Abstract

Extracting information of interest from continuous video streams is a strongly demanded computer vision task. For the realization of this task at the edge using the current de-facto standard approach, i.e., deep learning, it is critical to optimize key performance metrics such as throughput and energy consumption according to prescribed application requirements. This allows achieving timely decision-making while extending the battery lifetime as much as possible. In this context, we propose a method to boost neural-network performance based on a co-execution strategy that exploits hardware heterogeneity on edge platforms. The enabling tool is Apache TVM, a highly efficient machine-learning compiler compatible with a diversity of hardware back-ends. The proposed approach solves the problem of network partitioning and distributes the workloads to make concurrent use of all the processors available on the board following a pipeline scheme. We conducted experiments on various popular CNNs compiled with TVM on the Jetson TX2 platform. The experimental results based on measurements show a significant improvement in throughput with respect to a single-processor execution, ranging from 14% to 150% over all tested networks. Power-efficient configurations were also identified, accomplishing energy reductions above 10%.

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