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import os
import argparse
import torch
import gradio as gr
import transformers
from datasets import Dataset
from transformers import LlamaForCausalLM, LlamaTokenizer, GenerationConfig
from peft import prepare_model_for_int8_training, LoraConfig, get_peft_model, PeftModel
model = None
tokenizer = None
peft_model = None
def maybe_load_models():
global model
global tokenizer
if model is None:
model = LlamaForCausalLM.from_pretrained(
"decapoda-research/llama-7b-hf",
load_in_8bit=True,
torch_dtype=torch.float16,
device_map="auto",
)
if tokenizer is None:
tokenizer = LlamaTokenizer.from_pretrained(
"decapoda-research/llama-7b-hf",
)
return model, tokenizer
def reset_models():
global model
global tokenizer
del model
del tokenizer
model = None
tokenizer = None
def generate_text(
model_name,
text,
temperature,
top_p,
top_k,
repeat_penalty,
max_new_tokens,
progress=gr.Progress(track_tqdm=True)
):
model, tokenizer = maybe_load_models()
if model_name and model_name != "None":
model = PeftModel.from_pretrained(
model, model_name,
torch_dtype=torch.float16
)
inputs = tokenizer(text, return_tensors="pt")
input_ids = inputs["input_ids"].to(model.device)
generation_config = GenerationConfig(
# Controls the 'temperature' of the softmax distribution during sampling.
# Higher values (e.g., 1.0) make the model generate more diverse and random outputs,
# while lower values (e.g., 0.1) make it more deterministic and
# focused on the highest probability tokens.
temperature=temperature,
# Sets the nucleus sampling threshold. In nucleus sampling,
# only the tokens whose cumulative probability exceeds 'top_p' are considered
# for sampling. This technique helps to reduce the number of low probability
# tokens considered during sampling, which can lead to more diverse and coherent outputs.
top_p=top_p,
# Sets the number of top tokens to consider during sampling.
# In top-k sampling, only the 'top_k' tokens with the highest probabilities
# are considered for sampling. This method can lead to more focused and coherent
# outputs by reducing the impact of low probability tokens.
top_k=top_k,
# Applies a penalty to the probability of tokens that have already been generated,
# discouraging the model from repeating the same words or phrases. The penalty is
# applied by dividing the token probability by a factor based on the number of times
# the token has appeared in the generated text.
repeat_penalty=repeat_penalty,
# Limits the maximum number of tokens generated in a single iteration.
# This can be useful to control the length of generated text, especially in tasks
# like text summarization or translation, where the output should not be excessively long.
max_new_tokens=max_new_tokens,
)
with torch.no_grad():
generation_output = model.generate(
input_ids=input_ids,
attention_mask=torch.ones_like(input_ids),
generation_config=generation_config,
return_dict_in_generate=True,
output_scores=True,
)
output = []
for token_id in generation_output[0]:
new = tokenizer.decode(token_id, skip_special_tokens=True)
output.append(new)
print(new, end=" ", flush=True)
return ''.join(output).strip()
def tokenize_and_train(
training_text,
max_seq_length,
micro_batch_size,
gradient_accumulation_steps,
epochs,
learning_rate,
lora_r,
lora_alpha,
lora_dropout,
model_name,
progress=gr.Progress(track_tqdm=True)
):
model, tokenizer = maybe_load_models()
tokenizer.pad_token_id = 0
paragraphs = training_text.split("\n\n\n")
print("Number of samples: " + str(len(paragraphs)))
def tokenize(item):
result = tokenizer(
item["text"],
truncation=True,
max_length=max_seq_length,
padding="max_length",
)
return {
"input_ids": result["input_ids"][:-1],
"attention_mask": result["attention_mask"][:-1],
}
def to_dict(text):
return {"text": text}
paragraphs = [to_dict(x) for x in paragraphs]
data = Dataset.from_list(paragraphs)
data = data.shuffle().map(lambda x: tokenize(x))
model = prepare_model_for_int8_training(model)
model = get_peft_model(model, LoraConfig(
r=lora_r,
lora_alpha=lora_alpha,
target_modules=["q_proj", "v_proj"],
lora_dropout=lora_dropout,
bias="none",
task_type="CAUSAL_LM",
))
output_dir = f"lora-{model_name}"
print("Training...")
training_args = transformers.TrainingArguments(
# Set the batch size for training on each device (GPU, CPU, or TPU).
per_device_train_batch_size=micro_batch_size,
# Number of steps for gradient accumulation. This is useful when the total
# batch size is too large to fit in GPU memory. The effective batch size
# will be the product of 'per_device_train_batch_size' and 'gradient_accumulation_steps'.
gradient_accumulation_steps=gradient_accumulation_steps,
# Number of warmup steps for the learning rate scheduler. During these steps,
# the learning rate increases linearly from 0 to its initial value. Warmup helps
# to reduce the risk of very large gradients at the beginning of training,
# which could destabilize the model.
# warmup_steps=100,
# The total number of training steps. The training process will end once this
# number is reached, even if not all the training epochs are completed.
# max_steps=1500,
# The total number of epochs (complete passes through the training data)
# to perform during the training process.
num_train_epochs=epochs,
# The initial learning rate to be used during training.
learning_rate=learning_rate,
# Enables mixed precision training using 16-bit floating point numbers (FP16).
# This can speed up training and reduce GPU memory consumption without
# sacrificing too much model accuracy.
fp16=True,
# The frequency (in terms of steps) of logging training metrics and statistics
# like loss, learning rate, etc. In this case, it logs after every 20 steps.
logging_steps=20,
# The output directory where the trained model, checkpoints,
# and other training artifacts will be saved.
output_dir=output_dir,
# The maximum number of checkpoints to keep. When this limit is reached,
# the oldest checkpoint will be deleted to save a new one. In this case,
# a maximum of 3 checkpoints will be kept.
save_total_limit=3,
)
trainer = transformers.Trainer(
# The pre-trained model that you want to fine-tune or train from scratch.
# 'model' should be an instance of a Hugging Face Transformer model, such as BERT, GPT-2, T5, etc.
model=model,
# The dataset to be used for training. 'data' should be a PyTorch Dataset or
# a compatible format, containing the input samples and labels or masks (if required).
train_dataset=data,
# The TrainingArguments instance created earlier, which contains various
# hyperparameters and configurations for the training process.
args=training_args,
# A callable that takes a batch of samples and returns a batch of inputs for the model.
# This is used to prepare the input samples for training by batching, padding, and possibly masking.
data_collator=transformers.DataCollatorForLanguageModeling(
tokenizer,
# Whether to use masked language modeling (MLM) during training.
# MLM is a training technique used in models like BERT, where some tokens in the
# input are replaced by a mask token, and the model tries to predict the
# original tokens. In this case, MLM is set to False, indicating that it will not be used.
mlm=False,
),
)
result = trainer.train(resume_from_checkpoint=False)
model.save_pretrained(output_dir)
reset_models()
return result
with gr.Blocks(css="#refresh-button { max-width: 32px }") as demo:
with gr.Tab("Finetuning"):
with gr.Column():
training_text = gr.Textbox(lines=12, label="Training Data", info="Each sequence must be separated by a double newline")
max_seq_length = gr.Slider(
minimum=1, maximum=4096, value=512,
label="Max Sequence Length",
info="The maximum length of each sample text sequence. Sequences longer than this will be truncated."
)
with gr.Row():
with gr.Column():
micro_batch_size = gr.Slider(
minimum=1, maximum=100, value=1,
label="Micro Batch Size",
info="The number of examples in each mini-batch for gradient computation. A smaller micro_batch_size reduces memory usage but may increase training time."
)
gradient_accumulation_steps = gr.Slider(
minimum=1, maximum=10, value=1,
label="Gradient Accumulation Steps",
info="The number of steps to accumulate gradients before updating model parameters. This can be used to simulate a larger effective batch size without increasing memory usage."
)
epochs = gr.Slider(
minimum=1, maximum=100, value=1,
label="Epochs",
info="The number of times to iterate over the entire training dataset. A larger number of epochs may improve model performance but also increase the risk of overfitting.")
learning_rate = gr.Slider(
minimum=0.00001, maximum=0.01, value=3e-4,
label="Learning Rate",
info="The initial learning rate for the optimizer. A higher learning rate may speed up convergence but also cause instability or divergence. A lower learning rate may require more steps to reach optimal performance but also avoid overshooting or oscillating around local minima."
)
with gr.Column():
lora_r = gr.Slider(
minimum=1, maximum=16, value=8,
label="LoRA R",
info="The rank parameter for LoRA, which controls the dimensionality of the rank decomposition matrices. A larger lora_r increases the expressiveness and flexibility of LoRA but also increases the number of trainable parameters and memory usage."
)
lora_alpha = gr.Slider(
minimum=1, maximum=128, value=16,
label="LoRA Alpha",
info="The scaling parameter for LoRA, which controls how much LoRA affects the original pre-trained model weights. A larger lora_alpha amplifies the impact of LoRA but may also distort or override the pre-trained knowledge."
)
lora_dropout = gr.Slider(
minimum=0, maximum=1, value=0.01,
label="LoRA Dropout",
info="The dropout probability for LoRA, which controls the fraction of LoRA parameters that are set to zero during training. A larger lora_dropout increases the regularization effect of LoRA but also increases the risk of underfitting."
)
with gr.Column():
model_name = gr.Textbox(
lines=1, label="LoRA Model Name", value=""
)
with gr.Row():
train_btn = gr.Button(
"Train", variant="primary", label="Train",
)
abort_button = gr.Button(
"Abort", label="Abort",
)
output_text = gr.Text("Training Status")
train_progress = train_btn.click(
fn=tokenize_and_train,
inputs=[
training_text,
max_seq_length,
micro_batch_size,
gradient_accumulation_steps,
epochs,
learning_rate,
lora_r,
lora_alpha,
lora_dropout,
model_name
],
outputs=output_text
)
abort_button.click(None, None, None, cancels=[train_progress])
with gr.Tab("Inference"):
with gr.Row():
with gr.Column():
with gr.Row():
lora_model = gr.Dropdown(
label="LoRA Model",
)
refresh_models_list = gr.Button(
"Reload Models",
elem_id="refresh-button"
)
inference_text = gr.Textbox(lines=7, label="Input Text")
inference_output = gr.Textbox(lines=12, label="Output Text")
with gr.Row():
with gr.Column():
# temperature, top_p, top_k, repeat_penalty, max_new_tokens
temperature = gr.Slider(
minimum=0, maximum=2, value=0.7, step=0.1,
label="Temperature",
info=""
)
top_p = gr.Slider(
minimum=0, maximum=1, value=0.2, step=0.1,
label="Top P",
info=""
)
top_k = gr.Slider(
minimum=0, maximum=100, value=50, step=1,
label="Top K",
info=""
)
repeat_penalty = gr.Slider(
minimum=0, maximum=1, value=0.8, step=0.1,
label="Repeat Penalty",
info=""
)
max_new_tokens = gr.Slider(
minimum=0, maximum=4096, value=50, step=1,
label="Max New Tokens",
info=""
)
with gr.Column():
with gr.Row():
generate_btn = gr.Button(
"Generate", variant="primary", label="Generate",
)
inference_abort_button = gr.Button(
"Abort", label="Abort",
)
inference_progress = generate_btn.click(
fn=generate_text,
inputs=[
lora_model,
inference_text,
temperature,
top_p,
top_k,
repeat_penalty,
max_new_tokens
],
outputs=inference_output,
)
lora_model.change(
fn=reset_models
)
def update_models_list():
return gr.Dropdown.update(choices=["None"] + [
d for d in os.listdir() if os.path.isdir(d) and d.startswith('lora-')
], value="None")
refresh_models_list.click(
update_models_list,
inputs=None,
outputs=lora_model,
)
if __name__ == "__main__":
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(description="Simple LLaMA Finetuner")
parser.add_argument("-s", "--share", action="store_true", help="Enable sharing of the Gradio interface")
args = parser.parse_args()
demo.queue().launch(share=args.share)