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Accelerator: IPU training

Audience: Users looking to customize IPU training for massive models.


Advanced IPU options

IPUs provide further optimizations to speed up training. By using the IPUStrategy we can set the device_iterations, which controls the number of iterations run directly on the IPU devices before returning to the host. Increasing the number of on-device iterations will improve throughput, as there is less device to host communication required.

Note

When using model parallelism, it is a hard requirement to increase the number of device iterations to ensure we fully saturate the devices via micro-batching. see Model parallelism for more information.

import pytorch_lightning as pl
from pytorch_lightning.strategies import IPUStrategy

model = MyLightningModule()
trainer = pl.Trainer(accelerator="ipu", devices=8, strategy=IPUStrategy(device_iterations=32))
trainer.fit(model)

Note that by default we return the last device iteration loss. You can override this by passing in your own poptorch.Options and setting the AnchorMode as described in the PopTorch documentation.

import poptorch
import pytorch_lightning as pl
from pytorch_lightning.strategies import IPUStrategy

model = MyLightningModule()
inference_opts = poptorch.Options()
inference_opts.deviceIterations(32)

training_opts = poptorch.Options()
training_opts.anchorMode(poptorch.AnchorMode.All)
training_opts.deviceIterations(32)

trainer = Trainer(
    accelerator="ipu", devices=8, strategy=IPUStrategy(inference_opts=inference_opts, training_opts=training_opts)
)
trainer.fit(model)

You can also override all options by passing the poptorch.Options to the plugin. See PopTorch options documentation for more information.


Model parallelism

Due to the IPU architecture, larger models should be parallelized across IPUs by design. Currently PopTorch provides the capabilities via annotations as described in parallel execution strategies.

Below is an example using the block annotation in a LightningModule.

Note

Currently, when using model parallelism we do not infer the number of IPUs required for you. This is done via the annotations themselves. If you specify 4 different IDs when defining Blocks, this means your model will be split onto 4 different IPUs.

This is also mutually exclusive with the Trainer flag. In other words, if your model is split onto 2 IPUs and you set Trainer(accelerator="ipu", devices=4) this will require 8 IPUs in total: data parallelism will be used to replicate the two-IPU model 4 times.

When pipelining the model you must also increase the device_iterations to ensure full data saturation of the devices data, i.e whilst one device in the model pipeline processes a batch of data, the other device can start on the next batch. For example if the model is split onto 4 IPUs, we require device_iterations to be at-least 4.

import pytorch_lightning as pl
import poptorch


class MyLightningModule(pl.LightningModule):
    def __init__(self):
        super().__init__()
        # This will place layer1, layer2+layer3, layer4, softmax on different IPUs at runtime.
        # BeginBlock will start a new id for all layers within this block
        self.layer1 = poptorch.BeginBlock(torch.nn.Linear(5, 10), ipu_id=0)

        # This layer starts a new block,
        # adding subsequent layers to this current block at runtime
        # till the next block has been declared
        self.layer2 = poptorch.BeginBlock(torch.nn.Linear(10, 5), ipu_id=1)
        self.layer3 = torch.nn.Linear(5, 5)

        # Create new blocks
        self.layer4 = poptorch.BeginBlock(torch.nn.Linear(5, 5), ipu_id=2)
        self.softmax = poptorch.BeginBlock(torch.nn.Softmax(dim=1), ipu_id=3)

    ...


model = MyLightningModule()
trainer = pl.Trainer(accelerator="ipu", devices=8, strategy=IPUStrategy(device_iterations=20))
trainer.fit(model)

You can also use the block context manager within the forward function, or any of the step functions.

import pytorch_lightning as pl
import poptorch


class MyLightningModule(pl.LightningModule):
    def __init__(self):
        super().__init__()
        self.layer1 = torch.nn.Linear(5, 10)
        self.layer2 = torch.nn.Linear(10, 5)
        self.layer3 = torch.nn.Linear(5, 5)
        self.layer4 = torch.nn.Linear(5, 5)

        self.act = torch.nn.ReLU()
        self.softmax = torch.nn.Softmax(dim=1)

    def forward(self, x):

        with poptorch.Block(ipu_id=0):
            x = self.act(self.layer1(x))

        with poptorch.Block(ipu_id=1):
            x = self.act(self.layer2(x))

        with poptorch.Block(ipu_id=2):
            x = self.act(self.layer3(x))
            x = self.act(self.layer4(x))

        with poptorch.Block(ipu_id=3):
            x = self.softmax(x)
        return x

    ...


model = MyLightningModule()
trainer = pl.Trainer(accelerator="ipu", devices=8, strategy=IPUStrategy(device_iterations=20))
trainer.fit(model)

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