it:ai_nlp_chatgpt2
Table of Contents
AI - natural language processing (NLP) - how ChatGPT is made
see also:
Introduction
- artificial intelligence natural language processing (NLP) has been revolutionised by the introduction of the transformer model using positional encoding, self-attention and cross-attention in 2017 1)
- early AI textual processing using recurrent neural networks and similar were primarily finding patterns in characters or words without context and then comparing those with outcomes
- examples of this are ascertaining whether email is spam or not, or whether an online review was likely to be positive or negative based upon the words used
- the initial level of transformer-based NLP is that of analysing massive amounts of text to produce grammatically similar text - albeit potentially without meaning or context
- cross-attention allowed this to be taken to a different level so that it could be utilised to learn how to translate languages or how to respond to questions as in the case of ChatGPT
A simplified overview of the creation of ChatGPT2
- a dataset of text is needed to train the model
- in this case some 40Gb of online text was utilised
- the dataset needs to be pre-processed to optimise it
- duplicate data is removed
- the data is then reduced to batches and tokens to make it more efficient to analyse (a token may be a character or several characters)
- a transformer neural network model needs to be designed
- this is usually based upon the initial transformer paper published in 2017 with some additions from some other published papers such as dropout concept (to mitigate over-filling where the model gets too good at training data but it is not then generalisable so the validation data performance does not match the training data performance)
- the model is then trained
- this requires significant amount of computing time using the GPUs to perform the matrix vector calculations required to build model parameters which then will define the model
- the model is then evaluated on test data
- model then undergoes further training so it learns how to respond to prompts or question inputs
- this section of training is “black boxed” - OpenAI have not released how they do this part
- this is “supervised learning” where a labeler demonstrates the desired output behaviour
- ie. it is retrained with X dataset of a variety of prompts and a y label with the desired output for each prompt
- this learning is then modified with “rewards”
- ie. a labeler ranks the outputs from best to worst and then the model is retained with this data
- The model is then further optimized using the PPO reinforcement learning algorithm
further development to ChatGPT3.5
- ChatGPT3.5 was trained on 300 billion tokens resulting in 175 billion parameters with 96 neural network layers and a batch size of 3.2 million and required thousands of GPUs in Azure Cloud to train it
ChatGPT2-like Python model
- the following is from Andrej Karpathy - see his Youtube tutorial
code to prepare the OpenWebText data
#Written by Andrej Karpathy, the following code is placed in a Python file: "prepare.py"
# saves the openwebtext dataset to a binary file for training. following was helpful:
# https://github.com/HazyResearch/flash-attention/blob/main/training/src/datamodules/language_modeling_hf.py
import os
from tqdm import tqdm
import numpy as np
import tiktoken
from datasets import load_dataset # huggingface datasets
# number of workers in .map() call
# good number to use is ~order number of cpu cores // 2
num_proc = 8
# number of workers in load_dataset() call
# best number might be different from num_proc above as it also depends on NW speed.
# it is better than 1 usually though
num_proc_load_dataset = num_proc
if __name__ == '__main__':
# takes 54GB in huggingface .cache dir, about 8M documents (8,013,769)
dataset = load_dataset("openwebtext", num_proc=num_proc_load_dataset)
# owt by default only contains the 'train' split, so create a test split
split_dataset = dataset["train"].train_test_split(test_size=0.0005, seed=2357, shuffle=True)
split_dataset['val'] = split_dataset.pop('test') # rename the test split to val
# this results in:
# >>> split_dataset
# DatasetDict({
# train: Dataset({
# features: ['text'],
# num_rows: 8009762
# })
# val: Dataset({
# features: ['text'],
# num_rows: 4007
# })
# })
# we now want to tokenize the dataset. first define the encoding function (gpt2 bpe)
enc = tiktoken.get_encoding("gpt2")
def process(example):
ids = enc.encode_ordinary(example['text']) # encode_ordinary ignores any special tokens
ids.append(enc.eot_token) # add the end of text token, e.g. 50256 for gpt2 bpe
# note: I think eot should be prepended not appended... hmm. it's called "eot" though...
out = {'ids': ids, 'len': len(ids)}
return out
# tokenize the dataset
tokenized = split_dataset.map(
process,
remove_columns=['text'],
desc="tokenizing the splits",
num_proc=num_proc,
)
# concatenate all the ids in each dataset into one large file we can use for training
for split, dset in tokenized.items():
arr_len = np.sum(dset['len'], dtype=np.uint64)
filename = os.path.join(os.path.dirname(__file__), f'{split}.bin')
dtype = np.uint16 # (can do since enc.max_token_value == 50256 is < 2**16)
arr = np.memmap(filename, dtype=dtype, mode='w+', shape=(arr_len,))
total_batches = 1024
idx = 0
for batch_idx in tqdm(range(total_batches), desc=f'writing {filename}'):
# Batch together samples for faster write
batch = dset.shard(num_shards=total_batches, index=batch_idx, contiguous=True).with_format('numpy')
arr_batch = np.concatenate(batch['ids'])
# Write into mmap
arr[idx : idx + len(arr_batch)] = arr_batch
idx += len(arr_batch)
arr.flush()
# train.bin is ~17GB, val.bin ~8.5MB
# train has ~9B tokens (9,035,582,198)
# val has ~4M tokens (4,434,897)
# to read the bin files later, e.g. with numpy:
# m = np.memmap('train.bin', dtype=np.uint16, mode='r')
code to define the model
"""
Written by Andrej Karpathy, the following code is placed in a Python file: "model.py"
Full definition of a GPT Language Model, all of it in this single file.
References:
1) the official GPT-2 TensorFlow implementation released by OpenAI:
https://github.com/openai/gpt-2/blob/master/src/model.py
2) huggingface/transformers PyTorch implementation:
https://github.com/huggingface/transformers/blob/main/src/transformers/models/gpt2/modeling_gpt2.py
"""
import math
import inspect
from dataclasses import dataclass
import torch
import torch.nn as nn
from torch.nn import functional as F
class LayerNorm(nn.Module):
""" LayerNorm but with an optional bias. PyTorch doesn't support simply bias=False """
def __init__(self, ndim, bias):
super().__init__()
self.weight = nn.Parameter(torch.ones(ndim))
self.bias = nn.Parameter(torch.zeros(ndim)) if bias else None
def forward(self, input):
return F.layer_norm(input, self.weight.shape, self.weight, self.bias, 1e-5)
class CausalSelfAttention(nn.Module):
def __init__(self, config):
super().__init__()
assert config.n_embd % config.n_head == 0
# key, query, value projections for all heads, but in a batch
self.c_attn = nn.Linear(config.n_embd, 3 * config.n_embd, bias=config.bias)
# output projection
self.c_proj = nn.Linear(config.n_embd, config.n_embd, bias=config.bias)
# regularization
self.attn_dropout = nn.Dropout(config.dropout)
self.resid_dropout = nn.Dropout(config.dropout)
self.n_head = config.n_head
self.n_embd = config.n_embd
self.dropout = config.dropout
# flash attention make GPU go brrrrr but support is only in PyTorch >= 2.0
self.flash = hasattr(torch.nn.functional, 'scaled_dot_product_attention')
if not self.flash:
print("WARNING: using slow attention. Flash Attention requires PyTorch >= 2.0")
# causal mask to ensure that attention is only applied to the left in the input sequence
self.register_buffer("bias", torch.tril(torch.ones(config.block_size, config.block_size))
.view(1, 1, config.block_size, config.block_size))
def forward(self, x):
B, T, C = x.size() # batch size, sequence length, embedding dimensionality (n_embd)
# calculate query, key, values for all heads in batch and move head forward to be the batch dim
q, k, v = self.c_attn(x).split(self.n_embd, dim=2)
k = k.view(B, T, self.n_head, C // self.n_head).transpose(1, 2) # (B, nh, T, hs)
q = q.view(B, T, self.n_head, C // self.n_head).transpose(1, 2) # (B, nh, T, hs)
v = v.view(B, T, self.n_head, C // self.n_head).transpose(1, 2) # (B, nh, T, hs)
# causal self-attention; Self-attend: (B, nh, T, hs) x (B, nh, hs, T) -> (B, nh, T, T)
if self.flash:
# efficient attention using Flash Attention CUDA kernels
y = torch.nn.functional.scaled_dot_product_attention(q, k, v, attn_mask=None, dropout_p=self.dropout if self.training else 0, is_causal=True)
else:
# manual implementation of attention
att = (q @ k.transpose(-2, -1)) * (1.0 / math.sqrt(k.size(-1)))
att = att.masked_fill(self.bias[:,:,:T,:T] == 0, float('-inf'))
att = F.softmax(att, dim=-1)
att = self.attn_dropout(att)
y = att @ v # (B, nh, T, T) x (B, nh, T, hs) -> (B, nh, T, hs)
y = y.transpose(1, 2).contiguous().view(B, T, C) # re-assemble all head outputs side by side
# output projection
y = self.resid_dropout(self.c_proj(y))
return y
class MLP(nn.Module):
def __init__(self, config):
super().__init__()
self.c_fc = nn.Linear(config.n_embd, 4 * config.n_embd, bias=config.bias)
self.gelu = nn.GELU()
self.c_proj = nn.Linear(4 * config.n_embd, config.n_embd, bias=config.bias)
self.dropout = nn.Dropout(config.dropout)
def forward(self, x):
x = self.c_fc(x)
x = self.gelu(x)
x = self.c_proj(x)
x = self.dropout(x)
return x
class Block(nn.Module):
def __init__(self, config):
super().__init__()
self.ln_1 = LayerNorm(config.n_embd, bias=config.bias)
self.attn = CausalSelfAttention(config)
self.ln_2 = LayerNorm(config.n_embd, bias=config.bias)
self.mlp = MLP(config)
def forward(self, x):
x = x + self.attn(self.ln_1(x))
x = x + self.mlp(self.ln_2(x))
return x
@dataclass
class GPTConfig:
block_size: int = 1024
vocab_size: int = 50304 # GPT-2 vocab_size of 50257, padded up to nearest multiple of 64 for efficiency
n_layer: int = 12
n_head: int = 12
n_embd: int = 768
dropout: float = 0.0
bias: bool = True # True: bias in Linears and LayerNorms, like GPT-2. False: a bit better and faster
class GPT(nn.Module):
def __init__(self, config):
super().__init__()
assert config.vocab_size is not None
assert config.block_size is not None
self.config = config
self.transformer = nn.ModuleDict(dict(
wte = nn.Embedding(config.vocab_size, config.n_embd),
wpe = nn.Embedding(config.block_size, config.n_embd),
drop = nn.Dropout(config.dropout),
h = nn.ModuleList([Block(config) for _ in range(config.n_layer)]),
ln_f = LayerNorm(config.n_embd, bias=config.bias),
))
self.lm_head = nn.Linear(config.n_embd, config.vocab_size, bias=False)
# with weight tying when using torch.compile() some warnings get generated:
# "UserWarning: functional_call was passed multiple values for tied weights.
# This behavior is deprecated and will be an error in future versions"
# not 100% sure what this is, so far seems to be harmless. TODO investigate
self.transformer.wte.weight = self.lm_head.weight # https://paperswithcode.com/method/weight-tying
# init all weights
self.apply(self._init_weights)
# apply special scaled init to the residual projections, per GPT-2 paper
for pn, p in self.named_parameters():
if pn.endswith('c_proj.weight'):
torch.nn.init.normal_(p, mean=0.0, std=0.02/math.sqrt(2 * config.n_layer))
# report number of parameters
print("number of parameters: %.2fM" % (self.get_num_params()/1e6,))
def get_num_params(self, non_embedding=True):
"""
Return the number of parameters in the model.
For non-embedding count (default), the position embeddings get subtracted.
The token embeddings would too, except due to the parameter sharing these
params are actually used as weights in the final layer, so we include them.
"""
n_params = sum(p.numel() for p in self.parameters())
if non_embedding:
n_params -= self.transformer.wpe.weight.numel()
return n_params
def _init_weights(self, module):
if isinstance(module, nn.Linear):
torch.nn.init.normal_(module.weight, mean=0.0, std=0.02)
if module.bias is not None:
torch.nn.init.zeros_(module.bias)
elif isinstance(module, nn.Embedding):
torch.nn.init.normal_(module.weight, mean=0.0, std=0.02)
def forward(self, idx, targets=None):
device = idx.device
b, t = idx.size()
assert t <= self.config.block_size, f"Cannot forward sequence of length {t}, block size is only {self.config.block_size}"
pos = torch.arange(0, t, dtype=torch.long, device=device) # shape (t)
# forward the GPT model itself
tok_emb = self.transformer.wte(idx) # token embeddings of shape (b, t, n_embd)
pos_emb = self.transformer.wpe(pos) # position embeddings of shape (t, n_embd)
x = self.transformer.drop(tok_emb + pos_emb)
for block in self.transformer.h:
x = block(x)
x = self.transformer.ln_f(x)
if targets is not None:
# if we are given some desired targets also calculate the loss
logits = self.lm_head(x)
loss = F.cross_entropy(logits.view(-1, logits.size(-1)), targets.view(-1), ignore_index=-1)
else:
# inference-time mini-optimization: only forward the lm_head on the very last position
logits = self.lm_head(x[:, [-1], :]) # note: using list [-1] to preserve the time dim
loss = None
return logits, loss
def crop_block_size(self, block_size):
# model surgery to decrease the block size if necessary
# e.g. we may load the GPT2 pretrained model checkpoint (block size 1024)
# but want to use a smaller block size for some smaller, simpler model
assert block_size <= self.config.block_size
self.config.block_size = block_size
self.transformer.wpe.weight = nn.Parameter(self.transformer.wpe.weight[:block_size])
for block in self.transformer.h:
if hasattr(block.attn, 'bias'):
block.attn.bias = block.attn.bias[:,:,:block_size,:block_size]
@classmethod
def from_pretrained(cls, model_type, override_args=None):
assert model_type in {'gpt2', 'gpt2-medium', 'gpt2-large', 'gpt2-xl'}
override_args = override_args or {} # default to empty dict
# only dropout can be overridden see more notes below
assert all(k == 'dropout' for k in override_args)
from transformers import GPT2LMHeadModel
print("loading weights from pretrained gpt: %s" % model_type)
# n_layer, n_head and n_embd are determined from model_type
config_args = {
'gpt2': dict(n_layer=12, n_head=12, n_embd=768), # 124M params
'gpt2-medium': dict(n_layer=24, n_head=16, n_embd=1024), # 350M params
'gpt2-large': dict(n_layer=36, n_head=20, n_embd=1280), # 774M params
'gpt2-xl': dict(n_layer=48, n_head=25, n_embd=1600), # 1558M params
}[model_type]
print("forcing vocab_size=50257, block_size=1024, bias=True")
config_args['vocab_size'] = 50257 # always 50257 for GPT model checkpoints
config_args['block_size'] = 1024 # always 1024 for GPT model checkpoints
config_args['bias'] = True # always True for GPT model checkpoints
# we can override the dropout rate, if desired
if 'dropout' in override_args:
print(f"overriding dropout rate to {override_args['dropout']}")
config_args['dropout'] = override_args['dropout']
# create a from-scratch initialized minGPT model
config = GPTConfig(**config_args)
model = GPT(config)
sd = model.state_dict()
sd_keys = sd.keys()
sd_keys = [k for k in sd_keys if not k.endswith('.attn.bias')] # discard this mask / buffer, not a param
# init a huggingface/transformers model
model_hf = GPT2LMHeadModel.from_pretrained(model_type)
sd_hf = model_hf.state_dict()
# copy while ensuring all of the parameters are aligned and match in names and shapes
sd_keys_hf = sd_hf.keys()
sd_keys_hf = [k for k in sd_keys_hf if not k.endswith('.attn.masked_bias')] # ignore these, just a buffer
sd_keys_hf = [k for k in sd_keys_hf if not k.endswith('.attn.bias')] # same, just the mask (buffer)
transposed = ['attn.c_attn.weight', 'attn.c_proj.weight', 'mlp.c_fc.weight', 'mlp.c_proj.weight']
# basically the openai checkpoints use a "Conv1D" module, but we only want to use a vanilla Linear
# this means that we have to transpose these weights when we import them
assert len(sd_keys_hf) == len(sd_keys), f"mismatched keys: {len(sd_keys_hf)} != {len(sd_keys)}"
for k in sd_keys_hf:
if any(k.endswith(w) for w in transposed):
# special treatment for the Conv1D weights we need to transpose
assert sd_hf[k].shape[::-1] == sd[k].shape
with torch.no_grad():
sd[k].copy_(sd_hf[k].t())
else:
# vanilla copy over the other parameters
assert sd_hf[k].shape == sd[k].shape
with torch.no_grad():
sd[k].copy_(sd_hf[k])
return model
def configure_optimizers(self, weight_decay, learning_rate, betas, device_type):
# start with all of the candidate parameters
param_dict = {pn: p for pn, p in self.named_parameters()}
# filter out those that do not require grad
param_dict = {pn: p for pn, p in param_dict.items() if p.requires_grad}
# create optim groups. Any parameters that is 2D will be weight decayed, otherwise no.
# i.e. all weight tensors in matmuls + embeddings decay, all biases and layernorms don't.
decay_params = [p for n, p in param_dict.items() if p.dim() >= 2]
nodecay_params = [p for n, p in param_dict.items() if p.dim() < 2]
optim_groups = [
{'params': decay_params, 'weight_decay': weight_decay},
{'params': nodecay_params, 'weight_decay': 0.0}
]
num_decay_params = sum(p.numel() for p in decay_params)
num_nodecay_params = sum(p.numel() for p in nodecay_params)
print(f"num decayed parameter tensors: {len(decay_params)}, with {num_decay_params:,} parameters")
print(f"num non-decayed parameter tensors: {len(nodecay_params)}, with {num_nodecay_params:,} parameters")
# Create AdamW optimizer and use the fused version if it is available
fused_available = 'fused' in inspect.signature(torch.optim.AdamW).parameters
use_fused = fused_available and device_type == 'cuda'
extra_args = dict(fused=True) if use_fused else dict()
optimizer = torch.optim.AdamW(optim_groups, lr=learning_rate, betas=betas, **extra_args)
print(f"using fused AdamW: {use_fused}")
return optimizer
def estimate_mfu(self, fwdbwd_per_iter, dt):
""" estimate model flops utilization (MFU) in units of A100 bfloat16 peak FLOPS """
# first estimate the number of flops we do per iteration.
# see PaLM paper Appendix B as ref: https://arxiv.org/abs/2204.02311
N = self.get_num_params()
cfg = self.config
L, H, Q, T = cfg.n_layer, cfg.n_head, cfg.n_embd//cfg.n_head, cfg.block_size
flops_per_token = 6*N + 12*L*H*Q*T
flops_per_fwdbwd = flops_per_token * T
flops_per_iter = flops_per_fwdbwd * fwdbwd_per_iter
# express our flops throughput as ratio of A100 bfloat16 peak flops
flops_achieved = flops_per_iter * (1.0/dt) # per second
flops_promised = 312e12 # A100 GPU bfloat16 peak flops is 312 TFLOPS
mfu = flops_achieved / flops_promised
return mfu
@torch.no_grad()
def generate(self, idx, max_new_tokens, temperature=1.0, top_k=None):
"""
Take a conditioning sequence of indices idx (LongTensor of shape (b,t)) and complete
the sequence max_new_tokens times, feeding the predictions back into the model each time.
Most likely you'll want to make sure to be in model.eval() mode of operation for this.
"""
for _ in range(max_new_tokens):
# if the sequence context is growing too long we must crop it at block_size
idx_cond = idx if idx.size(1) <= self.config.block_size else idx[:, -self.config.block_size:]
# forward the model to get the logits for the index in the sequence
logits, _ = self(idx_cond)
# pluck the logits at the final step and scale by desired temperature
logits = logits[:, -1, :] / temperature
# optionally crop the logits to only the top k options
if top_k is not None:
v, _ = torch.topk(logits, min(top_k, logits.size(-1)))
logits[logits < v[:, [-1]]] = -float('Inf')
# apply softmax to convert logits to (normalized) probabilities
probs = F.softmax(logits, dim=-1)
# sample from the distribution
idx_next = torch.multinomial(probs, num_samples=1)
# append sampled index to the running sequence and continue
idx = torch.cat((idx, idx_next), dim=1)
return idx
training code
#Written by Andrej Karpathy, the following code is placed in a Python file: "train.py"
"""
This training script can be run both on a single gpu in debug mode,
and also in a larger training run with distributed data parallel (ddp).
To run on a single GPU, example:
$ python train.py --batch_size=32 --compile=False
To run with DDP on 4 gpus on 1 node, example:
$ torchrun --standalone --nproc_per_node=4 train.py
To run with DDP on 4 gpus across 2 nodes, example:
- Run on the first (master) node with example IP 123.456.123.456:
$ torchrun --nproc_per_node=8 --nnodes=2 --node_rank=0 --master_addr=123.456.123.456 --master_port=1234 train.py
- Run on the worker node:
$ torchrun --nproc_per_node=8 --nnodes=2 --node_rank=1 --master_addr=123.456.123.456 --master_port=1234 train.py
(If your cluster does not have Infiniband interconnect prepend NCCL_IB_DISABLE=1)
"""
import os
import time
import math
import pickle
from contextlib import nullcontext
import numpy as np
import torch
from torch.nn.parallel import DistributedDataParallel as DDP
from torch.distributed import init_process_group, destroy_process_group
from model import GPTConfig, GPT
# -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# default config values designed to train a gpt2 (124M) on OpenWebText
# I/O
out_dir = 'out'
eval_interval = 2000
log_interval = 1
eval_iters = 200
eval_only = False # if True, script exits right after the first eval
always_save_checkpoint = True # if True, always save a checkpoint after each eval
init_from = 'scratch' # 'scratch' or 'resume' or 'gpt2*'
# wandb logging
wandb_log = False # disabled by default
wandb_project = 'owt'
wandb_run_name = 'gpt2' # 'run' + str(time.time())
# data
dataset = 'openwebtext'
gradient_accumulation_steps = 5 * 8 # used to simulate larger batch sizes
batch_size = 12 # if gradient_accumulation_steps > 1, this is the micro-batch size
block_size = 1024
# model
n_layer = 12
n_head = 12
n_embd = 768
dropout = 0.0 # for pretraining 0 is good, for finetuning try 0.1+
bias = False # do we use bias inside LayerNorm and Linear layers?
# adamw optimizer
learning_rate = 6e-4 # max learning rate
max_iters = 600000 # total number of training iterations
weight_decay = 1e-1
beta1 = 0.9
beta2 = 0.95
grad_clip = 1.0 # clip gradients at this value, or disable if == 0.0
# learning rate decay settings
decay_lr = True # whether to decay the learning rate
warmup_iters = 2000 # how many steps to warm up for
lr_decay_iters = 600000 # should be ~= max_iters per Chinchilla
min_lr = 6e-5 # minimum learning rate, should be ~= learning_rate/10 per Chinchilla
# DDP settings
backend = 'nccl' # 'nccl', 'gloo', etc.
# system
device = 'cuda' # examples: 'cpu', 'cuda', 'cuda:0', 'cuda:1' etc., or try 'mps' on macbooks
dtype = 'bfloat16' if torch.cuda.is_available() and torch.cuda.is_bf16_supported() else 'float16' # 'float32', 'bfloat16', or 'float16', the latter will auto implement a GradScaler
compile = True # use PyTorch 2.0 to compile the model to be faster
# -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
config_keys = [k for k,v in globals().items() if not k.startswith('_') and isinstance(v, (int, float, bool, str))]
exec(open('configurator.py').read()) # overrides from command line or config file
config = {k: globals()[k] for k in config_keys} # will be useful for logging
# -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# various inits, derived attributes, I/O setup
ddp = int(os.environ.get('RANK', -1)) != -1 # is this a ddp run?
if ddp:
init_process_group(backend=backend)
ddp_rank = int(os.environ['RANK'])
ddp_local_rank = int(os.environ['LOCAL_RANK'])
ddp_world_size = int(os.environ['WORLD_SIZE'])
device = f'cuda:{ddp_local_rank}'
torch.cuda.set_device(device)
master_process = ddp_rank == 0 # this process will do logging, checkpointing etc.
seed_offset = ddp_rank # each process gets a different seed
# world_size number of processes will be training simultaneously, so we can scale
# down the desired gradient accumulation iterations per process proportionally
assert gradient_accumulation_steps % ddp_world_size == 0
gradient_accumulation_steps //= ddp_world_size
else:
# if not ddp, we are running on a single gpu, and one process
master_process = True
seed_offset = 0
ddp_world_size = 1
tokens_per_iter = gradient_accumulation_steps * ddp_world_size * batch_size * block_size
print(f"tokens per iteration will be: {tokens_per_iter:,}")
if master_process:
os.makedirs(out_dir, exist_ok=True)
torch.manual_seed(1337 + seed_offset)
torch.backends.cuda.matmul.allow_tf32 = True # allow tf32 on matmul
torch.backends.cudnn.allow_tf32 = True # allow tf32 on cudnn
device_type = 'cuda' if 'cuda' in device else 'cpu' # for later use in torch.autocast
# note: float16 data type will automatically use a GradScaler
ptdtype = {'float32': torch.float32, 'bfloat16': torch.bfloat16, 'float16': torch.float16}[dtype]
ctx = nullcontext() if device_type == 'cpu' else torch.amp.autocast(device_type=device_type, dtype=ptdtype)
# poor man's data loader
data_dir = os.path.join('data', dataset)
train_data = np.memmap(os.path.join(data_dir, 'train.bin'), dtype=np.uint16, mode='r')
val_data = np.memmap(os.path.join(data_dir, 'val.bin'), dtype=np.uint16, mode='r')
def get_batch(split):
data = train_data if split == 'train' else val_data
ix = torch.randint(len(data) - block_size, (batch_size,))
x = torch.stack([torch.from_numpy((data[i:i+block_size]).astype(np.int64)) for i in ix])
y = torch.stack([torch.from_numpy((data[i+1:i+1+block_size]).astype(np.int64)) for i in ix])
if device_type == 'cuda':
# pin arrays x,y, which allows us to move them to GPU asynchronously (non_blocking=True)
x, y = x.pin_memory().to(device, non_blocking=True), y.pin_memory().to(device, non_blocking=True)
else:
x, y = x.to(device), y.to(device)
return x, y
# init these up here, can override if init_from='resume' (i.e. from a checkpoint)
iter_num = 0
best_val_loss = 1e9
# attempt to derive vocab_size from the dataset
meta_path = os.path.join(data_dir, 'meta.pkl')
meta_vocab_size = None
if os.path.exists(meta_path):
with open(meta_path, 'rb') as f:
meta = pickle.load(f)
meta_vocab_size = meta['vocab_size']
print(f"found vocab_size = {meta_vocab_size} (inside {meta_path})")
# model init
model_args = dict(n_layer=n_layer, n_head=n_head, n_embd=n_embd, block_size=block_size,
bias=bias, vocab_size=None, dropout=dropout) # start with model_args from command line
if init_from == 'scratch':
# init a new model from scratch
print("Initializing a new model from scratch")
# determine the vocab size we'll use for from-scratch training
if meta_vocab_size is None:
print("defaulting to vocab_size of GPT-2 to 50304 (50257 rounded up for efficiency)")
model_args['vocab_size'] = meta_vocab_size if meta_vocab_size is not None else 50304
gptconf = GPTConfig(**model_args)
model = GPT(gptconf)
elif init_from == 'resume':
print(f"Resuming training from {out_dir}")
# resume training from a checkpoint.
ckpt_path = os.path.join(out_dir, 'ckpt.pt')
checkpoint = torch.load(ckpt_path, map_location=device)
checkpoint_model_args = checkpoint['model_args']
# force these config attributes to be equal otherwise we can't even resume training
# the rest of the attributes (e.g. dropout) can stay as desired from command line
for k in ['n_layer', 'n_head', 'n_embd', 'block_size', 'bias', 'vocab_size']:
model_args[k] = checkpoint_model_args[k]
# create the model
gptconf = GPTConfig(**model_args)
model = GPT(gptconf)
state_dict = checkpoint['model']
# fix the keys of the state dictionary :(
# honestly no idea how checkpoints sometimes get this prefix, have to debug more
unwanted_prefix = '_orig_mod.'
for k,v in list(state_dict.items()):
if k.startswith(unwanted_prefix):
state_dict[k[len(unwanted_prefix):]] = state_dict.pop(k)
model.load_state_dict(state_dict)
iter_num = checkpoint['iter_num']
best_val_loss = checkpoint['best_val_loss']
elif init_from.startswith('gpt2'):
print(f"Initializing from OpenAI GPT-2 weights: {init_from}")
# initialize from OpenAI GPT-2 weights
override_args = dict(dropout=dropout)
model = GPT.from_pretrained(init_from, override_args)
# read off the created config params, so we can store them into checkpoint correctly
for k in ['n_layer', 'n_head', 'n_embd', 'block_size', 'bias', 'vocab_size']:
model_args[k] = getattr(model.config, k)
# crop down the model block size if desired, using model surgery
if block_size < model.config.block_size:
model.crop_block_size(block_size)
model_args['block_size'] = block_size # so that the checkpoint will have the right value
model.to(device)
# initialize a GradScaler. If enabled=False scaler is a no-op
scaler = torch.cuda.amp.GradScaler(enabled=(dtype == 'float16'))
# optimizer
optimizer = model.configure_optimizers(weight_decay, learning_rate, (beta1, beta2), device_type)
if init_from == 'resume':
optimizer.load_state_dict(checkpoint['optimizer'])
checkpoint = None # free up memory
# compile the model
if compile:
print("compiling the model... (takes a ~minute)")
unoptimized_model = model
model = torch.compile(model) # requires PyTorch 2.0
# wrap model into DDP container
if ddp:
model = DDP(model, device_ids=[ddp_local_rank])
# helps estimate an arbitrarily accurate loss over either split using many batches
@torch.no_grad()
def estimate_loss():
out = {}
model.eval()
for split in ['train', 'val']:
losses = torch.zeros(eval_iters)
for k in range(eval_iters):
X, Y = get_batch(split)
with ctx:
logits, loss = model(X, Y)
losses[k] = loss.item()
out[split] = losses.mean()
model.train()
return out
# learning rate decay scheduler (cosine with warmup)
def get_lr(it):
# 1) linear warmup for warmup_iters steps
if it < warmup_iters:
return learning_rate * it / warmup_iters
# 2) if it > lr_decay_iters, return min learning rate
if it > lr_decay_iters:
return min_lr
# 3) in between, use cosine decay down to min learning rate
decay_ratio = (it - warmup_iters) / (lr_decay_iters - warmup_iters)
assert 0 <= decay_ratio <= 1
coeff = 0.5 * (1.0 + math.cos(math.pi * decay_ratio)) # coeff ranges 0..1
return min_lr + coeff * (learning_rate - min_lr)
# logging
if wandb_log and master_process:
import wandb
wandb.init(project=wandb_project, name=wandb_run_name, config=config)
# training loop
X, Y = get_batch('train') # fetch the very first batch
t0 = time.time()
local_iter_num = 0 # number of iterations in the lifetime of this process
raw_model = model.module if ddp else model # unwrap DDP container if needed
running_mfu = -1.0
while True:
# determine and set the learning rate for this iteration
lr = get_lr(iter_num) if decay_lr else learning_rate
for param_group in optimizer.param_groups:
param_group['lr'] = lr
# evaluate the loss on train/val sets and write checkpoints
if iter_num % eval_interval == 0 and master_process:
losses = estimate_loss()
print(f"step {iter_num}: train loss {losses['train']:.4f}, val loss {losses['val']:.4f}")
if wandb_log:
wandb.log({
"iter": iter_num,
"train/loss": losses['train'],
"val/loss": losses['val'],
"lr": lr,
"mfu": running_mfu*100, # convert to percentage
})
if losses['val'] < best_val_loss or always_save_checkpoint:
best_val_loss = losses['val']
if iter_num > 0:
checkpoint = {
'model': raw_model.state_dict(),
'optimizer': optimizer.state_dict(),
'model_args': model_args,
'iter_num': iter_num,
'best_val_loss': best_val_loss,
'config': config,
}
print(f"saving checkpoint to {out_dir}")
torch.save(checkpoint, os.path.join(out_dir, 'ckpt.pt'))
if iter_num == 0 and eval_only:
break
# forward backward update, with optional gradient accumulation to simulate larger batch size
# and using the GradScaler if data type is float16
for micro_step in range(gradient_accumulation_steps):
if ddp:
# in DDP training we only need to sync gradients at the last micro step.
# the official way to do this is with model.no_sync() context manager, but
# I really dislike that this bloats the code and forces us to repeat code
# looking at the source of that context manager, it just toggles this variable
model.require_backward_grad_sync = (micro_step == gradient_accumulation_steps - 1)
with ctx:
logits, loss = model(X, Y)
loss = loss / gradient_accumulation_steps # scale the loss to account for gradient accumulation
# immediately async prefetch next batch while model is doing the forward pass on the GPU
X, Y = get_batch('train')
# backward pass, with gradient scaling if training in fp16
scaler.scale(loss).backward()
# clip the gradient
if grad_clip != 0.0:
scaler.unscale_(optimizer)
torch.nn.utils.clip_grad_norm_(model.parameters(), grad_clip)
# step the optimizer and scaler if training in fp16
scaler.step(optimizer)
scaler.update()
# flush the gradients as soon as we can, no need for this memory anymore
optimizer.zero_grad(set_to_none=True)
# timing and logging
t1 = time.time()
dt = t1 - t0
t0 = t1
if iter_num % log_interval == 0 and master_process:
# get loss as float. note: this is a CPU-GPU sync point
# scale up to undo the division above, approximating the true total loss (exact would have been a sum)
lossf = loss.item() * gradient_accumulation_steps
if local_iter_num >= 5: # let the training loop settle a bit
mfu = raw_model.estimate_mfu(batch_size * gradient_accumulation_steps, dt)
running_mfu = mfu if running_mfu == -1.0 else 0.9*running_mfu + 0.1*mfu
print(f"iter {iter_num}: loss {lossf:.4f}, time {dt*1000:.2f}ms, mfu {running_mfu*100:.2f}%")
iter_num += 1
local_iter_num += 1
# termination conditions
if iter_num > max_iters:
break
if ddp:
destroy_process_group()
code to sample
#Written by Andrej Karpathy, the following code is placed in a Python file: "sample.py"
"""
Sample from a trained model
"""
import os
import pickle
from contextlib import nullcontext
import torch
import tiktoken
from model import GPTConfig, GPT
# -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
init_from = 'resume' # either 'resume' (from an out_dir) or a gpt2 variant (e.g. 'gpt2-xl')
out_dir = 'out' # ignored if init_from is not 'resume'
start = "\n" # or "<|endoftext|>" or etc. Can also specify a file, use as: "FILE:prompt.txt"
num_samples = 10 # number of samples to draw
max_new_tokens = 500 # number of tokens generated in each sample
temperature = 0.8 # 1.0 = no change, < 1.0 = less random, > 1.0 = more random, in predictions
top_k = 200 # retain only the top_k most likely tokens, clamp others to have 0 probability
seed = 1337
device = 'cuda' # examples: 'cpu', 'cuda', 'cuda:0', 'cuda:1', etc.
dtype = 'bfloat16' if torch.cuda.is_available() and torch.cuda.is_bf16_supported() else 'float16' # 'float32' or 'bfloat16' or 'float16'
compile = False # use PyTorch 2.0 to compile the model to be faster
exec(open('configurator.py').read()) # overrides from command line or config file
# -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
torch.manual_seed(seed)
torch.cuda.manual_seed(seed)
torch.backends.cuda.matmul.allow_tf32 = True # allow tf32 on matmul
torch.backends.cudnn.allow_tf32 = True # allow tf32 on cudnn
device_type = 'cuda' if 'cuda' in device else 'cpu' # for later use in torch.autocast
ptdtype = {'float32': torch.float32, 'bfloat16': torch.bfloat16, 'float16': torch.float16}[dtype]
ctx = nullcontext() if device_type == 'cpu' else torch.amp.autocast(device_type=device_type, dtype=ptdtype)
# model
if init_from == 'resume':
# init from a model saved in a specific directory
ckpt_path = os.path.join(out_dir, 'ckpt.pt')
checkpoint = torch.load(ckpt_path, map_location=device)
gptconf = GPTConfig(**checkpoint['model_args'])
model = GPT(gptconf)
state_dict = checkpoint['model']
unwanted_prefix = '_orig_mod.'
for k,v in list(state_dict.items()):
if k.startswith(unwanted_prefix):
state_dict[k[len(unwanted_prefix):]] = state_dict.pop(k)
model.load_state_dict(state_dict)
elif init_from.startswith('gpt2'):
# init from a given GPT-2 model
model = GPT.from_pretrained(init_from, dict(dropout=0.0))
model.eval()
model.to(device)
if compile:
model = torch.compile(model) # requires PyTorch 2.0 (optional)
# look for the meta pickle in case it is available in the dataset folder
load_meta = False
if init_from == 'resume' and 'config' in checkpoint and 'dataset' in checkpoint['config']: # older checkpoints might not have these...
meta_path = os.path.join('data', checkpoint['config']['dataset'], 'meta.pkl')
load_meta = os.path.exists(meta_path)
if load_meta:
print(f"Loading meta from {meta_path}...")
with open(meta_path, 'rb') as f:
meta = pickle.load(f)
# TODO want to make this more general to arbitrary encoder/decoder schemes
stoi, itos = meta['stoi'], meta['itos']
encode = lambda s: [stoi[c] for c in s]
decode = lambda l: ''.join([itos[i] for i in l])
else:
# ok let's assume gpt-2 encodings by default
print("No meta.pkl found, assuming GPT-2 encodings...")
enc = tiktoken.get_encoding("gpt2")
encode = lambda s: enc.encode(s, allowed_special={"<|endoftext|>"})
decode = lambda l: enc.decode(l)
# encode the beginning of the prompt
if start.startswith('FILE:'):
with open(start[5:], 'r', encoding='utf-8') as f:
start = f.read()
start_ids = encode(start)
x = (torch.tensor(start_ids, dtype=torch.long, device=device)[None, ...])
# run generation
with torch.no_grad():
with ctx:
for k in range(num_samples):
y = model.generate(x, max_new_tokens, temperature=temperature, top_k=top_k)
print(decode(y[0].tolist()))
print('---------------')
code for a configurator
#Written by Andrej Karpathy, the following code is placed in a Python file: "configurator.py"
"""
Poor Man's Configurator. Probably a terrible idea. Example usage:
$ python train.py config/override_file.py --batch_size=32
this will first run config/override_file.py, then override batch_size to 32
The code in this file will be run as follows from e.g. train.py:
>>> exec(open('configurator.py').read())
So it's not a Python module, it's just shuttling this code away from train.py
The code in this script then overrides the globals()
I know people are not going to love this, I just really dislike configuration
complexity and having to prepend config. to every single variable. If someone
comes up with a better simple Python solution I am all ears.
"""
import sys
from ast import literal_eval
for arg in sys.argv[1:]:
if '=' not in arg:
# assume it's the name of a config file
assert not arg.startswith('--')
config_file = arg
print(f"Overriding config with {config_file}:")
with open(config_file) as f:
print(f.read())
exec(open(config_file).read())
else:
# assume it's a --key=value argument
assert arg.startswith('--')
key, val = arg.split('=')
key = key[2:]
if key in globals():
try:
# attempt to eval it it (e.g. if bool, number, or etc)
attempt = literal_eval(val)
except (SyntaxError, ValueError):
# if that goes wrong, just use the string
attempt = val
# ensure the types match ok
assert type(attempt) == type(globals()[key])
# cross fingers
print(f"Overriding: {key} = {attempt}")
globals()[key] = attempt
else:
raise ValueError(f"Unknown config key: {key}")
code for a benchmarking
#Written by Andrej Karpathy, the following code is placed in a Python file: "bench.py"
"""
A much shorter version of train.py for benchmarking
"""
import os
from contextlib import nullcontext
import numpy as np
import time
import torch
from model import GPTConfig, GPT
# -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
batch_size = 12
block_size = 1024
bias = False
real_data = True
seed = 1337
device = 'cuda' # examples: 'cpu', 'cuda', 'cuda:0', 'cuda:1', etc.
dtype = 'bfloat16' if torch.cuda.is_available() and torch.cuda.is_bf16_supported() else 'float16' # 'float32' or 'bfloat16' or 'float16'
compile = True # use PyTorch 2.0 to compile the model to be faster
profile = False # use pytorch profiler, or just simple benchmarking?
exec(open('configurator.py').read()) # overrides from command line or config file
# -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
torch.manual_seed(seed)
torch.cuda.manual_seed(seed)
torch.backends.cuda.matmul.allow_tf32 = True # allow tf32 on matmul
torch.backends.cudnn.allow_tf32 = True # allow tf32 on cudnn
device_type = 'cuda' if 'cuda' in device else 'cpu' # for later use in torch.autocast
ptdtype = {'float32': torch.float32, 'bfloat16': torch.bfloat16, 'float16': torch.float16}[dtype]
ctx = nullcontext() if device_type == 'cpu' else torch.amp.autocast(device_type=device_type, dtype=ptdtype)
# data loading init
if real_data:
dataset = 'openwebtext'
data_dir = os.path.join('data', dataset)
train_data = np.memmap(os.path.join(data_dir, 'train.bin'), dtype=np.uint16, mode='r')
def get_batch(split):
data = train_data # note ignore split in benchmarking script
ix = torch.randint(len(data) - block_size, (batch_size,))
x = torch.stack([torch.from_numpy((data[i:i+block_size]).astype(np.int64)) for i in ix])
y = torch.stack([torch.from_numpy((data[i+1:i+1+block_size]).astype(np.int64)) for i in ix])
x, y = x.pin_memory().to(device, non_blocking=True), y.pin_memory().to(device, non_blocking=True)
return x, y
else:
# alternatively, if fixed data is desired to not care about data loading
x = torch.randint(50304, (batch_size, block_size), device=device)
y = torch.randint(50304, (batch_size, block_size), device=device)
get_batch = lambda split: (x, y)
# model init
gptconf = GPTConfig(
block_size = block_size, # how far back does the model look? i.e. context size
n_layer = 12, n_head = 12, n_embd = 768, # size of the model
dropout = 0, # for determinism
bias = bias,
)
model = GPT(gptconf)
model.to(device)
optimizer = model.configure_optimizers(weight_decay=1e-2, learning_rate=1e-4, betas=(0.9, 0.95), device_type=device_type)
if compile:
print("Compiling model...")
model = torch.compile(model) # pytorch 2.0
if profile:
# useful docs on pytorch profiler:
# - tutorial https://pytorch.org/tutorials/intermediate/tensorboard_profiler_tutorial.html
# - api https://pytorch.org/docs/stable/profiler.html#torch.profiler.profile
wait, warmup, active = 5, 5, 5
num_steps = wait + warmup + active
with torch.profiler.profile(
activities=[torch.profiler.ProfilerActivity.CPU, torch.profiler.ProfilerActivity.CUDA],
schedule=torch.profiler.schedule(wait=wait, warmup=warmup, active=active, repeat=1),
on_trace_ready=torch.profiler.tensorboard_trace_handler('./bench_log'),
record_shapes=False,
profile_memory=False,
with_stack=False, # incurs an additional overhead, disable if not needed
with_flops=True,
with_modules=False, # only for torchscript models atm
) as prof:
X, Y = get_batch('train')
for k in range(num_steps):
with ctx:
logits, loss = model(X, Y)
X, Y = get_batch('train')
optimizer.zero_grad(set_to_none=True)
loss.backward()
optimizer.step()
lossf = loss.item()
print(f"{k}/{num_steps} loss: {lossf:.4f}")
prof.step() # notify the profiler at end of each step
else:
# simple benchmarking
torch.cuda.synchronize()
for stage, num_steps in enumerate([10, 20]): # burnin, then benchmark
t0 = time.time()
X, Y = get_batch('train')
for k in range(num_steps):
with ctx:
logits, loss = model(X, Y)
X, Y = get_batch('train')
optimizer.zero_grad(set_to_none=True)
loss.backward()
optimizer.step()
lossf = loss.item()
print(f"{k}/{num_steps} loss: {lossf:.4f}")
torch.cuda.synchronize()
t1 = time.time()
dt = t1-t0
mfu = model.estimate_mfu(batch_size * 1 * num_steps, dt)
if stage == 1:
print(f"time per iteration: {dt/num_steps*1000:.4f}ms, MFU: {mfu*100:.2f}%")
it/ai_nlp_chatgpt2.txt · Last modified: 2024/04/03 10:32 by gary1