Yuji Liu

2papers

2 Papers

25.3DCMay 11
Surviving Partial Rank Failures in Wide Expert-Parallel MoE Inference

Xun Sun, Shaoyuan Chen, Pingchuan Ma et al.

Mixture-of-Experts (MoE) serving relies on wide expert parallelism (EP) to aggregate the memory capacity and bandwidth of many GPUs within one inference instance. This efficiency comes with a systems cost: every decoding step depends on token dispatch and combination across all active EP ranks, so even one rank failure can disrupt the entire service. Existing EP stacks handle such failures poorly because they treat membership as a fixed configuration established at initialization. The same rank set determines communicator state, expert placement, and the routing metadata baked into CUDA execution graphs, leaving the system with no way to shrink around a failure while keeping the instance valid. This paper argues that partial-failure tolerance should instead be formulated as a live EP validity problem. We present EEP, a communication and runtime substrate that represents membership as explicit, mutable runtime state. EEP repairs the specific state invalidated by a fault: it restores peer reachability without rebuilding the communication substrate, repairs lost expert coverage through a bandwidth-aware hierarchy, and reintegrates repaired ranks without forcing healthy ranks to recapture their CUDA graphs. We implement EEP in an EP serving stack integrated with SGLang and evaluate it under steady-state serving, failure recovery, and rank reintegration. The results show that explicit mutable membership preserves the steady-state fast path, staying within 4.4% of a fixed-membership DeepEP baseline under static serving, while turning a local rank fault from whole-instance downtime into two bounded interruptions. On a single-rank failure workload, EEP incurs an 11s recovery pause and an 8s reintegration pause, and restores throughput to within 95% of the pre-fault level within 52s, whereas a fixed-membership full-restart baseline remains unavailable until 348s.

ASFeb 11, 2022
The xmuspeech system for multi-channel multi-party meeting transcription challenge

Jie Wang, Yuji Liu, Binling Wang et al.

This paper describes the system developed by the XMUSPEECH team for the Multi-channel Multi-party Meeting Transcription Challenge (M2MeT). For the speaker diarization task, we propose a multi-channel speaker diarization system that obtains spatial information of speaker by Difference of Arrival (DOA) technology. Speaker-spatial embedding is generated by x-vector and s-vector derived from Filter-and-Sum Beamforming (FSB) which makes the embedding more robust. Specifically, we propose a novel multi-channel sequence-to-sequence neural network architecture named Discriminative Multi-stream Neural Network (DMSNet) which consists of Attention Filter-and-Sum block (AFSB) and Conformer encoder. We explore DMSNet to address overlapped speech problem on multi-channel audio. Compared with LSTM based OSD module, we achieve a decreases of 10.1% in Detection Error Rate(DetER). By performing DMSNet based OSD module, the DER of cluster-based diarization system decrease significantly form 13.44% to 7.63%. Our best fusion system achieves 7.09% and 9.80% of the diarization error rate (DER) on evaluation set and test set.