94.2DCApr 24
Guess-Verify-Refine: Data-Aware Top-K for Sparse-Attention Decoding on Blackwell via Temporal CorrelationLong Cheng, Ritchie Zhao, Timmy Liu et al.
Sparse-attention decoders rely on exact Top-K selection to choose the most important key-value entries for each query token. In long-context LLM serving, this Top-K stage runs once per decode query and becomes a meaningful latency bottleneck even when the indexer and attention kernels are already highly optimized. We present \textbf{Guess-Verify-Refine (GVR)}, a data-aware exact Top-K algorithm for sparse-attention decoding on NVIDIA Blackwell. GVR exploits temporal correlation across consecutive decode steps: it uses the previous step's Top-K as a prediction signal, computes pre-indexed statistics, narrows to a valid threshold by secant-style counting in 1-2 global passes, verifies candidates with a ballot-free collector, and finishes exact selection in shared memory. We connect this behavior to the Toeplitz / RoPE structure of DeepSeek Sparse Attention (DSA) indexer scores and validate the design on real DeepSeek-V3.2 workloads integrated into TensorRT-LLM. GVR achieves an average \textbf{1.88x} single-operator speedup over the production radix-select kernel, with up to \textbf{2.42x} per layer per step, while preserving bit-exact Top-K outputs. In controlled TEP8 min-latency deployment, it improves end-to-end TPOT by up to \textbf{7.52%} at 100K context, with larger gains at longer contexts and smaller but still positive gains under speculative decoding. While implemented and validated in the current TensorRT-LLM DSA stack on Blackwell, the same principle may extend to sparse-attention decoders whose decode-phase Top-K exhibits temporal stability.
99.9LGMar 25
AVO: Agentic Variation Operators for Autonomous Evolutionary SearchTerry Chen, Zhifan Ye, Bing Xu et al.
Agentic Variation Operators (AVO) are a new family of evolutionary variation operators that replace the fixed mutation, crossover, and hand-designed heuristics of classical evolutionary search with autonomous coding agents. Rather than confining a language model to candidate generation within a prescribed pipeline, AVO instantiates variation as a self-directed agent loop that can consult the current lineage, a domain-specific knowledge base, and execution feedback to propose, repair, critique, and verify implementation edits. We evaluate AVO on attention, among the most aggressively optimized kernel targets in AI, on NVIDIA Blackwell (B200) GPUs. Over 7 days of continuous autonomous evolution on multi-head attention, AVO discovers kernels that outperform cuDNN by up to 3.5% and FlashAttention-4 by up to 10.5% across the evaluated configurations. The discovered optimizations transfer readily to grouped-query attention, requiring only 30 minutes of additional autonomous adaptation and yielding gains of up to 7.0% over cuDNN and 9.3% over FlashAttention-4. Together, these results show that agentic variation operators move beyond prior LLM-in-the-loop evolutionary pipelines by elevating the agent from candidate generator to variation operator, and can discover performance-critical micro-architectural optimizations that produce kernels surpassing state-of-the-art expert-engineered attention implementations on today's most advanced GPU hardware.