Ning-Chi Huang

CV
h-index9
5papers
43citations
Novelty56%
AI Score41

5 Papers

AIJul 30, 2024Code
Palu: Compressing KV-Cache with Low-Rank Projection

Chi-Chih Chang, Wei-Cheng Lin, Chien-Yu Lin et al.

Post-training KV-Cache compression methods typically either sample a subset of effectual tokens or quantize the data into lower numerical bit width. However, these methods cannot exploit redundancy in the hidden dimension of the KV tensors. This paper presents a hidden dimension compression approach called Palu, a KV-Cache compression framework that utilizes low-rank projection to reduce inference-time LLM memory usage. Palu decomposes the linear layers into low-rank matrices, caches compressed intermediate states, and reconstructs the full keys and values on the fly. To improve accuracy, compression rate, and efficiency, Palu further encompasses (1) a medium-grained low-rank decomposition scheme, (2) an efficient rank search algorithm, (3) low-rank-aware quantization compatibility enhancements, and (4) optimized GPU kernels with operators fusion. Extensive experiments with popular LLMs show that Palu compresses KV-Cache by 50% while maintaining strong accuracy and delivering up to 1.89x on the RoPE-based attention module. When combined with quantization, Palu's inherent quantization-friendly design yields small to negligible extra accuracy degradation while saving additional memory than quantization-only methods and achieving up to 2.91x speedup for the RoPE-based attention. Moreover, it maintains comparable or even better accuracy (up to 1.19 lower perplexity) compared to quantization-only methods. These results demonstrate Palu's superior capability to effectively address the efficiency and memory challenges of LLM inference posed by KV-Cache. Our code is publicly available at: https://github.com/shadowpa0327/Palu

CVNov 7, 2023Code
FLORA: Fine-grained Low-Rank Architecture Search for Vision Transformer

Chi-Chih Chang, Yuan-Yao Sung, Shixing Yu et al.

Vision Transformers (ViT) have recently demonstrated success across a myriad of computer vision tasks. However, their elevated computational demands pose significant challenges for real-world deployment. While low-rank approximation stands out as a renowned method to reduce computational loads, efficiently automating the target rank selection in ViT remains a challenge. Drawing from the notable similarity and alignment between the processes of rank selection and One-Shot NAS, we introduce FLORA, an end-to-end automatic framework based on NAS. To overcome the design challenge of supernet posed by vast search space, FLORA employs a low-rank aware candidate filtering strategy. This method adeptly identifies and eliminates underperforming candidates, effectively alleviating potential undertraining and interference among subnetworks. To further enhance the quality of low-rank supernets, we design a low-rank specific training paradigm. First, we propose weight inheritance to construct supernet and enable gradient sharing among low-rank modules. Secondly, we adopt low-rank aware sampling to strategically allocate training resources, taking into account inherited information from pre-trained models. Empirical results underscore FLORA's efficacy. With our method, a more fine-grained rank configuration can be generated automatically and yield up to 33% extra FLOPs reduction compared to a simple uniform configuration. More specific, FLORA-DeiT-B/FLORA-Swin-B can save up to 55%/42% FLOPs almost without performance degradtion. Importantly, FLORA boasts both versatility and orthogonality, offering an extra 21%-26% FLOPs reduction when integrated with leading compression techniques or compact hybrid structures. Our code is publicly available at https://github.com/shadowpa0327/FLORA.

CVSep 15, 2024
ELSA: Exploiting Layer-wise N:M Sparsity for Vision Transformer Acceleration

Ning-Chi Huang, Chi-Chih Chang, Wei-Cheng Lin et al.

$N{:}M$ sparsity is an emerging model compression method supported by more and more accelerators to speed up sparse matrix multiplication in deep neural networks. Most existing $N{:}M$ sparsity methods compress neural networks with a uniform setting for all layers in a network or heuristically determine the layer-wise configuration by considering the number of parameters in each layer. However, very few methods have been designed for obtaining a layer-wise customized $N{:}M$ sparse configuration for vision transformers (ViTs), which usually consist of transformer blocks involving the same number of parameters. In this work, to address the challenge of selecting suitable sparse configuration for ViTs on $N{:}M$ sparsity-supporting accelerators, we propose ELSA, Exploiting Layer-wise $N{:}M$ Sparsity for ViTs. Considering not only all $N{:}M$ sparsity levels supported by a given accelerator but also the expected throughput improvement, our methodology can reap the benefits of accelerators supporting mixed sparsity by trading off negligible accuracy loss with both memory usage and inference time reduction for ViT models. For instance, our approach achieves a noteworthy 2.9$\times$ reduction in FLOPs for both Swin-B and DeiT-B with only a marginal degradation of accuracy on ImageNet. Our code will be released upon paper acceptance.

CLSep 22, 2025
Speculate Deep and Accurate: Lossless and Training-Free Acceleration for Offloaded LLMs via Substitute Speculative Decoding

Pei-Shuo Wang, Jian-Jia Chen, Chun-Che Yang et al.

The immense model sizes of large language models (LLMs) challenge deployment on memory-limited consumer GPUs. Although model compression and parameter offloading are common strategies to address memory limitations, compression can degrade quality, and offloading maintains quality but suffers from slow inference. Speculative decoding presents a promising avenue to accelerate parameter offloading, utilizing a fast draft model to propose multiple draft tokens, which are then verified by the target LLM in parallel with a single forward pass. This method reduces the time-consuming data transfers in forward passes that involve offloaded weight transfers. Existing methods often rely on pretrained weights of the same family, but require additional training to align with custom-trained models. Moreover, approaches that involve draft model training usually yield only modest speedups. This limitation arises from insufficient alignment with the target model, preventing higher token acceptance lengths. To address these challenges and achieve greater speedups, we propose SubSpec, a plug-and-play method to accelerate parameter offloading that is lossless and training-free. SubSpec constructs a highly aligned draft model by generating low-bit quantized substitute layers from offloaded target LLM portions. Additionally, our method shares the remaining GPU-resident layers and the KV-Cache, further reducing memory overhead and enhance alignment. SubSpec achieves a high average acceptance length, delivering 9.1x speedup for Qwen2.5 7B on MT-Bench (8GB VRAM limit) and an average of 12.5x speedup for Qwen2.5 32B on popular generation benchmarks (24GB VRAM limit).

CVDec 21, 2024
V"Mean"ba: Visual State Space Models only need 1 hidden dimension

Tien-Yu Chi, Hung-Yueh Chiang, Chi-Chih Chang et al.

Vision transformers dominate image processing tasks due to their superior performance. However, the quadratic complexity of self-attention limits the scalability of these systems and their deployment on resource-constrained devices. State Space Models (SSMs) have emerged as a solution by introducing a linear recurrence mechanism, which reduces the complexity of sequence modeling from quadratic to linear. Recently, SSMs have been extended to high-resolution vision tasks. Nonetheless, the linear recurrence mechanism struggles to fully utilize matrix multiplication units on modern hardware, resulting in a computational bottleneck. We address this issue by introducing \textit{VMeanba}, a training-free compression method that eliminates the channel dimension in SSMs using mean operations. Our key observation is that the output activations of SSM blocks exhibit low variances across channels. Our \textit{VMeanba} leverages this property to optimize computation by averaging activation maps across the channel to reduce the computational overhead without compromising accuracy. Evaluations on image classification and semantic segmentation tasks demonstrate that \textit{VMeanba} achieves up to a 1.12x speedup with less than a 3\% accuracy loss. When combined with 40\% unstructured pruning, the accuracy drop remains under 3\%.