Compilation
Last updated
Last updated
Compilation of a model produces machine code that executes the model on encrypted data. In some cases, notably in the client/server setting, the compilation can be done by the server when loading the model for serving.
As FHE execution is much slower than execution on non-encrypted data, Concrete ML has a simulation mode which can help to quickly evaluate the impact of FHE execution on models.
Concrete ML implements model inference using Concrete as a backend. In order to execute in FHE, a numerical program written in Concrete needs to be compiled. This functionality is , and Concrete ML hides away most of the complexity of this step, completing the entire compilation process itself.
From the perspective of the Concrete ML user, the compilation process performed by Concrete can be broken up into 3 steps:
tracing the NumPy program and creating a Concrete op-graph
checking the op-graph for FHE compatibility
producing machine code for the op-graph (this step automatically determines cryptographic parameters)
Additionally, the packages the result of the last step in a way that allows the deployment of the encrypted circuit to a server, as well as key generation, encryption, and decryption on the client side.
Compilation is performed for built-in models with the compile
method :
When using a pipeline, the Concrete ML model can predict with FHE during the pipeline execution, but it needs to be compiled beforehand. The compile function must be called on the Concrete ML model:
For custom models, with one of the compile_brevitas_qat_model
(for Brevitas models with Quantization Aware Training) or compile_torch_model
(PyTorch models using Post-Training Quantization) functions:
The result of this single step of the compilation pipeline allows the:
execution of the op-graph, which includes TLUs, on clear non-encrypted data. This is not secure, but it is much faster than executing in FHE. This mode is useful for debugging, especially when looking for appropriate model hyper-parameters
verification of the maximum bit-width of the op-graph and the intermediary bit-widths of model layers, to evaluate their impact on FHE execution latency
Simulation is enabled for all Concrete ML models once they are compiled as shown above. Obtaining the simulated predictions of the models is done by setting the fhe="simulate"
argument to prediction methods:
Moreover, the maximum accumulator bit-width is determined as follows:
The first step in the list above takes a Python function implemented using the Concrete and transforms it into an executable operation graph.
While Concrete ML hides away all the Concrete code that performs model inference, it can be useful to understand how Concrete code works. Here is a toy example for a simple linear regression model on integers to illustrate compilation concepts. Generally, it is recommended to use the , which provide linear regression out of the box.