PyTorch public
[search 0]
Plus
Téléchargez l'application!
show episodes
 
Loading …
show series
 
Higher order operators are a special form of operators in torch.ops which have relaxed input argument requirements: in particular, they can accept any form of argument, including Python callables. Their name is based off of their most common use case, which is to represent higher order functions like control flow operators. However, they are also u…
  continue reading
 
The post-grad FX passes in Inductor run after AOTAutograd has functionalized and normalized the input program into separate forward/backward graphs. As such, they generally can assume that the graph in question is functionalized, except for some mutations to inputs at the end of the graph. At the end of post-grad passes, there are special passes th…
  continue reading
 
CUDA graph trees are the internal implementation of CUDA graphs used in PT2 when you say mode="reduce-overhead". Their primary innovation is that they allow the reuse of memory across multiple CUDA graphs, as long as they form a tree structure of potential paths you can go down with the CUDA graph. This greatly reduced the memory usage of CUDA grap…
  continue reading
 
The min-cut partitioner makes decisions about what to save for backwards when splitting the forward and backwards graph from the joint graph traced by AOTAutograd. Crucially, it doesn't actually do a "split"; instead, it is deciding how much of the joint graph should be used for backwards. I also talk about the backward retracing problem.…
  continue reading
 
AOTInductor is a feature in PyTorch that lets you export an inference model into a self-contained dynamic library, which can subsequently be loaded and used to run optimized inference. It is aimed primarily at CUDA and CPU inference applications, for situations when your model export once to be exported once while your runtime may still get continu…
  continue reading
 
Tensor subclasses allow you to add extend PyTorch with new types of tensors without having to write any C++. They have been used to implement DTensor, FP8, Nested Jagged Tensor and Complex Tensor. Recent work by Brian Hirsh means that we can compile tensor subclasses in PT2, eliminating their overhead. The basic mechanism by which this compilation …
  continue reading
 
Compiled autograd is an extension to PT2 that permits compiling the entirety of a backward() call in PyTorch. This allows us to fuse accumulate grad nodes as well as trace through arbitrarily complicated Python backward hooks. Compiled autograd is an important part of our plans for compiled DDP/FSDP as well as for whole-graph compilation.…
  continue reading
 
Define-by-run IR is how Inductor defines the internal compute of a pointwise/reduction operation. It is characterized by a function that calls a number of functions in the 'ops' namespace, where these ops can be overridden by different handlers depending on what kind of semantic analysis you need to do. The ops Inductor supports include regular ari…
  continue reading
 
Traditionally, unsigned integer support in PyTorch was not great; we only support uint8. Recently, we added support for uint16, uint32 and uint64. Bare bones functionality works, but I'm entreating the community to help us build out the rest. In particular, for most operations, we plan to use PT2 to build anything else. But if you have an eager ker…
  continue reading
 
Inductor IR is an intermediate representation that lives between ATen FX graphs and the final Triton code generated by Inductor. It was designed to faithfully represent PyTorch semantics and accordingly models views, mutation and striding. When you write a lowering from ATen operators to Inductor IR, you get a TensorBox for each Tensor argument whi…
  continue reading
 
I talk about VariableTracker in Dynamo. VariableTracker is Dynamo's representation of the Python. I talk about some recent changes, namely eager guards and mutable VT. I also tell you how to find the functionality you care about in VariableTracker (https://docs.google.com/document/d/1XDPNK3iNNShg07jRXDOrMk2V_i66u1hEbPltcsxE-3E/edit#heading=h.i6v7gq…
  continue reading
 
This podcast goes over the basics of unbacked SymInts. You might want to listen to this one before listening to https://pytorch-dev-podcast.simplecast.com/episodes/zero-one-specialization Some questions we answer (h/t from Gregory Chanan): - Are unbacked symints only for export? Because otherwise I could just break / wait for the actual size. But m…
  continue reading
 
Mikey Dagistes joins me to ask some questions about the recent recent composability sync https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NJV7YFbtoR4 where we discussed 0/1 specialization and its implications on export in PT2. What's the fuss all about? What do I need to understand about PT2 to understand why 0/1 specialization is a thing?…
  continue reading
 
Join me with Richard Zou to talk about the history of functorch. What was the thought process behind the creation of functorch? How did it get started? JAX’s API and model is fairly different from PyTorch’s, how did we validate that it would work in PyTorch? Where did functorch go after the early user studies? Where is it going next?…
  continue reading
 
What are they good for? (Caches. Private fields.) C++ side support, how it’s implemented / release resources. Python side support, how it’s implemented. Weak ref tensor hazard due to resurrection. Downsides of weak references in C++. Scott Wolchok’s release resources optimization. Other episodes to listen to first: https://pytorch-dev-podcast.simpl…
  continue reading
 
Mike Ruberry has an RFC about stride-agnostic operator semantics (https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/issues/78050), so let's talk about strides. What are they? How are they used to implement views and memory format? How do you handle them properly when writing kernels? In what sense are strides overspecified, and therefore, not worth slavishly reim…
  continue reading
 
AOTAutograd is a cool new feature in functorch for capturing both forward and backward traces of PyTorch operators, letting you run them through a compiler and then drop the compiled kernels back into a normal PyTorch eager program. Today, Horace joins me to tell me how it works, what it is good to use for, and what our future plans for it are.…
  continue reading
 
Sherlock recently joined the PyTorch team, having previously worked on ONNX Runtime at Microsoft, and Sherlock’s going to ask me some questions about the dispatcher, and I’m going to answer them. We talked about the history of the dispatcher, how to override dispatching order, multiple dispatch, how to organize various dispatch keys and torch funct…
  continue reading
 
C++ has exceptions, Python has exceptions. But they’re not the same thing! How do exceptions work in CPython, how do we translate exceptions from C++ to Python (hint: it’s different for direct bindings versus pybind11), and what do warnings (which we also translate from C++ to Python) have in common with this infrastructure?…
  continue reading
 
PyTorch’s torch API is the Python API everyone knows and loves, but there’s also another API, the ATen API, which most of PyTorch’s internal subsystems are built on. How to tell them apart? What implications do these have on our graph mode IR design? Also, a plug for PrimTorch, a new set of operators, not designed for eager mode, that is supposed t…
  continue reading
 
PyTorch is in the business of shipping numerical software that can run fast on your CUDA-enabled NVIDIA GPU, but it turns out there is a lot of heterogeneity in NVIDIA’s physical GPU offering and when it comes to what is fast and what is slow, what specific GPU you have on hand matters quite a bit. Yet there are literally hundreds of distinct NVIDI…
  continue reading
 
A lot of recent work going in PyTorch is all about adding new and interesting Tensor subclasses, and this all leads up to the question of, what exactly is OK to make a tensor subclass? One answer to this question comes from an old principle from Barbara Liskov called the Liskov substitution principle, which informally can be stated as S is a subtyp…
  continue reading
 
In this episode I talk about reduced precision floating point formats float16 (aka half precision) and bfloat16. I'll discuss what floating point numbers are, how these two formats vary, and some of the practical considerations that arise when you are working with numeric code in PyTorch that also needs to work in reduced precision. Did you know th…
  continue reading
 
Today I'm going to talk about a famous issue in PyTorch, DataLoader with num_workers > 0 causes memory leak (https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/issues/13246). This bug is a good opportunity to talk about DataSet/DataLoader design in PyTorch, fork and copy-on-write memory in Linux and Python reference counting; you have to know about all of these th…
  continue reading
 
PyTorch operates on its input data in a batched manner, typically processing multiple batches of an input at once (rather than once at a time, as would be the case in typical programming). In this podcast, we talk a little about the implications of batching operations in this way, and then also about how PyTorch's API is structured for batching (hi…
  continue reading
 
Python is a single dispatch OO language, but there are some operations such as binary magic methods which implement a simple form of multiple dispatch. torch_function__ (through its Numpy predecessor __array_function) generalizes this mechanism so that invocations of torch.add with different subclasses work properly. This podcast describes how this…
  continue reading
 
Writing multithreading code has always been a pain, and in PyTorch there are buckets and buckets of multithreading related issues you have to be aware about and deal with when writing code that makes use of it. We'll cover how you interface with multithreading in PyTorch, what goes into implementing those interfaces (thread pools!) and also some mi…
  continue reading
 
CUDA is asynchronous, CPU is synchronous. Making them play well together can be one of the more thorny and easy to get wrong aspects of the PyTorch API. I talk about why non_blocking is difficult to use correctly, a hypothetical "asynchronous CPU" device which would help smooth over some of the API problems and also why it used to be difficult to i…
  continue reading
 
We talk about gradcheck, the property based testing mechanism that we use to verify the correctness of analytic gradient formulas in PyTorch. I'll talk a bit about testing in general, property based testing and why gradcheck is a particularly useful property based test. There will be some calculus, although I've tried to keep the math mostly to int…
  continue reading
 
torch.use_deterministic_algorithms lets you force PyTorch to use deterministic algorithms. It's very useful for debugging! There are some errors in the recording: the feature is called torch.use_deterministic_algorithms, and there is not actually a capability to warn (this was in an old version of the PR but taken out), we just error if you hit non…
  continue reading
 
Reference counting is a common memory management technique in C++ but PyTorch does its reference counting in a slightly idiosyncratic way using intrusive_ptr. We'll talk about why intrusive_ptr exists, the reason why refcount bumps are slow in C++ (but not in Python), what's up with const Tensor& everywhere, why the const is a lie and how TensorRef…
  continue reading
 
Memory layout specifies how the logical multi-dimensional tensor maps its elements onto physical linear memory. Some layouts admit more efficient implementations, e.g., NCHW versus NHWC. Memory layout makes use of striding to allow users to conveniently represent their tensors with different physical layouts without having to explicitly tell every …
  continue reading
 
Lexical and dynamic scoping are useful tools to reason about various API design choices in PyTorch, related to context managers, global flags, dynamic dispatch, and how to deal with BC-breaking changes. I'll walk through three case studies, one from Python itself (changing the meaning of division to true division), and two from PyTorch (device cont…
  continue reading
 
Today, Shen Li (mrshenli) joins me to talk about distributed computation in PyTorch. What is distributed? What kinds of things go into making distributed work in PyTorch? What's up with all of the optimizations people want to do here? Further reading. PyTorch distributed overview https://pytorch.org/tutorials/beginner/dist_overview.html Distributed…
  continue reading
 
Functional modules are a proposed mechanism to take PyTorch's existing NN module API and transform it into a functional form, where all the parameters are explicit argument. Why would you want to do this? What does functorch have to do with it? How come PyTorch's existing APIs don't seem to need this? What are the design problems? Further reading. …
  continue reading
 
What do default arguments have to do with PyTorch design? Why are default arguments great for clients (call sites) but not for servers (implementation sites)? In what sense are default arguments a canonicalization to max arity? What problems does this canonicalization cause? Can you canonicalize to minimum arity? What are some lessons to take? Furt…
  continue reading
 
What's a domain library? Why do they exist? What do they do for you? What should you know about developing in PyTorch main library versus in a domain library? How coupled are they with PyTorch as a whole? What's cool about working on domain libraries? Further reading. The classic trio of domain libraries is https://pytorch.org/audio/stable/index.ht…
  continue reading
 
What's TensorAccessor? Why not just use a raw pointer? What's PackedTensorAccessor? What are some future directions for mixing statically typed and typed erase code inside PyTorch proper? Further reading. TensorAccessor source code, short and sweet https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/blob/master/aten/src/ATen/core/TensorAccessor.h Legacy THCDeviceTe…
  continue reading
 
Why are RNGs important? What is the generator concept? How do PyTorch's CPU and CUDA RNGs differ? What are some of the reasons why Philox is a good RNG for CUDA? Why doesn't the generator class have virtual methods for getting random numbers? What's with the next normal double and what does it have to do with Box Muller transform? What's up with cs…
  continue reading
 
What is vmap? How is it implemented? How does our implementation compare to JAX's? What is a good way of understanding what vmap does? What's up with random numbers? Why are there some issues with the vmap that PyTorch currently ships? Further reading. Tracking issue for vmap support https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/issues/42368 BatchedTensor sou…
  continue reading
 
Loading …

Guide de référence rapide