Sam Ade Jacobs

DC
h-index38
10papers
2,616citations
Novelty56%
AI Score47

10 Papers

LGSep 25, 2023
DeepSpeed Ulysses: System Optimizations for Enabling Training of Extreme Long Sequence Transformer Models

Sam Ade Jacobs, Masahiro Tanaka, Chengming Zhang et al.

Computation in a typical Transformer-based large language model (LLM) can be characterized by batch size, hidden dimension, number of layers, and sequence length. Until now, system works for accelerating LLM training have focused on the first three dimensions: data parallelism for batch size, tensor parallelism for hidden size and pipeline parallelism for model depth or layers. These widely studied forms of parallelism are not targeted or optimized for long sequence Transformer models. Given practical application needs for long sequence LLM, renewed attentions are being drawn to sequence parallelism. However, existing works in sequence parallelism are constrained by memory-communication inefficiency, limiting their scalability to long sequence large models. In this work, we introduce DeepSpeed-Ulysses, a novel, portable and effective methodology for enabling highly efficient and scalable LLM training with extremely long sequence length. DeepSpeed-Ulysses at its core partitions input data along the sequence dimension and employs an efficient all-to-all collective communication for attention computation. Theoretical communication analysis shows that whereas other methods incur communication overhead as sequence length increases, DeepSpeed-Ulysses maintains constant communication volume when sequence length and compute devices are increased proportionally. Furthermore, experimental evaluations show that DeepSpeed-Ulysses trains 2.5x faster with 4x longer sequence length than the existing method SOTA baseline.

DCJun 16, 2023
ZeRO++: Extremely Efficient Collective Communication for Giant Model Training

Guanhua Wang, Heyang Qin, Sam Ade Jacobs et al.

Zero Redundancy Optimizer (ZeRO) has been used to train a wide range of large language models on massive GPUs clusters due to its ease of use, efficiency, and good scalability. However, when training on low-bandwidth clusters, or at scale which forces batch size per GPU to be small, ZeRO's effective throughput is limited because of high communication volume from gathering weights in forward pass, backward pass, and averaging gradients. This paper introduces three communication volume reduction techniques, which we collectively refer to as ZeRO++, targeting each of the communication collectives in ZeRO. First is block-quantization based all-gather. Second is data remapping that trades-off communication for more memory. Third is a novel all-to-all based quantized gradient averaging paradigm as replacement of reduce-scatter collective, which preserves accuracy despite communicating low precision data. Collectively, ZeRO++ reduces communication volume of ZeRO by 4x, enabling up to 2.16x better throughput at 384 GPU scale.

CLApr 22, 2024Code
Phi-3 Technical Report: A Highly Capable Language Model Locally on Your Phone

Marah Abdin, Jyoti Aneja, Hany Awadalla et al. · microsoft-research, stanford

We introduce phi-3-mini, a 3.8 billion parameter language model trained on 3.3 trillion tokens, whose overall performance, as measured by both academic benchmarks and internal testing, rivals that of models such as Mixtral 8x7B and GPT-3.5 (e.g., phi-3-mini achieves 69% on MMLU and 8.38 on MT-bench), despite being small enough to be deployed on a phone. Our training dataset is a scaled-up version of the one used for phi-2, composed of heavily filtered publicly available web data and synthetic data. The model is also further aligned for robustness, safety, and chat format. We also provide parameter-scaling results with a 7B, 14B models trained for 4.8T tokens, called phi-3-small, phi-3-medium, both significantly more capable than phi-3-mini (e.g., respectively 75%, 78% on MMLU, and 8.7, 8.9 on MT-bench). To enhance multilingual, multimodal, and long-context capabilities, we introduce three models in the phi-3.5 series: phi-3.5-mini, phi-3.5-MoE, and phi-3.5-Vision. The phi-3.5-MoE, a 16 x 3.8B MoE model with 6.6 billion active parameters, achieves superior performance in language reasoning, math, and code tasks compared to other open-source models of similar scale, such as Llama 3.1 and the Mixtral series, and on par with Gemini-1.5-Flash and GPT-4o-mini. Meanwhile, phi-3.5-Vision, a 4.2 billion parameter model derived from phi-3.5-mini, excels in reasoning tasks and is adept at handling both single-image and text prompts, as well as multi-image and text prompts.

DCAug 30, 2024
Training Ultra Long Context Language Model with Fully Pipelined Distributed Transformer

Jinghan Yao, Sam Ade Jacobs, Masahiro Tanaka et al.

Large Language Models (LLMs) with long context capabilities are integral to complex tasks in natural language processing and computational biology, such as text generation and protein sequence analysis. However, training LLMs directly on extremely long contexts demands considerable GPU resources and increased memory, leading to higher costs and greater complexity. Alternative approaches that introduce long context capabilities via downstream finetuning or adaptations impose significant design limitations. In this paper, we propose Fully Pipelined Distributed Transformer (FPDT) for efficiently training long-context LLMs with extreme hardware efficiency. For GPT and Llama models, we achieve a 16x increase in sequence length that can be trained on the same hardware compared to current state-of-the-art solutions. With our dedicated sequence chunk pipeline design, we can now train 8B LLM with 2 million sequence length on only 4 GPUs, while also maintaining over 55% of MFU. Our proposed FPDT is agnostic to existing training techniques and is proven to work efficiently across different LLM models.

73.6DCMay 3
Cross-Layer Energy Analysis of Multimodal Training on Grace Hopper Superchips

Mahmoud Ahmed, Sameh Abdulah, Olatunji Ruwase et al.

Multimodal deep learning models enable joint learning across heterogeneous data sources, including text, images, and video, but their rapid scaling introduces significant memory and communication bottlenecks. As model sizes and sequence lengths increase, training performance becomes increasingly impacted by data movement rather than computation. Frameworks such as DeepSpeed mitigate these challenges through CPU offloading, activation checkpointing, and communication optimizations. However, these techniques introduce additional system activity, which may affect energy efficiency. Meanwhile, tightly integrated heterogeneous architectures, such as the NVIDIA Grace Hopper (GH200) superchip, provide high-bandwidth CPU-GPU interconnects and unified memory, thereby reducing data transfer overhead. In this work, we present a cross-layer analysis of energy and performance trade-offs in multimodal training on GH200 systems, explicitly characterizing the interactions between application, runtime, and hardware layers. Leveraging high-bandwidth CPU-GPU interconnects, our results show that energy efficiency is primarily governed by data movement and overlap rather than raw compute utilization, and that configurations optimized for runtime are not necessarily optimal for energy. Based on these findings, we distill a set of actionable guidelines for practitioners that demonstrate how to balance offloading strategies, sequence parallelism, and hardware-aware scheduling to achieve energy-efficient training. Our results demonstrate that leveraging high-bandwidth CPU-GPU interconnects enables offloading strategies and sequence parallelism, achieving a strong balance among energy efficiency, runtime performance, and computational throughput, providing practical guidelines for efficient multimodal training on modern heterogeneous systems.

DCJun 27, 2024
Universal Checkpointing: A Flexible and Efficient Distributed Checkpointing System for Large-Scale DNN Training with Reconfigurable Parallelis

Xinyu Lian, Sam Ade Jacobs, Lev Kurilenko et al.

Deep neural network (DNN) training continues to scale rapidly in terms of model size, data volume, and sequence length, to the point where multiple machines are required to fit large models for training. Different distributed and parallel training strategies have been developed to support large-scale DNN training by partitioning the training state across GPUs. However, existing DNN training systems provide very limited support for reconfiguring parallelism strategies in the middle of the training via checkpointing. This limitation arises because distributed checkpoints are tightly coupled to specific model parallelism and hardware configurations, preventing large-scale training jobs from efficiently adapting to hardware failures or resource elasticity. This paper presents Universal Checkpointing (UCP), a novel checkpointing system that enables flexible and efficient DNN training with reconfigurable parallelism. UCP overcomes challenges in existing systems by decoupling checkpoint structure from parallel training strategies and hardware configurations. In addition, we present a pattern-based reconfiguration pipeline that enables automatic, flexible, and efficient mapping of checkpoint state to various parallelism strategies. Evaluation on a range of DNN models, including state-of-the-art dense and sparse LLMs, shows that UCP enables reconfiguration for a broader set of widely used parallelism strategies than existing solutions while adding negligible reconfiguration cost. UCP has been successfully employed in real LLM training workloads, greatly enhancing their flexibility and resilience to dynamic hardware environments.

LGDec 16, 2021
Learning Interpretable Models Through Multi-Objective Neural Architecture Search

Zachariah Carmichael, Tim Moon, Sam Ade Jacobs

Monumental advances in deep learning have led to unprecedented achievements across various domains. While the performance of deep neural networks is indubitable, the architectural design and interpretability of such models are nontrivial. Research has been introduced to automate the design of neural network architectures through neural architecture search (NAS). Recent progress has made these methods more pragmatic by exploiting distributed computation and novel optimization algorithms. However, there is little work in optimizing architectures for interpretability. To this end, we propose a multi-objective distributed NAS framework that optimizes for both task performance and "introspectability," a surrogate metric for aspects of interpretability. We leverage the non-dominated sorting genetic algorithm (NSGA-II) and explainable AI (XAI) techniques to reward architectures that can be better comprehended by domain experts. The framework is evaluated on several image classification datasets. We demonstrate that jointly optimizing for task error and introspectability leads to more disentangled and debuggable architectures that perform within tolerable error.

DCOct 5, 2019
Parallelizing Training of Deep Generative Models on Massive Scientific Datasets

Sam Ade Jacobs, Brian Van Essen, David Hysom et al.

Training deep neural networks on large scientific data is a challenging task that requires enormous compute power, especially if no pre-trained models exist to initialize the process. We present a novel tournament method to train traditional as well as generative adversarial networks built on LBANN, a scalable deep learning framework optimized for HPC systems. LBANN combines multiple levels of parallelism and exploits some of the worlds largest supercomputers. We demonstrate our framework by creating a complex predictive model based on multi-variate data from high-energy-density physics containing hundreds of millions of images and hundreds of millions of scalar values derived from tens of millions of simulations of inertial confinement fusion. Our approach combines an HPC workflow and extends LBANN with optimized data ingestion and the new tournament-style training algorithm to produce a scalable neural network architecture using a CORAL-class supercomputer. Experimental results show that 64 trainers (1024 GPUs) achieve a speedup of 70.2 over a single trainer (16 GPUs) baseline, and an effective 109% parallel efficiency.

LGJul 19, 2019
Scalable Topological Data Analysis and Visualization for Evaluating Data-Driven Models in Scientific Applications

Shusen Liu, Di Wang, Dan Maljovec et al.

With the rapid adoption of machine learning techniques for large-scale applications in science and engineering comes the convergence of two grand challenges in visualization. First, the utilization of black box models (e.g., deep neural networks) calls for advanced techniques in exploring and interpreting model behaviors. Second, the rapid growth in computing has produced enormous datasets that require techniques that can handle millions or more samples. Although some solutions to these interpretability challenges have been proposed, they typically do not scale beyond thousands of samples, nor do they provide the high-level intuition scientists are looking for. Here, we present the first scalable solution to explore and analyze high-dimensional functions often encountered in the scientific data analysis pipeline. By combining a new streaming neighborhood graph construction, the corresponding topology computation, and a novel data aggregation scheme, namely topology aware datacubes, we enable interactive exploration of both the topological and the geometric aspect of high-dimensional data. Following two use cases from high-energy-density (HED) physics and computational biology, we demonstrate how these capabilities have led to crucial new insights in both applications.

LGJan 30, 2019
Distinguishing between Normal and Cancer Cells Using Autoencoder Node Saliency

Ya Ju Fan, Jonathan E. Allen, Sam Ade Jacobs et al.

Gene expression profiles have been widely used to characterize patterns of cellular responses to diseases. As data becomes available, scalable learning toolkits become essential to processing large datasets using deep learning models to model complex biological processes. We present an autoencoder to capture nonlinear relationships recovered from gene expression profiles. The autoencoder is a nonlinear dimension reduction technique using an artificial neural network, which learns hidden representations of unlabeled data. We train the autoencoder on a large collection of tumor samples from the National Cancer Institute Genomic Data Commons, and obtain a generalized and unsupervised latent representation. We leverage a HPC-focused deep learning toolkit, Livermore Big Artificial Neural Network (LBANN) to efficiently parallelize the training algorithm, reducing computation times from several hours to a few minutes. With the trained autoencoder, we generate latent representations of a small dataset, containing pairs of normal and cancer cells of various tumor types. A novel measure called autoencoder node saliency (ANS) is introduced to identify the hidden nodes that best differentiate various pairs of cells. We compare our findings of the best classifying nodes with principal component analysis and the visualization of t-distributed stochastic neighbor embedding. We demonstrate that the autoencoder effectively extracts distinct gene features for multiple learning tasks in the dataset.