Xiaohe Hu

DC
h-index9
4papers
1citation
Novelty56%
AI Score50

4 Papers

91.7DCJun 1Code
An Efficient, Reliable and Observable Collective Communication Library in Large-scale GPU Training Clusters

Mingjun Zhang, Xiaohe Hu, Menghao Zhang et al.

Large-scale LLM training requires collective communication libraries to exchange data among distributed GPUs. As a company dedicated to building and operating large-scale GPU training clusters, we encounter several practical limitations of NCCL in production, including 1) SM competition between computation and communication, 2) expensive restart costs under link failures, and 3) insufficient observability of transient collective communication anomalies. To address these challenges, we propose VCCL, an efficient, reliable, and observable collective communication library in large-scale GPU training clusters. VCCL removes SM-consuming P2P kernels by moving intra-node data movement and stream dependency enforcement to CPU threads and GPU copy engines. VCCL also introduces a primary-backup QP mechanism to tolerate frequent NIC port failures, and designs a window-based monitor to observe network anomalies at O(μs) level. We opensource VCCL and deploy it in production training clusters for several months. Compared with NCCL, VCCL improves training throughput by up to 5.28% and reduces massive GPU resource wastage through runtime fault tolerance and finegrained monitor. We also share experience and lessons we learned during the deployment of VCCL in large-scale clusters.

87.7DCMay 20
PlexRL: Cluster-Level Orchestration of Serviceized LLM Execution for RLVR

Yiqi Zhang, Fangzheng Jiao, Tian Tang et al.

Reinforcement learning with verifiable rewards (RLVR) has recently unlocked strong reasoning capabilities in large language models (LLMs), triggering rapid exploration of new algorithms and data. However, RLVR training is notoriously inefficient: long-tailed rollouts, tool-induced stalls, and asymmetric resource requirements between rollout and training introduce substantial idle time that cannot be eliminated by job-local optimizations such as synchronous pipelining, asynchronous rollout, or colocated execution. We argue that this inefficiency is structural. While idle gaps are unavoidable within individual RLVR jobs, they are largely anti-correlated across jobs and therefore exploitable at the cluster level. Leveraging this observation, we present PlexRL, a cluster-level runtime for multiplexing unified LLM services across RLVR jobs. By centrally managing model placement, state transitions, and function-level scheduling under strict affinity constraints, PlexRL time-slices LLM execution across jobs to fill otherwise idle periods without expensive model migration. Our implementation and evaluations demonstrate that PlexRL significantly improves effective cluster capacity and reduces user GPU hour cost by maximum 37.58% while preserving algorithmic flexibility and introducing minimal per-job overhead.

78.6DCMay 18
EPIC: Abstraction and Polymorphism of In-Network Collectives on Ethernet

Yitao Yuan, Jianglong Nie, Tianyu Bai et al.

In-Network Collective (INC) acceleration holds immense potential for optimizing AI training and inference; however, its cross-layer nature has historically hindered investment and adoption within the open Ethernet ecosystem. To bridge this gap, we propose EPIC (Ethernet Polymorphic In-network Collective), an INC protocol specification and reference system built on the principle of "Unified Abstraction, Polymorphic Realization." EPIC introduces an abstraction compatible with standard Ethernet that aligns functional boundaries with participant roles, while offering polymorphic realizations tailored to varying hardware capabilities. We address three fundamental challenges: first, we employ a modular design that enables an evolutionary path from simple to complex implementations, allowing vendors to iterate their hardware incrementally; second, we apply formal verification methodologies to prove the correctness of all proposed polymorphic modes; and third, we develop a unified resource management model versatile enough for diverse INC scenarios. Extensive validation -- spanning model checking, packet/flow simulations, VM emulation, Tofino Testbed, and FPGA/RTL verification -- confirms EPIC's correctness, performance gain, and feasibility.

AIDec 18, 2025
Learning to Wait: Synchronizing Agents with the Physical World

Yifei She, Ping Zhang, He Liu et al.

Real-world agentic tasks, unlike synchronous Markov Decision Processes (MDPs), often involve non-blocking actions with variable latencies, creating a fundamental \textit{Temporal Gap} between action initiation and completion. Existing environment-side solutions, such as blocking wrappers or frequent polling, either limit scalability or dilute the agent's context window with redundant observations. In this work, we propose an \textbf{Agent-side Approach} that empowers Large Language Models (LLMs) to actively align their \textit{Cognitive Timeline} with the physical world. By extending the Code-as-Action paradigm to the temporal domain, agents utilize semantic priors and In-Context Learning (ICL) to predict precise waiting durations (\texttt{time.sleep(t)}), effectively synchronizing with asynchronous environment without exhaustive checking. Experiments in a simulated Kubernetes cluster demonstrate that agents can precisely calibrate their internal clocks to minimize both query overhead and execution latency, validating that temporal awareness is a learnable capability essential for autonomous evolution in open-ended environments.