}


Example Usage

In this section we provide examples code snippets to demonstrate how we can use the APIs proposed in this FLIP to address the use-cases in the motivation section.

...

Online learning by running Transformer and Estimator concurrently on different machines

Here is an online learning scenario:

...

Code Block
languagejava
void runTrainingOnClusterA(...) {
  // Creates the training stream from a Kafka topic.
  Table training_stream = ...;

  Estimator estimator = new EstimatorA(...);
  Transformer transformer = estimator.fit(training_stream);
  Table state_stream = transformer.getStateStreams()[0];
  String transformer_json = transformer.toJson();

  // Writes the state_stream to a Kafka topicA.
  state_stream.sinkTable(...);
  // WritesSaves transformer_json's state/metadata to a remote path.
  file.transformer.save(remote_path);

  // Executes the operators generated by the Estimator::fit(...), which reads from training_stream and writes to state_stream.
  env.execute()
}

...

Code Block
languagejava
void runInferenceOnWebServer(...) {

  // Reads the transformer_json from the same remote file written by the above code snippet.
  String transformer_json = ...;
  // Creates the state stream from Kafka topicA which is written by the above code snippet. 
  Table state_stream = ...;
  // Creates the input stream that needs inference.
  Table input_stream = ...;

  Transformer transformer = new Transformer(...);
  transformer.loadJsonload(transformerremote_jsonpath);
  transformer.setStateStreams(new Table[]{state_stream});
  Table output_stream = transformer.transform(input_stream);

  // Do something with the output_stream.

  // Executes the operators generated by the Transformer::transform(...), which reads from state_stream to update its parameters. 
  // It also does inference on input_stream and produces results to the output_stream.
  env.execute()
}


Compatibility, Deprecation, and Migration Plan

The changes proposed in this FLIP is backward incompatible with the existing APIs. We propose to change the APIs directly without deprecation period. And we will manually migrate the existing open source projects which use the existing Flink ML API to use the proposed APIs.

Note that there is no implementation of Estimator/Transformer (excluding test-only implementations) in the existing Flink codebase. So the effort no work is needed to migrate the existing Flink codebase is zero.

To our best knowledge, the only open source project that uses the Flink ML API is https://github.com/alibaba/Alink. We will work together with Alink developers to migrate the existing code to use the proposed API. Furthermore, we will migrate Alink's Estimator/Transformer implementation to the Flink ML library codebase as much as possible.

Test Plan

We will provide unit tests to validate the proposed changes.

Rejected Alternatives

There is no rejected alternatives to be listed here yet.

...