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Do you know how this giant all reduce works for giant architectures across hundreds of workers?
Specifically interested in this bit of code
if is_distributed:
...
# gather and concat across batches, accounting for variable batch sizes
x, batch_sizes = self.all_gather(x)
using standard notation from the code, the x returned from this is of shape [b * w, e, c, d] where standardly
b - batch size
w - world size
e - num experts
c - expert capacity (which we can say is something like n / e where n is seq len)
d - hidden dim
This means our overall tensor is of shape approx [b * w, n, d] which is the same as holding all the worker batches in memory on each individual device. I.e. on a per-device level we've moved from [b, n, d] -> [b * w, n, d]. Dont see how this can reasonably scale with w.
I'm currently at a loss to understanding how this doesn't prevent training over reasonable sizes.
E.g. in mixtral they have n = 32k, and if I have a large number of workers (even with batch size 1) this is not going to fit in memory.
Just wondering if I'm missing something or this is just a bottleneck inherent in MOE models.
Thanks very much for this code base, I found going through it highly informative!
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered:
has shape [k, b, n, e, c]. Again since c is like n / e then this is like b * n ** 2 which can hit CUDA OOMS easily for small batch sizes, 8 experts, and 32k seq len (again as stated in mixtral).
Again just wondering if this is some fundamental bottleneck with MOE models or there is some finer detail I am missing.
I have not seen it mentioned in papers (though admittedly I have not read that many related papers)
Do you know how this giant all reduce works for giant architectures across hundreds of workers?
Specifically interested in this bit of code
using standard notation from the code, the x returned from this is of shape
[b * w, e, c, d]
where standardlyThis means our overall tensor is of shape approx
[b * w, n, d]
which is the same as holding all the worker batches in memory on each individual device. I.e. on a per-device level we've moved from [b, n, d] -> [b * w, n, d]. Dont see how this can reasonably scale with w.I'm currently at a loss to understanding how this doesn't prevent training over reasonable sizes.
E.g. in mixtral they have n = 32k, and if I have a large number of workers (even with batch size 1) this is not going to fit in memory.
Just wondering if I'm missing something or this is just a bottleneck inherent in MOE models.
Thanks very much for this code base, I found going through it highly informative!
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: