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Shay Vargaftik

Shay Vargaftik contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

9 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

Quantizing With Randomized Hadamard Transforms: Efficient Heuristic Now Proven

Uniform random rotations (URRs) are a common preprocessing step in modern quantization approaches used for gradient compression, inference acceleration, KV-cache compression, model weight quantization, and approximate nearest-neighbor search in vector databases. In practice, URRs are often replaced by randomized Hadamard transforms (RHTs), which preserve orthogonality while admitting fast implementations. The remaining issue is the performance for worst-case inputs. With a URR, each coordinate is individually distributed as a shifted beta distribution, which converges to a Gaussian distribution in high dimensions. Generally, one RHT is not suitable in the worst case, as individual coordinates can be far from these distributions. We show that after composing two RHTs on any $d$-sized input vector, the marginal distribution of every fixed coordinate of the normalized rotated vector is within $O(d^{-1/2})$ of a standard Gaussian both in Kolmogorov distance and in $1$-Wasserstein distance. We then plug these bounds into the analyses of modern compression schemes, namely DRIVE and QUIC-FL, and show that two RHTs achieve performance that asymptotically matches URRs. However, we show that two RHTs may not be sufficient for Vector Quantization (VQ), which often requires weak correlation across fixed-size blocks of coordinates (as opposed to only marginal distribution convergence for single coordinates). We prove that a composition of three RHTs leads to decaying coordinate covariance. This ensures that any fixed, bounded, multi-dimensional VQ codebook optimized for URRs has the same expected error when using three RHTs, up to an additive term that vanishes with the dimension. Finally, because practical inputs are rarely adversarial, we propose a linear-time ${O}(d)$ check on the input's moments to dynamically adapt the number of RHTs used at runtime to improve performance.

preprint2022arXiv

Automating In-Network Machine Learning

Using programmable network devices to aid in-network machine learning has been the focus of significant research. However, most of the research was of a limited scope, providing a proof of concept or describing a closed-source algorithm. To date, no general solution has been provided for mapping machine learning algorithms to programmable network devices. In this paper, we present Planter, an open-source, modular framework for mapping trained machine learning models to programmable devices. Planter supports a wide range of machine learning models, multiple targets and can be easily extended. The evaluation of Planter compares different mapping approaches, and demonstrates the feasibility, performance, and resource efficiency for applications such as anomaly detection, financial transactions, and quality of experience. The results show that Planter-based in-network machine learning algorithms can run at line rate, have a negligible effect on latency, coexist with standard switching functionality, and have no or minor accuracy trade-offs.

preprint2022arXiv

EDEN: Communication-Efficient and Robust Distributed Mean Estimation for Federated Learning

Distributed Mean Estimation (DME) is a central building block in federated learning, where clients send local gradients to a parameter server for averaging and updating the model. Due to communication constraints, clients often use lossy compression techniques to compress the gradients, resulting in estimation inaccuracies. DME is more challenging when clients have diverse network conditions, such as constrained communication budgets and packet losses. In such settings, DME techniques often incur a significant increase in the estimation error leading to degraded learning performance. In this work, we propose a robust DME technique named EDEN that naturally handles heterogeneous communication budgets and packet losses. We derive appealing theoretical guarantees for EDEN and evaluate it empirically. Our results demonstrate that EDEN consistently improves over state-of-the-art DME techniques.

preprint2022arXiv

IIsy: Practical In-Network Classification

The rat race between user-generated data and data-processing systems is currently won by data. The increased use of machine learning leads to further increase in processing requirements, while data volume keeps growing. To win the race, machine learning needs to be applied to the data as it goes through the network. In-network classification of data can reduce the load on servers, reduce response time and increase scalability. In this paper, we introduce IIsy, implementing machine learning classification models in a hybrid fashion using off-the-shelf network devices. IIsy targets three main challenges of in-network classification: (i) mapping classification models to network devices (ii) extracting the required features and (iii) addressing resource and functionality constraints. IIsy supports a range of traditional and ensemble machine learning models, scaling independently of the number of stages in a switch pipeline. Moreover, we demonstrate the use of IIsy for hybrid classification, where a small model is implemented on a switch and a large model at the backend, achieving near optimal classification results, while significantly reducing latency and load on the servers.

preprint2021arXiv

SALSA: Self-Adjusting Lean Streaming Analytics

Counters are the fundamental building block of many data sketching schemes, which hash items to a small number of counters and account for collisions to provide good approximations for frequencies and other measures. Most existing methods rely on fixed-size counters, which may be wasteful in terms of space, as counters must be large enough to eliminate any risk of overflow. Instead, some solutions use small, fixed-size counters that may overflow into secondary structures. This paper takes a different approach. We propose a simple and general method called SALSA for dynamic re-sizing of counters and show its effectiveness. SALSA starts with small counters, and overflowing counters simply merge with their neighbors. SALSA can thereby allow more counters for a given space, expanding them as necessary to represent large numbers. Our evaluation demonstrates that, at the cost of a small overhead for its merging logic, SALSA significantly improves the accuracy of popular schemes (such as Count-Min Sketch and Count Sketch) over a variety of tasks. Our code is released as open-source [1].

preprint2020arXiv

Faster and More Accurate Measurement through Additive-Error Counters

Counters are a fundamental building block for networking applications such as load balancing, traffic engineering, and intrusion detection, which require estimating flow sizes and identifying heavy hitter flows. Existing works suggest replacing counters with shorter multiplicative error \emph{estimators} that improve the accuracy by fitting more of them within a given space. However, such estimators impose a computational overhead that degrades the measurement throughput. Instead, we propose \emph{additive} error estimators, which are simpler, faster, and more accurate when used for network measurement. Our solution is rigorously analyzed and empirically evaluated against several other measurement algorithms on real Internet traces. For a given error target, we improve the speed of the uncompressed solutions by $5\times$-$30\times$, and the space by up to $4\times$. Compared with existing state-of-the-art estimators, our solution is $ 9\times$-$35\times$ faster while being considerably more accurate.

preprint2020arXiv

LSQ: Load Balancing in Large-Scale Heterogeneous Systems with Multiple Dispatchers

Nowadays, the efficiency and even the feasibility of traditional load-balancing policies are challenged by the rapid growth of cloud infrastructure and the increasing levels of server heterogeneity. In such heterogeneous systems with many load-balancers, traditional solutions, such as JSQ, incur a prohibitively large communication overhead and detrimental incast effects due to herd behavior. Alternative low-communication policies, such as JSQ(d) and the recently proposed JIQ, are either unstable or provide poor performance. We introduce the Local Shortest Queue (LSQ) family of load balancing algorithms. In these algorithms, each dispatcher maintains its own, local, and possibly outdated view of the server queue lengths, and keeps using JSQ on its local view. A small communication overhead is used infrequently to update this local view. We formally prove that as long as the error in these local estimates of the server queue lengths is bounded in expectation, the entire system is strongly stable. Finally, in simulations, we show how simple and stable LSQ policies exhibit appealing performance and significantly outperform existing low-communication policies, while using an equivalent communication budget. In particular, our simple policies often outperform even JSQ due to their reduction of herd behavior. We further show how, by relying on smart servers (i.e., advanced pull-based communication), we can further improve performance and lower communication overhead.

preprint2020arXiv

RADE: Resource-Efficient Supervised Anomaly Detection Using Decision Tree-Based Ensemble Methods

Decision-tree-based ensemble classification methods (DTEMs) are a prevalent tool for supervised anomaly detection. However, due to the continued growth of datasets, DTEMs result in increasing drawbacks such as growing memory footprints, longer training times, and slower classification latencies at lower throughput. In this paper, we present, design, and evaluate RADE - a DTEM-based anomaly detection framework that augments standard DTEM classifiers and alleviates these drawbacks by relying on two observations: (1) we find that a small (coarse-grained) DTEM model is sufficient to classify the majority of the classification queries correctly, such that a classification is valid only if its corresponding confidence level is greater than or equal to a predetermined classification confidence threshold; (2) we find that in these fewer harder cases where our coarse-grained DTEM model results in insufficient confidence in its classification, we can improve it by forwarding the classification query to one of expert DTEM (fine-grained) models, which is explicitly trained for that particular case. We implement RADE in Python based on scikit-learn and evaluate it over different DTEM methods: RF, XGBoost, AdaBoost, GBDT and LightGBM, and over three publicly available datasets. Our evaluation over both a strong AWS EC2 instance and a Raspberry Pi 3 device indicates that RADE offers competitive and often superior anomaly detection capabilities as compared to standard DTEM methods, while significantly improving memory footprint (by up to 5.46x), training-time (by up to 17.2x), and classification latency (by up to 31.2x).

preprint2016arXiv

C-Share: Optical Circuits Sharing for Software-Defined Data-Centers

Integrating optical circuit switches in data-centers is an on-going research challenge. In recent years, state-of-the-art solutions introduce hybrid packet/circuit architectures for different optical circuit switch technologies, control techniques, and traffic rerouting methods. These solutions are based on separated packet and circuit planes which do not have the ability to utilize an optical circuit with flows that do not arrive from or delivered to switches directly connected to the circuit's end-points. Moreover, current SDN-based elephant flow rerouting methods require a forwarding rule for each flow, which raise scalability issues. In this paper, we present C-Share -- a practical, scalable SDN-based circuit sharing solution for data center networks. C-Share inherently enable elephant flows to share optical circuits by exploiting a flat upper tier network topology. C-Share is based on a scalable and decoupled SDN-based elephant flow rerouting method comprised of elephant flow detection, tagging and identification, which is utilized by using a prevalent network sampling method (e.g., sFlow). C-Share requires only a single OpenFlow rule for each optical circuit, and therefore significantly reduces the required OpenFlow rule entry footprint and setup rule rate. It also mitigates the OpenFlow outbound latency for subsequent elephant flows. We implement a proof-of-concept system for C-Share based on Mininet, and test the scalability of C-Share by using an event driven simulation. Our results show a consistent increase in the mice/elephant flow separation in the network which, in turn, improves both network throughput and flow completion time.