scikit-learn DBSCAN memory usage

Question:

UPDATED: In the end, the solution I opted to use for clustering my large dataset was one suggested by Anony-Mousse below. That is, using ELKI’s DBSCAN implimentation to do my clustering rather than scikit-learn’s. It can be run from the command line and with proper indexing, performs this task within a few hours. Use the GUI and small sample datasets to work out the options you want to use and then go to town. Worth looking into. Anywho, read on for a description of my original problem and some interesting discussion.

I have a dataset with ~2.5 million samples, each with 35 features (floating point values) that I’m trying to cluster. I’ve been trying to do this with scikit-learn’s implementation of DBSCAN, using the Manhattan distance metric and a value of epsilon estimated from some small random samples drawn from the data. So far, so good. (here is the snippet, for reference)

db = DBSCAN(eps=40, min_samples=10, metric='cityblock').fit(mydata)

My issue at the moment is that I easily run out of memory. (I’m currently working on a machine with 16 GB of RAM)

My question is, is DBSCAN calculating the pairwise distance matrix on the fly as it runs, and that’s what’s gobbling up my memory? (2.5 million ^ 2) * 8 bytes is obviously stupidly large, I would understand that. Should I not be using the fit() method? And more generally, is there a way around this issue, or am I generally barking up the wrong tree here?

Apologies if the answer winds up being obvious. I’ve been puzzling over this for a few days. Thanks!

Addendum: Also if anyone could explain the difference between fit(X) and fit_predict(X) to me more explicitly I’d also appreciate that–I’m afraid I just don’t quite get it.

Addendum #2: To be sure, I just tried this on a machine with ~550 GB of RAM and it still blew up, so I feel like DBSCAN is likely trying to make a pairwise distance matrix or something I clearly don’t want it to do. I guess now the big question is how to stop that behavior, or find other methods that might suit my needs more. Thanks for bearing with me here.

Addendum #3(!): I forgot to attach the traceback, here it is,

Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "tDBSCAN.py", line 34, in <module>
    db = DBSCAN(eps=float(sys.argv[2]), min_samples=10, metric='cityblock').fit(mydata)
  File "/home/jtownsend/.local/lib/python2.6/site-packages/sklearn/base.py", line 329, in fit_predict
    self.fit(X)
  File "/home/jtownsend/.local/lib/python2.6/site-packages/sklearn/cluster/dbscan_.py", line 186, in fit
    **self.get_params())
  File "/home/jtownsend/.local/lib/python2.6/site-packages/sklearn/cluster/dbscan_.py", line 69, in dbscan
    D = pairwise_distances(X, metric=metric)
  File "/home/jtownsend/.local/lib/python2.6/site-packages/sklearn/metrics/pairwise.py", line 651, in pairwise_distances
    return func(X, Y, **kwds)
  File "/home/jtownsend/.local/lib/python2.6/site-packages/sklearn/metrics/pairwise.py", line 237, in manhattan_distances
    D = np.abs(X[:, np.newaxis, :] - Y[np.newaxis, :, :])
MemoryError
Asked By: JamesT

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Answers:

The DBSCAN algorithm actually does compute the distance matrix, so no chance here.
For this much data, I would recommend using MiniBatchKMeans.
You can not use the Manhattan metric there out of the box, but you could do your own implementation. Maybe try the standard implementation with the euclidean metric first.

I don’t know many clustering algorithms that don’t perform pairwise distances.

Using the newly embedded cheat-sheet bottom center: though luck.

Answered By: Andreas Mueller

The problem apparently is a non-standard DBSCAN implementation in scikit-learn.

DBSCAN does not need a distance matrix. The algorithm was designed around using a database that can accelerate a regionQuery function, and return the neighbors within the query radius efficiently (a spatial index should support such queries in O(log n)).

The implementation in scikit however, apparently, computes the full O(n^2) distance matrix, which comes at a cost both memory-wise and runtime-wise.

So I see two choices:

  1. You may want to try the DBSCAN implementation in ELKI instead, which when used with an R*-tree index usually is substantially faster than a naive implementation.

  2. Otherwise, you may want to reimplement DBSCAN, as the implementation in scikit apparently isn’t too good. Don’t be scared of that: DBSCAN is really simple to implement yourself. The trickiest part of a good DBSCAN implementation is actually the regionQuery function. If you can get this query fast, DBSCAN will be fast. And you can actually reuse this function for other algorithms, too.

Update: by now, sklearn no longer computes a distance matrix and can, e.g., use a kd-tree index. However, because of “vectorization” it will still precompute the neighbors of every point, so the memory usage of sklearn for large epsilon is O(n²), whereas to my understanding the version in ELKI will only use O(n) memory. So if you run out of memory, choose a smaller epsilon and/or try ELKI.

You can do this using scikit-learn’s DBSCAN with the haversine metric and ball-tree algorithm. You do not need to precompute a distance matrix.

This example clusters over a million GPS latitude-longitude points with DBSCAN/haversine and avoids memory usage problems:

df = pd.read_csv('gps.csv')
coords = df.as_matrix(columns=['lat', 'lon'])
db = DBSCAN(eps=eps, min_samples=ms, algorithm='ball_tree', metric='haversine').fit(np.radians(coords))

Note that this specifically uses scikit-learn v0.15, as some earlier/later versions seem to require a full distance matrix to be computed, which blows up your RAM real quick. But if you use Anaconda, you can quickly set this up with:

conda install scikit-learn=0.15

Or, create a clean virtual environment for this clustering task:

conda create -n clusterenv python=3.4 scikit-learn=0.15 matplotlib pandas jupyter
activate clusterenv
Answered By: eos

This issue with sklearn is discussed here:

https://github.com/scikit-learn/scikit-learn/issues/5275

There are two options presented there;

One is to use OPTICS (which requires sklearn v21+), which is an alternative but closely related algorithm to DBSCAN:

https://scikit-learn.org/dev/modules/generated/sklearn.cluster.OPTICS.html

The others are to precompute the adjacency matrix, or to use sample weights.
Some more details on these options can be found under Notes here:

https://scikit-learn.org/stable/modules/generated/sklearn.cluster.DBSCAN.html

Answered By: Isaac

I faced the same problem when i was using old version on sklearn 0.19.1 because the complexity was O(N^2).

But now the problem has been resolved in new version 0.20.2 and no memory error anymore, and the complexity become O(n.d) where d is the average number of neighbours.
it’s not the ideal complexity but much better than old versions.

Check the notes in this release, to avoid high memory usage:
https://scikit-learn.org/stable/modules/generated/sklearn.cluster.DBSCAN.html

Answered By: MMamdouh