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Engineering MLOps
Engineering MLOps

Engineering MLOps: Rapidly build, test, and manage production-ready machine learning life cycles at scale

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Engineering MLOps

Chapter 1: Fundamentals of an MLOps Workflow

Machine learning (ML) is maturing from research to applied business solutions. However, the grim reality is that only 2% of companies using ML have successfully deployed a model in production to enhance their business processes, reported by DeepLearning.AI (https://info.deeplearning.ai/the-batch-companies-slipping-on-ai-goals-self-training-for-better-vision-muppets-and-models-china-vs-us-only-the-best-examples-proliferating-patents). What makes it so hard? And what do we need to do to improve the situation?

To get a solid understanding of this problem and its solution, in this chapter, we will delve into the evolution and intersection of software development and ML. We'll begin by reflecting on some of the trends in traditional software development, starting from the waterfall model to agile to DevOps practices, and how these are evolving to industrialize ML-centric applications. You will be introduced to a systematic approach to operationalizing AI using Machine Learning Operations (MLOps). By the end of this chapter, you will have a solid understanding of MLOps and you will be equipped to implement a generic MLOps workflow that can be used to build, deploy, and monitor a wide range of ML applications.

In this chapter, we're going to cover the following main topics:

  • The evolution of infrastructure and software development
  • Traditional software development challenges
  • Trends of ML adoption in software development
  • Understanding MLOps
  • Concepts and workflow of MLOps

The evolution of infrastructure and software development

With the genesis of the modern internet age (around 1995), we witnessed a rise in software applications, ranging from operating systems such as Windows 95 to the Linux operating system and websites such as Google and Amazon, which have been serving the world (online) for over two decades. This has resulted in a culture of continuously improving services by collecting, storing, and processing a massive amount of data from user interactions. Such developments have been shaping the evolution of IT infrastructure and software development.

Transformation in IT infrastructure has picked up pace since the start of this millennium. Since then, businesses have increasingly adopted cloud computing as it opens up new possibilities for businesses to outsource IT infrastructure maintenance while provisioning necessary IT resources such as storage and computation resources and services required to run and scale their operations.

Cloud computing offers on-demand provisioning and the availability of IT resources such as data storage and computing resources without the need for active management by the user of the IT resources. For example, businesses provisioning computation and storage resources do not have to manage these resources directly and are not responsible for keeping them running – the maintenance is outsourced to the cloud service provider.

Businesses using cloud computing can reap benefits as there's no need to buy and maintain IT resources; it enables them to have less in-house expertise for IT resource maintenance and this allows businesses to optimize costs and resources. Cloud computing enables scaling on demand and users pay as per the usage of resources. As a result, we have seen companies adopting cloud computing as part of their businesses and IT infrastructures.

Cloud computing became popular in the industry from 2006 onward when Sun Microsystems launched Sun Grid in March 2006. It is a hardware and data resource sharing service. This service was acquired by Oracle and was later named Sun Cloud. Parallelly, in the same year (2006), another cloud computing service was launched by Amazon called Elastic Compute Cloud. This enabled new possibilities for businesses to provision computation, storage, and scaling capabilities on demand. Since then, the transformation across industries has been organic toward adopting cloud computing.

In the last decade, many companies on a global and regional scale have catalyzed the cloud transformation, with companies such as Google, IBM, Microsoft, UpCloud, Alibaba, and others heavily investing in the research and development of cloud services. As a result, a shift from localized computing (companies having their own servers and data centers) to on-demand computing has taken place due to the availability of robust and scalable cloud services. Now businesses and organizations are able to provision resources on-demand on the cloud to satisfy their data processing needs.

With these developments, we have witnessed Moore's law in operation, which states that the number of transistors on a microchip doubles every 2 years – though the cost of computers has halved, this has been true so far. Subsequently, some trends are developing as follows.

The rise of machine learning and deep learning

Over the last decade, we have witnessed the adoption of ML in everyday life applications. Not only for esoteric applications such as Dota or AlphaGo, but ML has also made its way to pretty standard applications such as machine translation, image processing, and voice recognition.

This adoption is powered by developments in infrastructure, especially in terms of the utilization of computation power. It has unlocked the potential of deep learning and ML.. We can observe deep learning breakthroughs correlated with computation developments in Figure 1.1 (sourced from OpenAI: https://openai.com/blog/ai-and-compute):

Figure 1.1 – Demand for deep learning over time supported by computation

Figure 1.1 – Demand for deep learning over time supported by computation

These breakthroughs in deep learning are enabled by the exponential growth in computing, which increases around 35 times every 18 months. Looking ahead in time, with such demands we may hit roadblocks in terms of scaling up central computing for CPUs, GPUs, or TPUs. This has forced us to look at alternatives such as distributed learning where computation for data processing is distributed across multiple computation nodes. We have seen some breakthroughs in distributed learning, such as federated learning and edge computing approaches. Distributed learning has shown promise to serve the growing demands of deep learning.

The end of Moore's law

Prior to 2012, AI results closely tracked Moore's law, with compute doubling every 2 years. Post-2012, compute has been doubling every 3.4 months (sourced from AI Index 2019 – https://hai.stanford.edu/research/ai-index-2019). We can observe from Figure 1.1 that demand for deep learning and high-performance computing (HPC) has been increasing exponentially with around 35x growth in computing every 18 months whereas Moore's law is seen to be outpaced (2x every 18 months). Moore's law is still applicable to the case of CPUs (single-core performance) but not to new hardware architectures such as GPUs and TPUs. This makes Moore's law obsolete and outpaced in contrast to current demands and trends.

AI-centric applications

Applications are becoming AI-centric – we see that across multiple industries. Virtually every application is starting to use AI, and these applications are running separately on distributed workloads such as HPC, microservices, and big data, as shown in Figure 1.2:

Figure 1.2 – Applications running on distributed workloads

Figure 1.2 – Applications running on distributed workloads

By combining HPC and AI, we can enable the benefits of computation needed to train deep learning and ML models. With the overlapping of big data and AI, we can leverage extracting required data at scale for AI model training, and with the overlap of microservices and AI we can serve the AI models for inference to enhance business operations and impact. This way, distributed applications have become the new norm. Developing AI-centric applications at scale requires a synergy of distributed applications (HPC, microservices, and big data) and for this, a new way of developing software is required.

Software development evolution

Software development has evolved hand in hand with infrastructural developments to facilitate the efficient development of applications using the infrastructure. Traditionally, software development started with the waterfall method of development where development is done linearly by gathering requirements to design and develop. The waterfall model has many limitations, which led to the evolution of software development over the years in the form of Agile methodologies and the DevOps method, as shown in Figure 1.3:

Figure 1.3 – Software development evolution

Figure 1.3 – Software development evolution

The waterfall method

The waterfall method was used to develop software from the onset of the internet age (~1995). It is a non-iterative way of developing software. It is delivered in a unidirectional way. Every stage is pre-organized and executed one after another, starting from requirements gathering to software design, development, and testing. The waterfall method is feasible and suitable when requirements are well-defined, specific, and do not change over time. Hence this is not suitable for dynamic projects where requirements change and evolve as per user demands. In such cases, where there is continuous modification, the waterfall method cannot be used to develop software. These are the major disadvantages of waterfall development methods:

  • The entire set of requirements has to be given before starting the development; modifying them during or after the project development is not possible.
  • There are fewer chances to create or implement reusable components.
  • Testing can only be done after the development is finished. Testing is not intended to be iterable; it is not possible to go back and fix anything once it is done. Moreover, customer acceptance tests often introduced changes, resulting in a delay in delivery and high costs. This way of development and testing can have a negative impact on the project delivery timeline and costs.
  • Most of the time, users of the system are provisioned with a system based on the developer's understanding, which is not user-centric and can come short of meeting their needs.

The Agile method

The Agile method facilitates an iterative and progressive approach to software development. Unlike the waterfall method, Agile approaches are precise and user-centric. The method is bidirectional and often involves end users or customers in the development and testing process so they have the opportunity to test, give feedback, and suggest improvements throughout the project development process and phases. Agile has several advantages over the waterfall method:

  • Requirements are defined before starting the development, but they can be modified at any time.
  • It is possible to create or implement reusable components.
  • The solution or project can be modular by segregating the project into different modules that are delivered periodically.
  • The users or customers can co-create by testing and evaluating developed solution modules periodically to ensure the business needs are satisfied. Such a user-centric process ensures quality outcomes focused on meeting customer and business needs.

The following diagram shows the difference between Waterfall and Agile methodologies:

Figure 1.4 – Difference between waterfall and agile methods

Figure 1.4 – Difference between waterfall and agile methods

The DevOps method

The DevOps method extends agile development practices by expediting software development across the build, test, deploy, and delivery stages. Continuous integration, continuous deployment, and continuous delivery are all part of DevOps, which gives cross-functional teams the autonomy to execute their software applications. It promotes software developers and IT operators to collaborate, integrate, and automate in order to improve the efficiency, speed, and quality of providing customer-centric software. DevOps is a software development methodology that streamlines the process of building, testing, delivering, and monitoring systems in production. DevOps has made it possible to release software to production in minutes and maintain it consistently.

Traditional software development challenges

In the previous section, we saw the evolution in software development from the traditional waterfall model to Agile and DevOps practices. However, despite the success of these modern methods, we can't use the same methods for machine learning (ML) applications.

To see why, we have to look at what ML actually is; it's not just code, like in traditional software development, but code plus data. The data is fundamental to the ML model, and the code enables us to fit the data so we can derive insights from it:

Figure 1.5 – ML = data + code

Figure 1.5 – ML = data + code

On account of this relationship between code and data, care must be taken to bridge the two together in development so they evolve in a controlled way, toward the common goal of a robust and scalable ML system; data for training, testing, and inference will change over time, across different sources, and needs to be met with changing code. Without a systematic MLOps approach, there can be divergence in how code and data evolve that causes problems in production, gets in the way of smooth deployment, and leads to results that are hard to trace or reproduce:

Figure 1.6 – MLOps – data and code progressing together

Figure 1.6 – MLOps – data and code progressing together

MLOps streamlines the development, deployment, and monitoring pipeline for ML applications, unifying the contributions from the different teams involved and ensuring that all steps in the process are recorded and repeatable. In the next sections, we will learn how MLOps enables and empowers data science and IT teams to collaborate to build and maintain robust and scalable ML systems.

Trends of ML adoption in software development

Before we delve into the workings of the MLOps method and workflow, it is beneficial to understand the big picture and trends as to where and how MLOps is disrupting the world. As many applications are becoming AI-centric, software development is evolving to facilitate ML. ML will increasingly become part of software development, mainly due to the following reasons:

  • Investments: In 2019, investments in global private AI clocked over $70 billion, with start-up investments related to AI over $37 billion, M&A $34 billion, IPOs $5 billion, and minority stake valued at around $2 billion. The forecast for AI globally shows fast growth in market value as AI reached $9.5 billion in 2018 and is anticipated to reach a market value of $118 billion by 2025. It has been assessed that growth in economic activity resulting from AI until 2030 will be of high value and significance. Currently, the US attracts ~50% of global VC funding, China ~39%, and 11% goes to Europe.
  • Big data: Data is exponentially growing in volume, velocity, veracity, and variety. For instance, observations suggest data growing in volume at 61% per annum in Europe, and it is anticipated that four times more data will be created by 2025 than exists today. Data is a requisite raw material for developing AI.
  • Infrastructural developments and adoption: Moore's law has been closely tracked and observed to have been realized prior to 2012. Post-2012, compute has been doubling every 3.4 months.
  • Increasing research and development: AI research has been prospering in quality and quantity. A prominent growth of 300% is observed in the volume of peer-reviewed AI papers from 1998 to 2018, summing up to 9% of published conference papers and 3% of peer-reviewed journal publications.
  • Industry: Based on a surveyed report, 47% of large companies have reported having adopted AI in at least one function or business unit. In 2019, it went up to 58% and is expected to increase.

    Information

    These points have been sourced from policy and investment recommendations for trustworthy AI – European commission (https://ec.europa.eu/digital-single-market/en/news/policy-and-investment-recommendations-trustworthy-artificial-intelligence) and AI Index 2019 (https://hai.stanford.edu/research/ai-index-2019).

All these developments indicate a strong push toward the industrialization of AI, and this is possible by bridging industry and research. MLOps will play a key role in the industrialization of AI. If you invest in learning this method, it will give you a headstart in your company or team and you could be a catalyst for operationalizing ML and industrializing AI.

So far, we have learned about some challenges and developments in IT, software development, and AI. Next, we will delve into understanding MLOps conceptually and learn in detail about a generic MLOps workflow that can be used commonly for any use case. These fundamentals will help you get a firm grasp of MLOps.

Understanding MLOps

Software development is multidisciplinary, and it's changing to facilitate ML. MLOps is a new approach for fusing ML and software development by combining different domains. MLOps combines ML, DevOps, and data engineering, with the goal of reliably and efficiently building, deploying, and maintaining ML systems in production. Thus, MLOps can be explained by this intersection.

Figure 1.7 – MLOps intersection

Figure 1.7 – MLOps intersection

To make this intersection (MLOps) operational, I have designed a modular framework by following the systematic design science method proposed by Wieringa (https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-662-43839-8) to develop a workflow to bring these three together (Data Engineering, Machine Learning, and DevOps). Design science goes with the application of design to problems and context. Design science is the design and investigation of artifacts in a context. The artifact in this case is the MLOps workflow, which is designed iteratively by interacting with problem contexts (industry use cases for the application of AI):

Figure 1.8 – Design science workflow

Figure 1.8 – Design science workflow

In a structured and iterative approach, the implementation of two cycles (the design cycle and the empirical cycle) was done for qualitative and quantitative analysis for MLOps workflow design through iterations. As a result of these cycles, an MLOps workflow is developed and validated by applying it to multiple problem contexts, that is, tens of ML use cases (for example, anomaly detection, real-time trading, predictive maintenance, recommender systems, virtual assistants, and so on) across multiple industries (for example, finance, manufacturing, healthcare, retail, the automotive industry, energy, and so on). I have applied and validated this MLOps workflow successfully in various projects across multiple industries to operationalize ML. In the next section, we will go through the concepts of the MLOps workflow designed as a result of the design science process.

Concepts and workflow of MLOps

In this section, we will learn about a generic MLOps workflow; it is the result of many design cycle iterations as discussed in the previous section. It brings together data engineering, ML, and DevOps in a streamlined fashion. Figure 1.10 is a generic MLOps workflow; it is modular and flexible and can be used to build proofs of concept or to operationalize ML solutions in any business or industry:

Figure 1.9 – MLOps workflow

Figure 1.9 – MLOps workflow

This workflow is segmented into two modules:

  • MLOps pipeline (build, deploy, and monitor) – the upper layer
  • Drivers: Data, code, artifacts, middleware, and infrastructure – mid and lower layers

The upper layer is the MLOps pipeline (build, deploy, and monitor), which is enabled by drivers such as data, code, artifacts, middleware, and infrastructure. The MLOps pipeline is powered by an array of services, drivers, middleware, and infrastructure, and it crafts ML-driven solutions. By using this pipeline, a business or individual(s) can do quick prototyping, testing, and validating and deploy the model(s) to production at scale frugally and efficiently.

To understand the workings and implementation of the MLOps workflow, we will look at the implementation of each layer and step using a figurative business use case.

Discussing a use case

In this use case, we are to operationalize (prototyping and deploying for production) an image classification service to classify cats and dogs in a pet park in Barcelona, Spain. The service will identify cats and dogs in real time from the inference data coming from a CCTV camera installed in the pet park.

The pet park provide you access to the data and infrastructure needed to operationalize the service:

  • Data: The pet park has given you access to their data lake containing 100,000 labeled images of cats and dogs, which we will use for training the model. 
  • Infrastructure: Public cloud (IaaS).  

This use case resembles a real-life use case for operationalizing ML and is used to explain the workings and implementation of the MLOps workflow. Remember to look for an explanation for the implementation of this use case at every segment and step of the MLOps workflow. Now, let's look at the workings of every layer and step in detail.

The MLOps pipeline

The MLOps pipeline is the upper layer, which performs operations such as build, deploy, and monitor, which work modularly in sync with each other. Let's look into each module's functionality.

Build

The build module has the core ML pipeline, and this is purely for training, packaging, and versioning the ML models. It is powered by the required compute (for example, the CPU or GPU on the cloud or distributed computing) resources to run the ML training and pipeline:

Figure 1.10 – MLOps – build pipeline

Figure 1.10 – MLOps – build pipeline

The pipeline works from left to right. Let's look at the functionality of each step in detail:

  • Data ingestion: This step is a trigger step for the ML pipeline. It deals with the volume, velocity, veracity, and variety of data by extracting data from various data sources (for example, databases, data warehouses, or data lakes) and ingesting the required data for the model training step. Robust data pipelines connected to multiple data sources enable it to perform extract, transform, and load (ETL) operations to provide the necessary data for ML training purposes. In this step, we can split and version data for model training in the required format (for example, the training or test set). As a result of this step, any experiment (that is, model training) can be audited and is back-traceable.

    For a better understanding of the data ingestion step, here is the previously described use case implementation:

    Use case implementation

    As you have access to the pet park's data lake, you can now procure data to get started. Using data pipelines (part of the data ingestion step), you do the following:

    1. Extract, transform, and load 100,000 images of cats and dogs.

    2. Split and version this data into a train and test split (with an 80% and 20% split).

    Versioning this data will enable end-to-end traceability for trained models.

    Congrats – now you are ready to start training and testing the ML model using this data.

  • Model training: After procuring the required data for ML model training in the previous step, this step will enable model training; it has modular scripts or code that perform all the traditional steps in ML, such as data preprocessing, feature engineering, and feature scaling before training or retraining any model. Following this, the ML model is trained while performing hyperparameter tuning to fit the model to the dataset (training set). This step can be done manually, but efficient and automatic solutions such as Grid Search or Random Search exist. As a result, all important steps of ML model training are executed with a ML model as the output of this step.

    Use case implementation

    In this step, we implement all the important steps to train the image classification model. The goal is to train a ML model to classify cats and dogs. For this case, we train a convolutional neural network (CNNhttps://towardsdatascience.com/wtf-is-image-classification-8e78a8235acb) for the image classification service. The following steps are implemented: data preprocessing, feature engineering, and feature scaling before training, followed by training the model with hyperparameter tuning. As a result, we have a CNN model to classify cats and dogs with 97% accuracy.

  • Model testing: In this step, we evaluate the trained model performance on a separated set of data points named test data (which was split and versioned in the data ingestion step). The inference of the trained model is evaluated according to selected metrics as per the use case. The output of this step is a report on the trained model's performance.

    Use case implementation

    We test the trained model on test data (we split data earlier in the Data ingestion step) to evaluate the trained model's performance. In this case, we look for precision and the recall score to validate the model's performance in classifying cats and dogs to assess false positives and true positives to get a realistic understanding of the model's performance. If and when we are satisfied with the results, we can proceed to the next step, or else reiterate the previous steps to get a decent performing model for the pet park image classification service.

  • Model packaging: After the trained model has been tested in the previous step, the model can be serialized into a file or containerized (using Docker) to be exported to the production environment.

    Use case implementation

    The model we trained and tested in the previous steps is serialized to an ONNX file and is ready to be deployed in the production environment.

  • Model registering: In this step, the model that was serialized or containerized in the previous step is registered and stored in the model registry. A registered model is a logical collection or package of one or more files that assemble, represent, and execute your ML model. For example, multiple files can be registered as one model. For instance, a classification model can be comprised of a vectorizer, model weights, and serialized model files. All these files can be registered as one single model. After registering, the model (all files or a single file) can be downloaded and deployed as needed.

    Use case implementation

    The serialized model in the previous step is registered on the model registry and is available for quick deployment into the pet park production environment.

    By implementing the preceding steps, we successfully execute the ML pipeline designed for our use case. As a result, we have trained models on the model registry ready to be deployed in the production setup. Next, we will look into the workings of the deployment pipeline.

Deploy

The deploy module enables operationalizing the ML models we developed in the previous module (build). In this module, we test our model performance and behavior in a production or production-like (test) environment to ensure the robustness and scalability of the ML model for production use. Figure 1.12 depicts the deploy pipeline, which has two components – production testing and production release – and the deployment pipeline is enabled by streamlined CI/CD pipelines connecting the development to production environments:

Figure 1.11 – MLOps – deploy pipeline

Figure 1.11 – MLOps – deploy pipeline

It works from left to right. Let's look at the functionality of each step in detail:  

  • Application testing: Before deploying an ML model to production, it is vital to test its robustness and performance via testing. Hence we have the "application testing" phase where we rigorously test all the trained models for robustness and performance in a production-like environment called a test environment. In the application testing phase, we deploy the models in the test environment (pre-production), which replicates the production environment.

    The ML model for testing is deployed as an API or streaming service in the test environment to deployment targets such as Kubernetes clusters, container instances, or scalable virtual machines or edge devices as per the need and use case. After the model is deployed for testing, we perform predictions using test data (which is not used for training the model; test data is sample data from a production environment) for the deployed model, during which model inference in batch or periodically is done to test the model deployed in the test environment for robustness and performance.

    The performance results are automatically or manually reviewed by a quality assurance expert. When the ML model's performance meets the standards, then it is approved to be deployed in the production environment where the model will be used to infer in batches or real time to make business decisions.

    Use case implementation

    We deploy the model as an API service on an on-premises computer in the pet park, which is set up for testing purposes. This computer is connected to a CCTV camera in the park to fetch real-time inference data to predict cats or dogs in the video frames. The model deployment is enabled by the CI/CD pipeline. In this step, we test the robustness of the model in a production-like environment, that is, whether the model is performing inference consistently, and an accuracy, fairness, and error analysis. At the end of this step, a quality assurance expert certifies the model if it meets the standards.

  • Production release: Previously tested and approved models are deployed in the production environment for model inference to generate business or operational value. This production release is deployed to the production environment enabled by CI/CD pipelines.

    Use case implementation

    We deploy a previously tested and approved model (by a quality assurance expert) as an API service on a computer connected to CCTV in the pet park (production setup). This deployed model performs ML inference on the incoming video data from the CCTV camera in the pet park to classify cats or dogs in real time.

Monitor

The monitor module works in sync with the deploy module. Using explainable monitoring (discussed later in detail, in Chapter 11, Key Principles for Monitoring Your ML System), we can monitor, analyze, and govern the deployed ML application (ML model and application). Firstly, we can monitor the performance of the ML model (using pre-defined metrics) and the deployed application (using telemetry data). Secondly, model performance can be analyzed using a pre-defined explainability framework, and lastly, the ML application can be governed using alerts and actions based on the model's quality assurance and control. This ensures a robust monitoring mechanism for the production system:

Figure 1.12 – MLOps – monitor pipeline

Figure 1.12 – MLOps – monitor pipeline

Let's see each of the abilities of the monitor module in detail:

  • Monitor: The monitoring module captures critical information to monitor data integrity, model drift, and application performance. Application performance can be monitored using telemetry data. It depicts the device performance of a production system over a period of time. With telemetry data such as accelerometer, gyroscope, humidity, magnetometer, pressure, and temperature we can keep a check on the production system's performance, health, and longevity. 

    Use case implementation

    In real time, we will monitor three things – data integrity, model drift, and application performance – for the deployed API service on the park's computer. Metrics such as accuracy, F1 score, precision, and recall are tracked to data integrity and model drift. We monitor application performance by tracking the telemetry data of the production system (the on-premises computer in the park) running the deployed ML model to ensure the proper functioning of the production system. Telemetry data is monitored to foresee any anomalies or potential failures and fix them in advance. Telemetry data is logged and can be used to assess production system performance over time to check its health and longevity.

  • Analyze: It is critical to analyze the model performance of ML models deployed in production systems to ensure optimal performance and governance in correlation to business decisions or impact. We use model explainability techniques to measure the model performance in real time. Using this, we evaluate important aspects such as model fairness, trust, bias, transparency, and error analysis with the intention of improving the model in correlation to business.

    Over time, the statistical properties of the target variable we are trying to predict can change in unforeseen ways. This change is called "model drift," for example, in a case where we have deployed a recommender system model to suggest suitable items for users. User behavior may change due to unforeseeable trends that could not be observed in historical data that was used for training the model. It is essential to consider such unforeseen factors to ensure deployed models provide the best and most relevant business value. When model drift is observed, then any of these actions should be performed:

    a) The product owner or the quality assurance expert needs to be alerted.

    b) The model needs to be switched or updated.

    c) Re-training the pipeline should be triggered to re-train and update the model as per the latest data or needs.

    Use case implementation

    We monitor the deployed model's performance in the production system (a computer connected to the CCTV in the pet park). We will analyze the accuracy, precision, and recall scores for the model periodically (once a day) to ensure the model's performance does not deteriorate below the threshold. When the model performance deteriorates below the threshold, we initiate system governing mechanisms (for example, a trigger to retrain the model).

  • Govern: Monitoring and analyzing is done to govern the deployed application to drive optimal performance for the business (or the purpose of the ML system). After monitoring and analyzing the production data, we can generate certain alerts and actions to govern the system. For example, the product owner or the quality assurance expert gets alerted when model performance deteriorates (for example, low accuracy, high bias, and so on) below a pre-defined threshold. The product owner initiates a trigger to retrain and deploy an alternative model. Lastly, an important aspect of governance is "compliance" with the local and global laws and rules. For compliance, model explainability and transparency are vital. For this, model auditing and reporting are done to provide end-to-end traceability and explainability for production models.

    Use case implementation

    We monitor and analyze the deployed model's performance in the production system (a computer connected to the CCTV in the pet park). Based on the analysis of accuracy, precision, and recall scores for the deployed model, periodically (once a day), alerts are generated when the model's performance deteriorates below the pre-defined threshold. The product owner of the park generates actions, and these actions are based on the alerts. For example, an alert is generated notifying the product owner that the production model is 30% biased to detect dogs more than cats. The product owner then triggers the model re-training pipeline to update the model using the latest data to reduce the bias, resulting in a fair and robust model in production. This way, the ML system at the pet park in Barcelona is well-governed to serve the business needs.

This brings us to the end of the MLOps pipeline. All models trained, deployed, and monitored using the MLOps method are end-to-end traceable and their lineage is logged in order to trace the origins of the model, which includes the source code the model used to train, the data used to train and test the model, and parameters used to converge the model. Full lineage is useful to audit operations or to replicate the model, or when a blocker is hit, the logged ML model lineage is useful to backtrack the origins of the model or to observe and debug the cause of the blocker. As ML models generate data in production during inference, this data can be tied to the model training and deployment lineage to ensure the end-to-end lineage, and this is important for certain compliance requirements. Next, we will look into key drivers enabling the MLOps pipeline.

Drivers

These are the key drivers for the MLOps pipeline: data, code, artifacts, middleware, and infrastructure. Let's look into each of the drivers to get an overview of how they enable the MLOps pipeline:

Figure 1.13 – MLOps drivers

Figure 1.13 – MLOps drivers

Each of the key drivers for the MLOps pipeline are defined as follows:

  • Data: Data can be in multiple forms, such as text, audio, video, and images. In traditional software applications, data quite often tends to be structured, whereas, for ML applications, it can be structured or unstructured. To manage data in ML applications, data is handled in these steps: data acquisition, data annotation, data cataloging, data preparation, data quality checking, data sampling, and data augmentation. Each step involves its own life cycle. This makes a whole new set of processes and tools necessary for ML applications. For efficient functioning of the ML pipeline, data is segmented and versioned into training data, testing data, and monitoring data (collected in production, for example, model inputs, outputs, and telemetry data). These data operations are part of the MLOps pipeline.
  • Code: There are three essential modules of code that drive the MLOps pipeline: training code, testing code, and application code. These scripts or code are executed using the CI/CD and data pipelines to ensure the robust working of the MLOps pipeline. The source code management system (for example, using Git or Mercurial) will enable orchestration and play a vital role in managing and integrating seamlessly with CI, CD, and data pipelines. All of the code is staged and versioned in the source code management setup (for example, Git).
  • Artifacts: The MLOps pipeline generates artifacts such as data, serialized models, code snippets, system logs, ML model training, and testing metrics information. All these artifacts are useful for the successful working of the MLOps pipeline, ensuring its traceability and sustainability. These artifacts are managed using middleware services such as the model registry, workspaces, logging services, source code management services, databases, and so on.
  • Middleware: Middleware is computer software that offers services to software applications that are more than those available from the operating systems. Middleware services ensure multiple applications to automate and orchestrate processes for the MLOps pipeline. We can use a diverse set of middleware software and services depending on the use cases, for example, Git for source code management, VNets to enable the required network configurations, Docker for containerizing our models, and Kubernetes for container orchestration to automate application deployment, scaling, and management.
  • Infrastructure: To ensure the successful working of the MLOps pipeline, we need essential compute and storage resources to train Test and deploy the ML models. Compute resources enable us to train, deploy and monitor our ML models. Two types of storages resources can facilitate ML operations, central storage and feature stores. A central storage stores the logs, artifacts, training, testing and monitoring data. A feature store is optional and complementary to central storage. It extracts, transforms and stores needed features for ML model training and inference using a feature pipeline. When it comes to the infrastructure, there are various options such as on-premises resources or infrastructure as a service (IaaS), which is cloud services. These days, there are many cloud players providing IaaS, such as Amazon, Microsoft, Google, Alibaba, and so on. Having the right infrastructure for your use case will enable robust, efficient, and frugal operations for your team and company.

    A fully automated workflow is achievable with smart optimization and synergy of all these drivers with the MLOps pipeline. Some direct advantages of implementing an automated MLOps workflow is a spike in IT teams' efficiency (by reducing the time spent by data scientists and developers on mundane and repeatable tasks) and the optimization of resources, resulting in cost reductions, and both of these are great for any business.

Summary

In this chapter, we have learned about the evolution of software development and infrastructure to facilitate ML. We delved into the concepts of MLOps, followed by getting acquainted with a generic MLOps workflow that can be implemented in a wide range of ML solutions across multiple industries.

In the next chapter, you will learn how to characterize any ML problem into an MLOps-driven solution and start developing it using an MLOps workflow.

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Key benefits

  • Become well-versed with MLOps techniques to monitor the quality of machine learning models in production
  • Explore a monitoring framework for ML models in production and learn about end-to-end traceability for deployed models
  • Perform CI/CD to automate new implementations in ML pipelines

Description

Engineering MLps presents comprehensive insights into MLOps coupled with real-world examples in Azure to help you to write programs, train robust and scalable ML models, and build ML pipelines to train and deploy models securely in production. The book begins by familiarizing you with the MLOps workflow so you can start writing programs to train ML models. Then you’ll then move on to explore options for serializing and packaging ML models post-training to deploy them to facilitate machine learning inference, model interoperability, and end-to-end model traceability. You’ll learn how to build ML pipelines, continuous integration and continuous delivery (CI/CD) pipelines, and monitor pipelines to systematically build, deploy, monitor, and govern ML solutions for businesses and industries. Finally, you’ll apply the knowledge you’ve gained to build real-world projects. By the end of this ML book, you'll have a 360-degree view of MLOps and be ready to implement MLOps in your organization.

Who is this book for?

This MLOps book is for data scientists, software engineers, DevOps engineers, machine learning engineers, and business and technology leaders who want to build, deploy, and maintain ML systems in production using MLOps principles and techniques. Basic knowledge of machine learning is necessary to get started with this book.

What you will learn

  • Formulate data governance strategies and pipelines for ML training and deployment
  • Get to grips with implementing ML pipelines, CI/CD pipelines, and ML monitoring pipelines
  • Design a robust and scalable microservice and API for test and production environments
  • Curate your custom CD processes for related use cases and organizations
  • Monitor ML models, including monitoring data drift, model drift, and application performance
  • Build and maintain automated ML systems
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Table of Contents

17 Chapters
Section 1: Framework for Building Machine Learning Models Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Chapter 1: Fundamentals of an MLOps Workflow Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Chapter 2: Characterizing Your Machine Learning Problem Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Chapter 3: Code Meets Data Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Chapter 4: Machine Learning Pipelines Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Chapter 5: Model Evaluation and Packaging Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Section 2: Deploying Machine Learning Models at Scale Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Chapter 6: Key Principles for Deploying Your ML System Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Chapter 7: Building Robust CI/CD Pipelines Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Chapter 8: APIs and Microservice Management Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Chapter 9: Testing and Securing Your ML Solution Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Chapter 10: Essentials of Production Release Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Section 3: Monitoring Machine Learning Models in Production Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Chapter 11: Key Principles for Monitoring Your ML System Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Chapter 12: Model Serving and Monitoring Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Chapter 13: Governing the ML System for Continual Learning Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Other Books You May Enjoy Chevron down icon Chevron up icon

Customer reviews

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Alireza Darbehani Jun 17, 2021
Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon 5
I would generally recommend this book to learn the big picture of the MLOps Pipeline.
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Thomas Forss Jun 09, 2021
Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon 5
Hard to come by information about MLOps shared in a practical way. I especially like that the guidelines are practical and can be done as "labs" to learn while doing. More technical books should be like this!
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Vytautas Jun 27, 2021
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The media could not be loaded. Perfect book where all main keys to get started MLOps and improve skills if. you are Data Scienstis. The author combines all - theory, hands on practice and business perspectives in the same time, this will let you easily go deep into the tasks and what is behind. Perfect book to Data Scientist to improve their carrier and get more REAL practice with MLOps. Highly recommended!
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Laurier common May 06, 2021
Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon 5
The author provides a high-level view of MLOps as well as detailed explanations pretty well which helps understand the concept well to someone who is a novice. The well-versed reader would enjoy the detailed implementations of the concepts. The author makes it simple to understand and I would highly recommend it to anyone who is interested in MLOps.
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Amazon Customer Aug 16, 2021
Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon 5
The book is a good introduction to MLOps concepts. MLOps is something that will be very popular in the upcoming days and the book is a good step in that direction. The content aims to implement CI/CD for machine learning models much similar to DevOps practices but for ML
Amazon Verified review Amazon
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