h-index8
2papers

2 Papers

LGFeb 9
LLaDA2.1: Speeding Up Text Diffusion via Token Editing

Tiwei Bie, Maosong Cao, Xiang Cao et al.

While LLaDA2.0 showcased the scaling potential of 100B-level block-diffusion models and their inherent parallelization, the delicate equilibrium between decoding speed and generation quality has remained an elusive frontier. Today, we unveil LLaDA2.1, a paradigm shift designed to transcend this trade-off. By seamlessly weaving Token-to-Token (T2T) editing into the conventional Mask-to-Token (M2T) scheme, we introduce a joint, configurable threshold-decoding scheme. This structural innovation gives rise to two distinct personas: the Speedy Mode (S Mode), which audaciously lowers the M2T threshold to bypass traditional constraints while relying on T2T to refine the output; and the Quality Mode (Q Mode), which leans into conservative thresholds to secure superior benchmark performances with manageable efficiency degrade. Furthering this evolution, underpinned by an expansive context window, we implement the first large-scale Reinforcement Learning (RL) framework specifically tailored for dLLMs, anchored by specialized techniques for stable gradient estimation. This alignment not only sharpens reasoning precision but also elevates instruction-following fidelity, bridging the chasm between diffusion dynamics and complex human intent. We culminate this work by releasing LLaDA2.1-Mini (16B) and LLaDA2.1-Flash (100B). Across 33 rigorous benchmarks, LLaDA2.1 delivers strong task performance and lightning-fast decoding speed. Despite its 100B volume, on coding tasks it attains an astounding 892 TPS on HumanEval+, 801 TPS on BigCodeBench, and 663 TPS on LiveCodeBench.

82.5DCMay 12
AB-Sparse: Sparse Attention with Adaptive Block Size for Accurate and Efficient Long-Context Inference

Di Liu, Ruitian Wang, Chen Chen et al.

As large language models scale to longer contexts, loading the growing KV cache during attention computation becomes a critical bottleneck. Previous work has shown that attention computation is dominated by a small subset of tokens. This motivates block sparse attention methods that partition the KV cache into fixed-size blocks and selectively compute attention over those blocks exhibiting high importance. However, these methods assign a uniform block size across all attention heads, implicitly assuming homogeneous behavior throughout the model. Our analysis reveals that this assumption is flawed: attention heads exhibit widely varying sensitivity to block granularity, and uniformity leads to suboptimal accuracy. We present AB-Sparse, a training-free algorithm-system co-designed framework that improves accuracy while preserving throughput. AB-Sparse introduces lightweight adaptive block size allocation across attention heads to improve accuracy. To compensate for the additional memory overhead, it further employs lossless block centroid quantization. In addition, custom GPU kernels are developed to support efficient execution with variable block sizes. Evaluation results demonstrate that AB-Sparse achieves an accuracy improvement of up to 5.43% over existing block sparse attention baselines without throughput overhead.