# Axolotl Axolotl is a tool designed to streamline the fine-tuning of various AI models, offering support for multiple configurations and architectures. Features: - Train various Huggingface models such as llama, pythia, falcon, mpt - Supports fullfinetune, lora, qlora, relora, and gptq - Customize configurations using a simple yaml file or CLI overwrite - Load different dataset formats, use custom formats, or bring your own tokenized datasets - Integrated with xformer, flash attention, rope scaling, and multipacking - Works with single GPU or multiple GPUs via FSDP or Deepspeed - Easily run with Docker locally or on the cloud - Log results and optionally checkpoints to wandb or mlflow - And more!
## Table of Contents - [Introduction](#axolotl) - [Supported Features](#axolotl-supports) - [Quickstart](#quickstart-) - [Installation](#installation) - [Docker](#docker) - [Conda/Pip venv](#condapip-venv) - [Runpod](#runpod) - [LambdaLabs](#lambdalabs) - [Windows](#windows) - [Launching on public clouds via SkyPilot](#launching-on-public-clouds-via-skypilot) - [Dataset](#dataset) - [How to Add Custom Prompts](#how-to-add-custom-prompts) - [How to Use Custom Pretokenized Dataset](#how-to-use-your-custom-pretokenized-dataset) - [Config](#config) - [Train](#train) - [Inference](#inference) - [Merge LORA to Base](#merge-lora-to-base) - [Special Tokens](#special-tokens) - [Common Errors](#common-errors-) - [Tokenization Mismatch b/w Training & Inference](#tokenization-mismatch-bw-inference--training) - [Debugging Axolotl](#debugging-axolotl) - [Need Help?](#need-help-) - [Badge](#badge-) - [Community Showcase](#community-showcase) - [Contributing](#contributing-) - [Sponsors](#sponsors-)
axolotl

Axolotl provides a unified repository for fine-tuning
a variety of AI models with ease

Go ahead and Axolotl questions!!

pre-commit PyTest Status
## Axolotl supports | | fp16/fp32 | lora | qlora | gptq | gptq w/flash attn | flash attn | xformers attn | |-------------|:----------|:-----|-------|------|-------------------|------------|--------------| | llama | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | | Mistral | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | | Mixtral-MoE | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ❓ | ❓ | ❓ | ❓ | | Pythia | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ❌ | ❌ | ❌ | ❓ | | cerebras | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ❌ | ❌ | ❌ | ❓ | | btlm | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ❌ | ❌ | ❌ | ❓ | | mpt | ✅ | ❌ | ❓ | ❌ | ❌ | ❌ | ❓ | | falcon | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ❌ | ❌ | ❌ | ❓ | | gpt-j | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ❌ | ❌ | ❓ | ❓ | | XGen | ✅ | ❓ | ✅ | ❓ | ❓ | ❓ | ✅ | | phi | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ❓ | ❓ | ❓ | ❓ | | RWKV | ✅ | ❓ | ❓ | ❓ | ❓ | ❓ | ❓ | | Qwen | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ❓ | ❓ | ❓ | ❓ | ## Quickstart ⚡ Get started with Axolotl in just a few steps! This quickstart guide will walk you through setting up and running a basic fine-tuning task. **Requirements**: Python >=3.9 and Pytorch >=2.0. `pip3 install "axolotl[flash-attn,deepspeed] @ git+https://github.com/OpenAccess-AI-Collective/axolotl"` ### For developers ```bash git clone https://github.com/OpenAccess-AI-Collective/axolotl cd axolotl pip3 install packaging pip3 install -e '.[flash-attn,deepspeed]' ``` ### Usage ```bash # finetune lora accelerate launch -m axolotl.cli.train examples/openllama-3b/lora.yml # inference accelerate launch -m axolotl.cli.inference examples/openllama-3b/lora.yml \ --lora_model_dir="./lora-out" # gradio accelerate launch -m axolotl.cli.inference examples/openllama-3b/lora.yml \ --lora_model_dir="./lora-out" --gradio ``` ## Installation ### Environment #### Docker ```bash docker run --gpus '"all"' --rm -it winglian/axolotl:main-py3.10-cu118-2.0.1 ``` Or run on the current files for development: ```sh docker compose up -d ```
Docker advanced A more powerful Docker command to run would be this: ```bash docker run --privileged --gpus '"all"' --shm-size 10g --rm -it --name axolotl --ipc=host --ulimit memlock=-1 --ulimit stack=67108864 --mount type=volume,src=axolotl,target=/workspace/axolotl -v ${HOME}/.cache/huggingface:/root/.cache/huggingface winglian/axolotl:main-py3.10-cu118-2.0.1 ``` It additionally: * Prevents memory issues when running e.g. deepspeed (e.g. you could hit SIGBUS/signal 7 error) through `--ipc` and `--ulimit` args. * Persists the downloaded HF data (models etc.) and your modifications to axolotl code through `--mount`/`-v` args. * The `--name` argument simply makes it easier to refer to the container in vscode (`Dev Containers: Attach to Running Container...`) or in your terminal. * The `--privileged` flag gives all capabilities to the container. * The `--shm-size 10g` argument increases the shared memory size. Use this if you see `exitcode: -7` errors using deepspeed. [More information on nvidia website](https://docs.nvidia.com/deeplearning/frameworks/user-guide/index.html#setincshmem)
#### Conda/Pip venv 1. Install python >=**3.9** 2. Install pytorch stable https://pytorch.org/get-started/locally/ 3. Install Axolotl along with python dependencies ```bash pip3 install packaging pip3 install -e '.[flash-attn,deepspeed]' ``` 4. (Optional) Login to Huggingface to use gated models/datasets. ```bash huggingface-cli login ``` Get the token at huggingface.co/settings/tokens #### Runpod Use `winglian/axolotl-runpod:main-latest` or use this [direct link](https://runpod.io/gsc?template=v2ickqhz9s&ref=6i7fkpdz) #### LambdaLabs
Click to Expand 1. Install python ```bash sudo apt update sudo apt install -y python3.9 sudo update-alternatives --install /usr/bin/python python /usr/bin/python3.9 1 sudo update-alternatives --config python # pick 3.9 if given option python -V # should be 3.9 ``` 2. Install pip ```bash wget https://bootstrap.pypa.io/get-pip.py python get-pip.py ``` 3. Install torch ```bash pip3 install -U torch --index-url https://download.pytorch.org/whl/cu118 ``` 4. Axolotl ```bash git clone https://github.com/OpenAccess-AI-Collective/axolotl cd axolotl pip3 install packaging pip3 install -e '.[flash-attn,deepspeed]' pip3 install protobuf==3.20.3 pip3 install -U --ignore-installed requests Pillow psutil scipy ``` 5. Set path ```bash export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu:$LD_LIBRARY_PATH ```
#### Windows Please use WSL or Docker! #### Launching on public clouds via SkyPilot To launch on GPU instances (both on-demand and spot instances) on 7+ clouds (GCP, AWS, Azure, OCI, and more), you can use [SkyPilot](https://skypilot.readthedocs.io/en/latest/index.html): ```bash pip install "skypilot-nightly[gcp,aws,azure,oci,lambda,kubernetes,ibm,scp]" # choose your clouds sky check ``` Get the [example YAMLs](https://github.com/skypilot-org/skypilot/tree/master/llm/axolotl) of using Axolotl to finetune `mistralai/Mistral-7B-v0.1`: ``` git clone https://github.com/skypilot-org/skypilot.git cd skypilot/llm/axolotl ``` Use one command to launch: ```bash # On-demand HF_TOKEN=xx sky launch axolotl.yaml --env HF_TOKEN # Managed spot (auto-recovery on preemption) HF_TOKEN=xx BUCKET= sky spot launch axolotl-spot.yaml --env HF_TOKEN --env BUCKET ``` ### Dataset Axolotl supports a variety of dataset formats. Below are some of the formats you can use. Have dataset(s) in one of the following format (JSONL recommended): - `alpaca`: instruction; input(optional) ```json {"instruction": "...", "input": "...", "output": "..."} ``` - `sharegpt`: conversations where `from` is `human`/`gpt`. (optional: `system` to override default system prompt) ```json {"conversations": [{"from": "...", "value": "..."}]} ``` - `llama-2`: the json is the same format as `sharegpt` above, with the following config (see the [config section](#config) for more details) ```yml datasets: - path: type: sharegpt conversation: llama-2 ``` - `completion`: raw corpus ```json {"text": "..."} ```
See other formats - `jeopardy`: question and answer ```json {"question": "...", "category": "...", "answer": "..."} ``` - `oasst`: instruction ```json {"INSTRUCTION": "...", "RESPONSE": "..."} ``` - `gpteacher`: instruction; input(optional) ```json {"instruction": "...", "input": "...", "response": "..."} ``` - `reflection`: instruction with reflect; input(optional) ```json {"instruction": "...", "input": "...", "output": "...", "reflection": "...", "corrected": "..."} ``` - `explainchoice`: question, choices, (solution OR explanation) ```json {"question": "...", "choices": ["..."], "solution": "...", "explanation": "..."} ``` - `concisechoice`: question, choices, (solution OR explanation) ```json {"question": "...", "choices": ["..."], "solution": "...", "explanation": "..."} ``` - `summarizetldr`: article and summary ```json {"article": "...", "summary": "..."} ``` - `alpaca_chat`: basic instruct for alpaca chat ```json {"instruction": "...", "input": "...", "response": "..."} ``` - `alpaca_chat.load_qa`: question and answer for alpaca chat ```json {"question": "...", "answer": "..."} ``` - `alpaca_chat.load_concise`: question and answer for alpaca chat, for concise answers ```json {"instruction": "...", "input": "...", "response": "..."} ``` - `alpaca_chat.load_camel_ai`: question and answer for alpaca chat, for load_camel_ai ```json {"message_1": "...", "message_2": "..."} ``` - `alpaca_w_system.load_open_orca`: support for open orca datasets with included system prompts, instruct ```json {"system_prompt": "...", "question": "...", "response": "..."} ``` - `context_qa`: in context question answering from an article ```json {"article": "...", "question": "...", "answer": "..."} ``` - `context_qa.load_v2`: in context question answering (alternate) ```json {"context": "...", "question": "...", "answer": "..."} ``` - `context_qa.load_404`: in context question answering from an article, with default response for no answer from context ```json {"article": "...", "unanswerable_question": "..."} ``` - `creative_acr.load_answer`: instruction and revision ```json {"instruction": "...", "revision": "..."} ``` - `creative_acr.load_critique`: critique ```json {"scores": "...", "critiques": "...", "instruction": "...", "answer": "..."} ``` - `creative_acr.load_revise`: critique and revise ```json {"scores": "...", "critiques": "...", "instruction": "...", "answer": "...", "revision": "..."} ``` - `pygmalion`: pygmalion ```json {"conversations": [{"role": "...", "value": "..."}]} ``` - `metharme`: instruction, adds additional eos tokens ```json {"prompt": "...", "generation": "..."} ``` - `sharegpt.load_role`: conversations where `role` is used instead of `from` ```json {"conversations": [{"role": "...", "value": "..."}]} ``` - `sharegpt.load_guanaco`: conversations where `from` is `prompter`/`assistant` instead of default sharegpt ```json {"conversations": [{"from": "...", "value": "..."}]} ``` - `sharegpt_jokes`: creates a chat where bot is asked to tell a joke, then explain why the joke is funny ```json {"conversations": [{"title": "...", "text": "...", "explanation": "..."}]} ```
#### How to add custom prompts For a dataset that is preprocessed for instruction purposes: ```json {"instruction": "...", "output": "..."} ``` You can use this example in your YAML config: ```yaml datasets: - path: repo type: system_prompt: "" field_system: system format: "[INST] {instruction} [/INST]" no_input_format: "[INST] {instruction} [/INST]" ``` #### How to use your custom pretokenized dataset - Do not pass a `type:` - Columns in Dataset must be exactly `input_ids`, `attention_mask`, `labels` ### Config See [examples](examples) for quick start. It is recommended to duplicate and modify to your needs. The most important options are: - model ```yaml base_model: ./llama-7b-hf # local or huggingface repo ``` Note: The code will load the right architecture. - dataset ```yaml sequence_len: 2048 # max token length for prompt # huggingface repo datasets: - path: vicgalle/alpaca-gpt4 type: alpaca # format from earlier # huggingface repo with specific configuration/subset datasets: - path: EleutherAI/pile name: enron_emails type: completion # format from earlier field: text # Optional[str] default: text, field to use for completion data # huggingface repo with multiple named configurations/subsets datasets: - path: bigcode/commitpackft name: - ruby - python - typescript type: ... # unimplemented custom format # fastchat conversation # See 'conversation' options: https://github.com/lm-sys/FastChat/blob/main/fastchat/conversation.py datasets: - path: ... type: sharegpt conversation: chatml # local datasets: - path: data.jsonl # or json ds_type: json # see other options below type: alpaca # dataset with splits, but no train split dataset: - path: knowrohit07/know_sql type: context_qa.load_v2 train_on_split: validation # loading from s3 or gcs # s3 creds will be loaded from the system default and gcs only supports public access dataset: - path: s3://path_to_ds # Accepts folder with arrow/parquet or file path like above. Supports s3, gcs. ... ``` - loading ```yaml load_in_4bit: true load_in_8bit: true bf16: true # require >=ampere fp16: true tf32: true # require >=ampere bfloat16: true # require >=ampere, use instead of bf16 when you don't want AMP (automatic mixed precision) float16: true # use instead of fp16 when you don't want AMP ``` Note: Repo does not do 4-bit quantization. - lora ```yaml adapter: lora # qlora or leave blank for full finetune lora_r: 8 lora_alpha: 16 lora_dropout: 0.05 lora_target_modules: - q_proj - v_proj ```
All yaml options (click me) ```yaml # This is the huggingface model that contains *.pt, *.safetensors, or *.bin files # This can also be a relative path to a model on disk base_model: ./llama-7b-hf # You can specify an ignore pattern if the model repo contains more than 1 model type (*.pt, etc) base_model_ignore_patterns: # If the base_model repo on hf hub doesn't include configuration .json files, # You can set that here, or leave this empty to default to base_model base_model_config: ./llama-7b-hf # You can specify to choose a specific model revision from huggingface hub model_revision: # Optional tokenizer configuration override in case you want to use a different tokenizer # than the one defined in the base model tokenizer_config: # If you want to specify the type of model to load, AutoModelForCausalLM is a good choice too model_type: AutoModelForCausalLM # Corresponding tokenizer for the model AutoTokenizer is a good choice tokenizer_type: AutoTokenizer # Trust remote code for untrusted source trust_remote_code: # use_fast option for tokenizer loading from_pretrained, default to True tokenizer_use_fast: # Whether to use the legacy tokenizer setting, defaults to True tokenizer_legacy: # Resize the model embeddings when new tokens are added to multiples of 32 # This is reported to improve training speed on some models resize_token_embeddings_to_32x: # Used to identify which the model is based on is_falcon_derived_model: is_llama_derived_model: # Please note that if you set this to true, `padding_side` will be set to "left" by default is_mistral_derived_model: is_qwen_derived_model: # optional overrides to the base model configuration model_config: # RoPE Scaling https://github.com/huggingface/transformers/pull/24653 rope_scaling: type: # linear | dynamic factor: # float # optional overrides to the bnb 4bit quantization configuration # https://huggingface.co/docs/transformers/main/main_classes/quantization#transformers.BitsAndBytesConfig bnb_config_kwargs: # These are default values llm_int8_has_fp16_weight: false bnb_4bit_quant_type: nf4 bnb_4bit_use_double_quant: true # Whether you are training a 4-bit GPTQ quantized model gptq: true gptq_groupsize: 128 # group size gptq_model_v1: false # v1 or v2 # This will attempt to quantize the model down to 8 bits and use adam 8 bit optimizer load_in_8bit: true # Use bitsandbytes 4 bit load_in_4bit: # Use CUDA bf16 bf16: true # bool or 'full' for `bf16_full_eval`. require >=ampere # Use CUDA fp16 fp16: true # Use CUDA tf32 tf32: true # require >=ampere # No AMP (automatic mixed precision) bfloat16: true # require >=ampere float16: true # Limit the memory for all available GPUs to this amount (if an integer, expressed in gigabytes); default: unset gpu_memory_limit: 20GiB # Do the LoRA/PEFT loading on CPU -- this is required if the base model is so large it takes up most or all of the available GPU VRAM, e.g. during a model and LoRA merge lora_on_cpu: true # A list of one or more datasets to finetune the model with datasets: # HuggingFace dataset repo | s3://,gs:// path | "json" for local dataset, make sure to fill data_files - path: vicgalle/alpaca-gpt4 # The type of prompt to use for training. [alpaca, sharegpt, gpteacher, oasst, reflection] type: alpaca # format | format: (chat/instruct) | .load_ ds_type: # Optional[str] (json|arrow|parquet|text|csv) defines the datatype when path is a file data_files: # Optional[str] path to source data files shards: # Optional[int] number of shards to split data into name: # Optional[str] name of dataset configuration to load train_on_split: train # Optional[str] name of dataset split to load from # Optional[str] fastchat conversation type, only used with type: sharegpt conversation: # Options (see Conversation 'name'): https://github.com/lm-sys/FastChat/blob/main/fastchat/conversation.py field_human: # Optional[str]. Human key to use for conversation. field_model: # Optional[str]. Assistant key to use for conversation. # Custom user prompt - path: repo type: # The below are defaults. only set what's needed. system_prompt: "" system_format: "{system}" field_system: system field_instruction: instruction field_input: input field_output: output # Customizable to be single line or multi-line # 'format' can include {input} format: |- User: {instruction} {input} Assistant: # 'no_input_format' cannot include {input} no_input_format: "{instruction} " # For `completion` datsets only, uses the provided field instead of `text` column field: # use RL training: dpo, ipo, kto_pair rl: # Saves the desired chat template to the tokenizer_config.json for easier inferencing # Currently supports chatml and inst (mistral/mixtral) chat_template: chatml # Axolotl attempts to save the dataset as an arrow after packing the data together so # subsequent training attempts load faster, relative path dataset_prepared_path: data/last_run_prepared # Push prepared dataset to hub push_dataset_to_hub: # repo path # The maximum number of processes to use while preprocessing your input dataset. This defaults to `os.cpu_count()` # if not set. dataset_processes: # defaults to os.cpu_count() if not set # push checkpoints to hub hub_model_id: # repo path to push finetuned model # how to push checkpoints to hub # https://huggingface.co/docs/transformers/v4.31.0/en/main_classes/trainer#transformers.TrainingArguments.hub_strategy hub_strategy: # Whether to use hf `use_auth_token` for loading datasets. Useful for fetching private datasets # Required to be true when used in combination with `push_dataset_to_hub` hf_use_auth_token: # boolean # How much of the dataset to set aside as evaluation. 1 = 100%, 0.50 = 50%, etc. 0 for no eval. val_set_size: 0.04 # Num shards for whole dataset dataset_shard_num: # Index of shard to use for whole dataset dataset_shard_idx: # The maximum length of an input to train with, this should typically be less than 2048 # as most models have a token/context limit of 2048 sequence_len: 2048 # Pad inputs so each step uses constant sized buffers # This will reduce memory fragmentation and may prevent OOMs, by re-using memory more efficiently pad_to_sequence_len: # Max sequence length to concatenate training samples together up to # Inspired by StackLLaMA. see https://huggingface.co/blog/stackllama#supervised-fine-tuning # FutureWarning: This will soon be DEPRECATED max_packed_sequence_len: 1024 # Use efficient multi-packing with block diagonal attention and per sequence position_ids. Recommend set to 'true' sample_packing: # Set to 'false' if getting errors during eval with sample_packing on. eval_sample_packing: # You can set these packing optimizations AFTER starting a training at least once. # The trainer will provide recommended values for these values. sample_packing_eff_est: total_num_tokens: # Passed through to transformers when loading the model when launched without accelerate # Use `sequential` when training w/ model parallelism to limit memory device_map: # Defines the max memory usage per gpu on the system. Passed through to transformers when loading the model. max_memory: # If you want to use 'lora' or 'qlora' or leave blank to train all parameters in original model adapter: lora # If you already have a lora model trained that you want to load, put that here. # This means after training, if you want to test the model, you should set this to the value of `output_dir`. # Note that if you merge an adapter to the base model, a new subdirectory `merged` will be created under the `output_dir`. lora_model_dir: # LoRA hyperparameters # For more details about the following options, see: # https://www.anyscale.com/blog/fine-tuning-llms-lora-or-full-parameter-an-in-depth-analysis-with-llama-2 lora_r: 8 lora_alpha: 16 lora_dropout: 0.05 lora_target_modules: - q_proj - v_proj # - k_proj # - o_proj # - gate_proj # - down_proj # - up_proj lora_target_linear: # If true, will target all linear layers # If you added new tokens to the tokenizer, you may need to save some LoRA modules because they need to know the new tokens. # For LLaMA and Mistral, you need to save `embed_tokens` and `lm_head`. It may vary for other models. # `embed_tokens` converts tokens to embeddings, and `lm_head` converts embeddings to token probabilities. # https://github.com/huggingface/peft/issues/334#issuecomment-1561727994 lora_modules_to_save: # - embed_tokens # - lm_head lora_fan_in_fan_out: false # ReLoRA configuration # Must use either 'lora' or 'qlora' adapter, and does not support fsdp or deepspeed relora_steps: # Number of steps per ReLoRA restart relora_warmup_steps: # Number of per-restart warmup steps relora_cpu_offload: # True to perform lora weight merges on cpu during restarts, for modest gpu memory savings # wandb configuration if you're using it # Make sure your `WANDB_API_KEY` environment variable is set (recommended) or you login to wandb with `wandb login`. wandb_mode: # "offline" to save run metadata locally and not sync to the server, "disabled" to turn off wandb wandb_project: # Your wandb project name wandb_entity: # A wandb Team name if using a Team wandb_watch: wandb_name: # Set the name of your wandb run wandb_run_id: # Set the ID of your wandb run wandb_log_model: # "checkpoint" to log model to wandb Artifacts every `save_steps` or "end" to log only at the end of training # mlflow configuration if you're using it mlflow_tracking_uri: # URI to mlflow mlflow_experiment_name: # Your experiment name # Where to save the full-finetuned model to output_dir: ./completed-model # Whether to use torch.compile and which backend to use torch_compile: # bool torch_compile_backend: # Optional[str] # Training hyperparameters # If greater than 1, backpropagation will be skipped and the gradients will be accumulated for the given number of steps. gradient_accumulation_steps: 1 # The number of samples to include in each batch. This is the number of samples sent to each GPU. micro_batch_size: 2 eval_batch_size: num_epochs: 4 warmup_steps: 100 # cannot use with warmup_ratio warmup_ratio: 0.05 # cannot use with warmup_steps learning_rate: 0.00003 lr_quadratic_warmup: logging_steps: eval_steps: # Leave empty to eval at each epoch, integers for every N steps. decimal for fraction of total steps evals_per_epoch: # number of times per epoch to run evals, mutually exclusive with eval_steps save_strategy: # Set to `no` to skip checkpoint saves save_steps: # Leave empty to save at each epoch saves_per_epoch: # number of times per epoch to save a checkpoint, mutually exclusive with save_steps save_total_limit: # Checkpoints saved at a time # Maximum number of iterations to train for. It precedes num_epochs which means that # if both are set, num_epochs will not be guaranteed. # e.g., when 1 epoch is 1000 steps => `num_epochs: 2` and `max_steps: 100` will train for 100 steps max_steps: eval_table_size: # Approximate number of predictions sent to wandb depending on batch size. Enabled above 0. Default is 0 eval_table_max_new_tokens: # Total number of tokens generated for predictions sent to wandb. Default is 128 loss_watchdog_threshold: # High loss value, indicating the learning has broken down (a good estimate is ~2 times the loss at the start of training) loss_watchdog_patience: # Number of high-loss steps in a row before the trainer aborts (default: 3) # Save model as safetensors (require safetensors package) save_safetensors: # Whether to mask out or include the human's prompt from the training labels train_on_inputs: false # Group similarly sized data to minimize padding. # May be slower to start, as it must download and sort the entire dataset. # Note that training loss may have an oscillating pattern with this enabled. group_by_length: false # Whether to use gradient checkpointing https://huggingface.co/docs/transformers/v4.18.0/en/performance#gradient-checkpointing gradient_checkpointing: false # additional kwargs to pass to the trainer for gradient checkpointing # gradient_checkpointing_kwargs: # use_reentrant: false # Stop training after this many evaluation losses have increased in a row # https://huggingface.co/transformers/v4.2.2/_modules/transformers/trainer_callback.html#EarlyStoppingCallback early_stopping_patience: 3 # Specify a scheduler and kwargs to use with the optimizer lr_scheduler: # 'one_cycle' | 'log_sweep' | empty for cosine lr_scheduler_kwargs: cosine_min_lr_ratio: # decay lr to some percentage of the peak lr, e.g. cosine_min_lr_ratio=0.1 for 10% of peak lr # For one_cycle optim lr_div_factor: # Learning rate div factor # For log_sweep optim log_sweep_min_lr: log_sweep_max_lr: # Specify optimizer # Valid values are driven by the Transformers OptimizerNames class, see: # https://github.com/huggingface/transformers/blob/95b374952dc27d8511541d6f5a4e22c9ec11fb24/src/transformers/training_args.py#L134 # # Note that not all optimizers may be available in your environment, ex: 'adamw_anyprecision' is part of # torchdistx, 'adamw_bnb_8bit' is part of bnb.optim.Adam8bit, etc. When in doubt, it is recommended to start with the optimizer used # in the examples/ for your model and fine-tuning use case. # # Valid values for 'optimizer' include: # - adamw_hf # - adamw_torch # - adamw_torch_fused # - adamw_torch_xla # - adamw_apex_fused # - adafactor # - adamw_anyprecision # - sgd # - adagrad # - adamw_bnb_8bit # - lion_8bit # - lion_32bit # - paged_adamw_32bit # - paged_adamw_8bit # - paged_lion_32bit # - paged_lion_8bit optimizer: # Specify weight decay weight_decay: # adamw hyperparams adam_beta1: adam_beta2: adam_epsilon: # Gradient clipping max norm max_grad_norm: # Augmentation techniques # NEFT https://arxiv.org/abs/2310.05914, set this to a number (paper default is 5) to add noise to embeddings # currently only supported on Llama and Mistral neftune_noise_alpha: # Whether to bettertransformers flash_optimum: # Whether to use xformers attention patch https://github.com/facebookresearch/xformers: xformers_attention: # Whether to use flash attention patch https://github.com/Dao-AILab/flash-attention: flash_attention: flash_attn_cross_entropy: # Whether to use flash-attention cross entropy implementation - advanced use only flash_attn_rms_norm: # Whether to use flash-attention rms norm implementation - advanced use only flash_attn_fuse_qkv: # Whether to fuse QKV into a single operation flash_attn_fuse_mlp: # Whether to fuse part of the MLP into a single operation # Whether to use scaled-dot-product attention # https://pytorch.org/docs/stable/generated/torch.nn.functional.scaled_dot_product_attention.html sdp_attention: # Resume from a specific checkpoint dir resume_from_checkpoint: # If resume_from_checkpoint isn't set and you simply want it to start where it left off. # Be careful with this being turned on between different models. auto_resume_from_checkpoints: false # Don't mess with this, it's here for accelerate and torchrun local_rank: # Add or change special tokens. # If you add tokens here, you don't need to add them to the `tokens` list. special_tokens: # bos_token: "" # eos_token: "" # unk_token: "" # Add extra tokens. tokens: # FSDP fsdp: fsdp_config: # Deepspeed config path. e.g., deepspeed/zero3.json deepspeed: # Advanced DDP Arguments ddp_timeout: ddp_bucket_cap_mb: ddp_broadcast_buffers: # Path to torch distx for optim 'adamw_anyprecision' torchdistx_path: # Set to HF dataset for type: 'completion' for streaming instead of pre-tokenize pretraining_dataset: # Debug mode debug: # Seed seed: # Allow overwrite yml config using from cli strict: ```
Understanding of batch size and gradient accumulation steps
Gradient accumulation means accumulating gradients over several mini-batches and updating the model weights afterward. When the samples in each batch are diverse, this technique doesn't significantly impact learning. This method allows for effective training with larger effective batch sizes without needing proportionally larger memory. Here's why: 1. **Memory Consumption with Batch Size**: The primary reason increasing the batch size impacts memory is due to the storage requirements for intermediate activations. When you forward propagate a batch through a network, you have to store the activations at each layer for each sample in the batch, because these activations are used during backpropagation to compute gradients. Therefore, larger batches mean more activations, leading to greater GPU memory consumption. 2. **Gradient Accumulation**: With gradient accumulation, you're effectively simulating a larger batch size by accumulating gradients over several smaller batches (or micro-batches). However, at any given time, you're only forward and backward propagating a micro-batch. This means you only store activations for the micro-batch, not the full accumulated batch. As a result, you can simulate the effect of a larger batch size without the memory cost of storing activations for a large batch. **Example 1:** Micro batch size: 3 Gradient accumulation steps: 2 Number of GPUs: 3 Total batch size = 3 * 2 * 3 = 18 ``` | GPU 1 | GPU 2 | GPU 3 | |----------------|----------------|----------------| | S1, S2, S3 | S4, S5, S6 | S7, S8, S9 | | e1, e2, e3 | e4, e5, e6 | e7, e8, e9 | |----------------|----------------|----------------| | → (accumulate) | → (accumulate) | → (accumulate) | |----------------|----------------|----------------| | S10, S11, S12 | S13, S14, S15 | S16, S17, S18 | | e10, e11, e12 | e13, e14, e15 | e16, e17, e18 | |----------------|----------------|----------------| | → (apply) | → (apply) | → (apply) | Accumulated gradient for the weight w1 after the second iteration (considering all GPUs): Total gradient for w1 = e1 + e2 + e3 + e4 + e5 + e6 + e7 + e8 + e9 + e10 + e11 + e12 + e13 + e14 + e15 + e16 + e17 + e18 Weight update for w1: w1_new = w1_old - learning rate x (Total gradient for w1 / 18) ``` **Example 2:** Micro batch size: 2 Gradient accumulation steps: 1 Number of GPUs: 3 Total batch size = 2 * 1 * 3 = 6 ``` | GPU 1 | GPU 2 | GPU 3 | |-----------|-----------|-----------| | S1, S2 | S3, S4 | S5, S6 | | e1, e2 | e3, e4 | e5, e6 | |-----------|-----------|-----------| | → (apply) | → (apply) | → (apply) | Accumulated gradient for the weight w1 (considering all GPUs): Total gradient for w1 = e1 + e2 + e3 + e4 + e5 + e6 Weight update for w1: w1_new = w1_old - learning rate × (Total gradient for w1 / 6) ```
### Train Run ```bash accelerate launch -m axolotl.cli.train your_config.yml ``` #### Preprocess dataset You can optionally pre-tokenize dataset with the following before finetuning. This is recommended for large datasets. - Set `dataset_prepared_path:` to a local folder for saving and loading pre-tokenized dataset. - (Optional): Set `push_dataset_to_hub: hf_user/repo` to push it to Huggingface. - (Optional): Use `--debug` to see preprocessed examples. ```bash python -m axolotl.cli.preprocess your_config.yml ``` #### Multi-GPU Below are the options available in axolotl for training with multiple GPUs. Note that DeepSpeed is the recommended multi-GPU option currently because FSDP may experience [loss instability](https://github.com/huggingface/transformers/issues/26498). ##### DeepSpeed Deepspeed is an optimization suite for multi-gpu systems allowing you to train much larger models than you might typically be able to fit into your GPU's VRAM. More information about the various optimization types for deepspeed is available at https://huggingface.co/docs/accelerate/main/en/usage_guides/deepspeed#what-is-integrated We provide several default deepspeed JSON configurations for ZeRO stage 1, 2, and 3. ```yaml deepspeed: deepspeed/zero1.json ``` ```shell accelerate launch -m axolotl.cli.train examples/llama-2/config.py --deepspeed deepspeed/zero1.json ``` ##### FSDP - llama FSDP ```yaml fsdp: - full_shard - auto_wrap fsdp_config: fsdp_offload_params: true fsdp_state_dict_type: FULL_STATE_DICT fsdp_transformer_layer_cls_to_wrap: LlamaDecoderLayer ``` ##### Weights & Biases Logging Make sure your `WANDB_API_KEY` environment variable is set (recommended) or you login to wandb with `wandb login`. - wandb options ```yaml wandb_mode: wandb_project: wandb_entity: wandb_watch: wandb_name: wandb_log_model: ``` ##### Special Tokens It is important to have special tokens like delimiters, end-of-sequence, beginning-of-sequence in your tokenizer's vocabulary. This will help you avoid tokenization issues and help your model train better. You can do this in axolotl like this: ```yml special_tokens: bos_token: "" eos_token: "" unk_token: "" tokens: # these are delimiters - "<|im_start|>" - "<|im_end|>" ``` When you include these tokens in your axolotl config, axolotl adds these tokens to the tokenizer's vocabulary. ### Inference Playground Axolotl allows you to load your model in an interactive terminal playground for quick experimentation. The config file is the same config file used for training. Pass the appropriate flag to the inference command, depending upon what kind of model was trained: - Pretrained LORA: ```bash python -m axolotl.cli.inference examples/your_config.yml --lora_model_dir="./lora-output-dir" ``` - Full weights finetune: ```bash python -m axolotl.cli.inference examples/your_config.yml --base_model="./completed-model" ``` - Full weights finetune w/ a prompt from a text file: ```bash cat /tmp/prompt.txt | python -m axolotl.cli.inference examples/your_config.yml \ --base_model="./completed-model" --prompter=None --load_in_8bit=True ``` -- With gradio hosting ```bash python -m axolotl.cli.inference examples/your_config.yml --gradio ``` Please use `--sample_packing False` if you have it on and receive the error similar to below: > RuntimeError: stack expects each tensor to be equal size, but got [1, 32, 1, 128] at entry 0 and [1, 32, 8, 128] at entry 1 ### Merge LORA to base The following command will merge your LORA adapater with your base model. You can optionally pass the argument `--lora_model_dir` to specify the directory where your LORA adapter was saved, otherwhise, this will be inferred from `output_dir` in your axolotl config file. The merged model is saved in the sub-directory `{lora_model_dir}/merged`. ```bash python3 -m axolotl.cli.merge_lora your_config.yml --lora_model_dir="./completed-model" ``` You may need to use the `gpu_memory_limit` and/or `lora_on_cpu` config options to avoid running out of memory. If you still run out of CUDA memory, you can try to merge in system RAM with ```bash CUDA_VISIBLE_DEVICES="" python3 -m axolotl.cli.merge_lora ... ``` although this will be very slow, and using the config options above are recommended instead. ## Common Errors 🧰 See also the [FAQ's](./docs/faq.md) and [debugging guide](docs/debugging.md). > If you encounter a 'Cuda out of memory' error, it means your GPU ran out of memory during the training process. Here's how to resolve it: Please reduce any below - `micro_batch_size` - `eval_batch_size` - `gradient_accumulation_steps` - `sequence_len` If it does not help, try running without deepspeed and without accelerate (replace "accelerate launch" with "python") in the command. Using adamw_bnb_8bit might also save you some memory. > `failed (exitcode: -9)` Usually means your system has run out of system memory. Similarly, you should consider reducing the same settings as when you run out of VRAM. Additionally, look into upgrading your system RAM which should be simpler than GPU upgrades. > RuntimeError: expected scalar type Float but found Half Try set `fp16: true` > NotImplementedError: No operator found for `memory_efficient_attention_forward` ... Try to turn off xformers. > accelerate config missing It's safe to ignore it. > NCCL Timeouts during training See the [NCCL](docs/nccl.md) guide. ### Tokenization Mismatch b/w Inference & Training For many formats, Axolotl constructs prompts by concatenating token ids _after_ tokenizing strings. The reason for concatenating token ids rather than operating on strings is to maintain precise accounting for attention masks. If you decode a prompt constructed by axolotl, you might see spaces between tokens (or lack thereof) that you do not expect, especially around delimiters and special tokens. When you are starting out with a new format, you should always do the following: 1. Materialize some data using `python -m axolotl.cli.preprocess your_config.yml --debug`, and then decode the first few rows with your model's tokenizer. 2. During inference, right before you pass a tensor of token ids to your model, decode these tokens back into a string. 3. Make sure the inference string from #2 looks **exactly** like the data you fine tuned on from #1, including spaces and new lines. If they aren't the same adjust your inference server accordingly. 4. As an additional troubleshooting step, you can look look at the token ids between 1 and 2 to make sure they are identical. Having misalignment between your prompts during training and inference can cause models to perform very poorly, so it is worth checking this. See [this blog post](https://hamel.dev/notes/llm/05_tokenizer_gotchas.html) for a concrete example. ## Debugging Axolotl See [this debugging guide](docs/debugging.md) for tips on debugging Axolotl, along with an example configuration for debugging with VSCode. ## Need help? 🙋♂️ Join our [Discord server](https://discord.gg/HhrNrHJPRb) where we can help you ## Badge ❤🏷️ Building something cool with Axolotl? Consider adding a badge to your model card. ```markdown [Built with Axolotl](https://github.com/OpenAccess-AI-Collective/axolotl) ``` [Built with Axolotl](https://github.com/OpenAccess-AI-Collective/axolotl) ## Community Showcase Check out some of the projects and models that have been built using Axolotl! Have a model you'd like to add to our Community Showcase? Open a PR with your model. Open Access AI Collective - [Minotaur 13b](https://huggingface.co/openaccess-ai-collective/minotaur-13b) - [Manticore 13b](https://huggingface.co/openaccess-ai-collective/manticore-13b) - [Hippogriff 30b](https://huggingface.co/openaccess-ai-collective/hippogriff-30b-chat) PocketDoc Labs - [Dan's PersonalityEngine 13b LoRA](https://huggingface.co/PocketDoc/Dans-PersonalityEngine-13b-LoRA) ## Contributing 🤝 Please read the [contributing guide](./.github/CONTRIBUTING.md) Bugs? Please check the [open issues](https://github.com/OpenAccess-AI-Collective/axolotl/issues/bug) else create a new Issue. PRs are **greatly welcome**! Please run below to setup env ```bash pip3 install -r requirements-dev.txt -r requirements-tests.txt pre-commit install # test pytest tests/ ``` ## Sponsors 🤝❤ OpenAccess AI Collective is run by volunteer contributors such as [winglian](https://github.com/winglian), [NanoCode012](https://github.com/NanoCode012), [tmm1](https://github.com/tmm1), [mhenrichsen](https://github.com/mhenrichsen), [casper-hansen](https://github.com/casper-hansen), [hamelsmu](https://github.com/hamelsmu) and many more who help us accelerate forward by fixing bugs, answering community questions and implementing new features. Axolotl needs donations from sponsors for the compute needed to run our unit & integration tests, troubleshooting community issues, and providing bounties. If you love axolotl, consider sponsoring the project via [GitHub Sponsors](https://github.com/sponsors/OpenAccess-AI-Collective), [Ko-fi](https://ko-fi.com/axolotl_ai) or reach out directly to [wing@openaccessaicollective.org](mailto:wing@openaccessaicollective.org). --- #### 💎 Diamond Sponsors - [Contact directly](mailto:wing@openaccessaicollective.org) --- #### 🥇 Gold Sponsors - $5000/mo --- #### 🥈 Silver Sponsors - $1000/mo --- #### 🥉 Bronze Sponsors - $500/mo ---