Federated learning (FL), proposed by Google at the very beginning, is recently a burgeoning research area of machine learning, which aims to protect individual data privacy in the distributed machine learning processes, especially in finance, smart healthcare, and edge computing. Different from traditional data-centered distributed machine learning, participants in the FL setting utilize localized data to train local models, then leverages specific strategies with other participants to acquire the final model collaboratively, avoiding direct data-sharing behavior.
To relieve the burden of researchers in implementing FL algorithms and emancipate FL scientists from the repetitive implementation of basic FL settings, we introduce a highly customizable framework FedLab in this work. FedLab provides the necessary modules for FL simulation, including communication, compression, model optimization, data partition and other functional modules. Users can build an FL simulation environment with custom modules like playing with LEGO bricks. For better understanding and easy usage, the FL baseline algorithms implemented via FedLab are also presented.
- Install the latest version from source code:
$ git clone git@github.com:SMILELab-FL/FedLab.git
$ cd FedLab
$ pip install -r requirements.txt
- Install the stable version (old version) via pip:
# assign the version fedlab==1.3.0
$ pip install fedlab
We provide tutorials in jupyter notebook format for FedLab beginners in FedLab\tutorials. These tutorials include data partition, customized algorithms, and pipeline demos. For the FedLab or FL beginners, we recommend this notebook. Furthermore, we provide reproductions of federated algorithms via FedLab, which are stored in fedlab.contirb.algorithm. We think they are good examples for users to further explore FedLab.
Website Documentations are available:
- Run our quick start examples of different scenarios with a partitioned MNIST dataset.
# example of standalone
$ cd ./examples/standalone/
$ python standalone.py --total_clients 100 --com_round 3 --sample_ratio 0.1 --batch_size 100 --epochs 5 --lr 0.02
Files architecture of FedLab. These contents may be helpful for users to understand our repo.
├── fedlab
│ ├── contrib
│ ├── core
│ ├── models
│ └── utils
├── datasets
│ └── ...
├── examples
│ ├── asynchronous-cross-process-mnist
│ ├── cross-process-mnist
│ ├── hierarchical-hybrid-mnist
│ ├── network-connection-checker
│ ├── scale-mnist
│ └── standalone-mnist
└── tutorials
├── communication_tutorial.ipynb
├── customize_tutorial.ipynb
├── pipeline_tutorial.ipynb
└── ...
We provide the reproduction of baseline federated algorthms for users in this repo.
Sophisticated in the real world, FL needs to handle various kind of data distribution scenarios, including iid and non-iid scenarios. Though there already exists some datasets and partition schemes for published data benchmark, it still can be very messy and hard for researchers to partition datasets according to their specific research problems, and maintain partition results during simulation. FedLab provides fedlab.utils.dataset.partition.DataPartitioner
that allows you to use pre-partitioned datasets as well as your own data. DataPartitioner
stores sample indices for each client given a data partition scheme. Also, FedLab provides some extra datasets that are used in current FL researches while not provided by official PyTorch torchvision.datasets
yet.
We provide multiple data partition schemes used in recent FL papers[1][2][3]. Here we show the data partition visualization of several common used datasets as the examples.
Each client has same number of samples, and same distribution for all class samples.
Given 100 clients and CIFAR10, the data samples assigned to the first 10 clients could be:
Assign different sample number for each client using Log-Normal distribution
Given
Non-iid partition used in [3] and [6]. Number of data points and class proportions are unbalanced. Samples will be partitioned into
Given 100 clients,
Non-iid partition based on shards, used in [4].
Given shard_number=200
, 100 clients and CIFAR10, the data samples assigned to the first 10 clients could be:
Non-iid partition used in [5]. Each client has same number of samples, while class distribution in each client follows Dirichlet distribution
Given
Non-iid partition used in [5]. Sample numbers of clients are drawn from Log-normal distribution
Given
Non-iid partition used in [1]. Each client has only specific number of sample class.
Given class number for each client as
Non-iid partition used in [1]. Different client's sample feature has different levels of Gaussian noise. Data example for 10 clients could be:
Non-iid partition used in [1]. Data example for 4 clients could be shown as:
Data Type | Data Name | #Training Samples | #Test Samples | #Label Classes |
Vision data | CIFAR10 | 50K | 10K | 10 |
CIFAR100 | 50K | 10K | 100 | |
FashionMNIST | 60K | 10K | 10 | |
MNIST | 60K | 10K | 10 | |
SVHN | 73K | 26K | 10 | |
CelebA | 200, 288 | 2 | ||
FEMNIST | 805, 263 | 62 | ||
Text data | Shakespeare | 4, 226, 158 | - | |
Sent14 | 1, 600, 498 | 3 | ||
56, 587, 343 | - | |||
Tabular data | Adult | 32, 561 | 16, 281 | 2 |
Covtype | 581, 012 | 2 | ||
RCV1 binary | 20, 242 | 677, 399 | 2 | |
Synthetic data | FCUBE | - | - | 2 |
LEAF-Synthetic | - | - | - |
For data distribution visualization in data partition, we provide fedlab.utils.dataset.functional.feddata_scatterplot()
for users' convenience.
Visualization for synthetic partition code below:
import numpy as np
from matplotlib import pyplot as plt
from fedlab.utils.dataset.functional import feddata_scatterplot
sample_num = 15
class_num = 4
clients_num = 3
num_per_client = int(sample_num/clients_num)
labels = np.random.randint(class_num, size=sample_num) # generate 15 labels, each label is 0 to 3
rand_per = np.random.permutation(sample_num)
# partition synthetic data into 3 clients
data_indices = {0: rand_per[0:num_per_client],
1: rand_per[num_per_client:num_per_client*2],
2: rand_per[num_per_client*2:num_per_client*3]}
title = 'Data Distribution over Clients for Each Class'
fig = feddata_scatterplot(labels.tolist(),
data_indices,
clients_num,
class_num,
figsize=(6, 4),
max_size=200,
title=title)
plt.show(fig)
fig.savefig(f'imgs/feddata-scatterplot-vis.png')
Visualization result for CIFAR-10 Dirichlet Non-IID with
We provide the performance report of several reproduced federated learning algorithms to illustrate the correctness of FedLab in simulation. Furthermore, we describe several insights FedLab could provide for federated learning research. Without loss of generality, this section's experiments are conducted on partitioned MNIST datasets. The conclusions and observations in this section should still be valid in other data sets and scenarios.
We choose
We use the same partitioned MNIST dataset in FedAvg[4] to evaluate the corectness of FedLab. The rounds for FedAvg to achieve 97% test accuracy on MNIST using 2NN with E=5 reported in [4] / FedLab:
Sample ratio | IID | Non-IID | ||
B=FULL | B=10 | B=FULL | B=10 | |
0.0 | 1455 / 1293 | 316 / 77 | 4278 / 1815 | 3275 / 1056 |
0.1 | 1474 / 1230 | 87 / 43 | 1796 / 2778 | 664 / 439 |
0.2 | 1658 / 1234 | 77 / 37 | 1528 / 2805 | 619 / 427 |
0.5 | -- / 1229 | 75 / 36 | -- / 3034 | 443 / 474 |
1.0 | -- / 1284 | 70 / 35 | -- / 3154 | 380 / 507 |
The results are obtained by running the tutorial with random seed 0.
Time cost in 100 rounds (50 clients are sampled per round) under different acceleration settings. 1M-10P stands for the simulation runs on 1 machine with 4 GPUs and 10 processes. 2M-10P stands for the simulation runs on 2 machines with 4 GPUs and 10 processes (5 processes on each machine).
Hardware platform: Intel(R) Xeon(R) Gold 6240L CPU @ 2.60GHz + Tesla V100 * 4.
Standalone | Cross-process 1M-10P | Cross-process 2M-10P |
---|---|---|
45.6 Min | 2.9 Min | 4.23 Min |
The results are obtained by running the tutorial and an example of cross-process scenario. Besides, the results reveal the simulation efficiency of FedLab under different simulation modes. Cross-process with 2 machines could be slower in this setting due to communication bottleneck.
We provide a few performance baselines in communication-efficient federated learning including QSGD and top-k. In the experiment setting, we choose
Setting | Baseline | QSGD-4bit | QSGD-8bit | QSGD-16bit | Top-5% | Top-10% | Top-20% |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Test Accuracy (%) | 93.14 | 93.03 | 93.27 | 93.11 | 11.35 | 61.25 | 89.96 |
Communication (MB) | 302.45 | 45.59 | 85.06 | 160.67 | 0.94 | 1.89 | 3.79 |
The above results are obtained by running the tutorial.
Please cite FedLab in your publications if it helps your research:
@article{JMLR:v24:22-0440,
author = {Dun Zeng and Siqi Liang and Xiangjing Hu and Hui Wang and Zenglin Xu},
title = {FedLab: A Flexible Federated Learning Framework},
journal = {Journal of Machine Learning Research},
year = {2023},
volume = {24},
number = {100},
pages = {1--7},
url = {http://jmlr.org/papers/v24/22-0440.html}
}
or
@article{zeng2021fedlab,
title={Fedlab: A flexible federated learning framework},
author={Zeng, Dun and Liang, Siqi and Hu, Xiangjing and Wang, Hui and Xu, Zenglin},
journal={arXiv preprint arXiv:2107.11621},
year={2021}
}
Project Investigator: Prof. Zenglin Xu (xuzenglin@hit.edu.cn).
For technical issues related to FedLab development, please contact our development team through Github issues or email:
[1] Li, Q., Diao, Y., Chen, Q., & He, B. (2022, May). Federated learning on non-iid data silos: An experimental study. In 2022 IEEE 38th International Conference on Data Engineering (ICDE) (pp. 965-978). IEEE.
[2] Caldas, S., Duddu, S. M. K., Wu, P., Li, T., Konečný, J., McMahan, H. B., ... & Talwalkar, A. (2018). Leaf: A benchmark for federated settings. arXiv preprint arXiv:1812.01097.
[3] Yurochkin, M., Agarwal, M., Ghosh, S., Greenewald, K., Hoang, N., & Khazaeni, Y. (2019, May). Bayesian nonparametric federated learning of neural networks. In International Conference on Machine Learning (pp. 7252-7261). PMLR.
[4] McMahan, B., Moore, E., Ramage, D., Hampson, S., & y Arcas, B. A. (2017, April). Communication-efficient learning of deep networks from decentralized data. In Artificial intelligence and statistics (pp. 1273-1282). PMLR.
[5] Acar, D. A. E., Zhao, Y., Navarro, R. M., Mattina, M., Whatmough, P. N., & Saligrama, V. (2021). Federated learning based on dynamic regularization. arXiv preprint arXiv:2111.04263.
[6] Wang, H., Yurochkin, M., Sun, Y., Papailiopoulos, D., & Khazaeni, Y. (2020). Federated learning with matched averaging. arXiv preprint arXiv:2002.06440.