Skip to content
This repository has been archived by the owner on Aug 8, 2023. It is now read-only.

model-zoo/scikit-learn-lambda

Repository files navigation

scikit-learn-lambda

scikit-learn-lambda PyPI version License

scikit-learn-lambda is a toolkit for deploying scikit-learn models for realtime inference on AWS Lambda.

Why use scikit-learn-lambda?

  • Get started quickly - scikit-learn-lambda handles the boilerplate code for you, simply drop in a joblib or pickle model file and deploy.
  • Cost efficient - The equivalent architecture on AWS SageMaker will cost you ~$50 per endpoint per month. Deploying on AWS Lambda allows you to pay-per-request and not worry about the number of models you're deploying to production.
  • Built-in autoscaling - Deploying on Elastic Container Service or Kubernetes requires configuring and maintaining autoscaling groups. AWS Lambda abstracts this complexity away for you.

Read more in our blogpost: Saving 95% on infrastructure costs using AWS Lambda for scikit-learn predictions.

Overview

scikit-learn-lambda provides three components:

  1. scikit-learn-lambda: A Python package that includes a handler for serving scikit-learn predictions via AWS Lambda, designed for use with API Gateway.
  2. A repository of Lambda layers for various versions of Python (3.6 - 3.8) and scikit-learn (0.22+).
  3. Example Serverless template configuration for deploying a model to an HTTP endpoint.

Quickstart (Serverless)

You have two options for deploying a model with Serverless framework.

  • Package your model as part of the deployment package upload to AWS Lambda. This option will require your model file to be under ~50 MB, but achieve the best cold-start latency.

  • Store your model into Amazon S3 and load it from there on AWS Lambda initialization. This option has no model size constraints.

Prerequisites

Package your model with the code (~50 MB limit)

  1. Copy your model joblib file to scikit-learn-lambda/model.joblib, the same directory that serverless.yaml is in.
$ cp testdata/svm.joblib scikit-learn-lambda/model.joblib
  1. Deploy your model with Serverless framework.
$ serverless deploy
  1. Test the your endpoint with some example data:
$ curl --header "Content-Type: application/json" \
  --request POST \
  --data '{"input":[[0, 0, 0, 0]]}' \
  https://<insert your api here>.execute-api.us-west-2.amazonaws.com/dev/predict
$ {"prediction": [0]}

Package your model via Amazon S3

  1. Edit the environment variable SKLEARN_MODEL_PATH in scikit-learn-lambda/serverless.yaml to specify an s3 URL.
function:
  scikitLearnLambda:
    ...
    environment:
      SKLEARN_MODEL_PATH: "s3://my-bucket/my-model-file.joblib"
  1. Add an IAM Role that gives the Lambda function permission to access the model file at the specified S3 path.
function:
  scikitLearnLambda:
    ...
    role: ScikitLearnLambdaRole

resources:
  ScikitLearnLambdaRole:
    Type: AWS::IAM::Role
    Properties:
      RoleName: ScikitLearnLambdaRole
      AssumeRolePolicyDocument:
        Version: '2012-10-17'
        Statement:
          - Effect: Allow
            Principal:
              Service:
                - lambda.amazonaws.com
            Action: sts:AssumeRole
      Policies:
        - PolicyName: ModelInfoGetObjectPolicy-${self:custom.stage}
          PolicyDocument:
            Version: '2012-10-17'
            Statement:
              - Effect: Allow
                Action: ["s3:GetObject"]
                Resource: "arn:aws:s3:::my-bucket/my-model.file.joblib"
  1. Deploy your model with Serverless framework.
$ serverless deploy

Customize the Python runtime version or scikit-learn version.

It is a good idea to match your Python version and scikit-learn version with the environment that was used to train and serialize the model.

The default template is configured to use Python 3.7 and scikit-learn 0.23.1. To use a different version, change the layer ARN in the serverless template. We have prebuilt and published a set of AWS Lambda you can get started with quickly. For production usage, we recommend that you use our provided scripts to build and host your own AWS Lambda layer -- see Layers.

function:
  scikitLearnLambda:
    ...
    layers:
      - "<layer ARN including version number>"

When changing the Python runtime version, make sure to also edit the runtime in serverless:

provider:
  ...
  runtime: "<python3.6, python3.7, or python3.8>"

Layers

To get around a the 50 MB (zipped) deployment package limit, it is useful to create a distinct layer for the scikit-learn dependency. This frees up more room in your deployment package for your model or other dependencies.

scikit-learn-lambda comes with a pre-built set of AWS Lambda layers that include scikit-learn and joblib that you can use out of the box on us-west-2. These layers are hosted on the Model Zoo AWS account with public permissions for any AWS account to use. We also provide a script tools/build-layers.sh that allows you to build and upload layers owned by your own AWS account.

Prebuilt Layers

We have published a set of layers for combinations of Python 3.6 - 3.8 and scikit-learn 0.22 - 0.24 to different US regions. These are published to layers.csv:

layers.csv

Build your own layers

tools/build-layers.sh is a bash script that can be used to build one or more AWS Lambda Layers with the scikit-learn and joblib dependencies.

This script assumes you have jq, Docker, and the AWS cli installed on your machine.

Example 1: Build layer for Python 3.7 and scikit-learn 0.23.0.

./build-layers.sh --scikit-learn=0.23.0 --python=3.7

Example 2: Build layer for Python 3.7 and scikit-learn 0.23.0 and publish to us-west-2.

 ./build-layers.sh --python=3.7 --scikit-learn==0.23.0 --region=us-west-2

./build-layers.sh

Expected HTTP Schema

scikit-learn-lambda is designed to be used with Lambda Proxy Integrations in API Gateway. When using the provided serverless template, the HTTP endpoint will expect a POST request with a Content-Type of application/json.

The expected input fields are:

  • input (string): The list of array-like values to predict. The shape should match the value that is typically fed into a model.predict call.
  • return_prediction (boolean): Will return prediction in output if true. This field is optional and defaults to true.
  • return_probabilities (boolean): Will return probabilities in output if true. This field is optional and defaults to false.

One of return_prediction or return_probabilities or both must be true.

The return response will be JSON-encoded with the following fields:

  • prediction: A list of array-like prediction from model.predict(), one for every sample in the batch. Present if return_prediction is true.
  • probabilities: A list of dictionaries mapping string class names to probabilities from model.predict_proba(), one for every sample in the batch. Present if return_probabilities is true.

Examples

$ curl --header "Content-Type: application/json" \
      --request POST \
      --data '{"input":[[0, 0, 0, 0]]}' \
      https://<api-id>.execute-api.us-west-2.amazonaws.com/mlp-250-250-250/predict
{"prediction": [0]}
$ curl --header "Content-Type: application/json" \
      --request POST \
      --data '{"input":[[0, 0, 0, 0]], "return_probabilities": true}' \
      https://<api-id>.execute-api.us-west-2.amazonaws.com/mlp-250-250-250/predict
{"prediction": [0], "probabilities": [{"0": 0.3722170997279803, "1": 0.29998954257031885, "2": 0.32779335770170076}]}

Performance Benchmarks

To run these benchmarks, we generate MLPClassifier models with three hidden layers each using layer sizes of 100, 250, 500, 750, and 900. Each model is trained on the iris dataset and serialized using joblib. This results in model files sized 0.68 MB, 4.08 MB, 16.17 MB, 36.25 MB, and 52.13 MB respectively. We deploy each to a lambda function with 1024 MB memory and measure an average cold-start latency over three samples:

We also plot the “warm” latency below averaged over fifteen samples for each model:

Cost Benchmarks

https://modelzoo.dev/lambda-vs-sagemaker-cost/

We've created this interactive visualization to help us understand the cost per month under various usage scenarios. It also includes a comparison to SageMaker inference endpoint costs.

About

Toolkit for deploying scikit-learn models for realtime inference on AWS Lambda

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published