模型:
michaelfeil/ct2fast-pythia-160m
语言:
en许可:
apache-2.0Speedup inference while reducing memory by 2x-4x using int8 inference in C++ on CPU or GPU.
quantized version of EleutherAI/pythia-160m
pip install hf-hub-ctranslate2>=2.0.6
Converted on 2023-05-19 using
ct2-transformers-converter --model EleutherAI/pythia-160m --output_dir /home/michael/tmp-ct2fast-pythia-160m --force --copy_files tokenizer.json README.md tokenizer_config.json special_tokens_map.json .gitattributes --quantization float16
Checkpoint compatible to ctranslate2>=3.13.0 and hf-hub-ctranslate2>=2.0.6
from hf_hub_ctranslate2 import TranslatorCT2fromHfHub, GeneratorCT2fromHfHub from transformers import AutoTokenizer model_name = "michaelfeil/ct2fast-pythia-160m" # use either TranslatorCT2fromHfHub or GeneratorCT2fromHfHub here, depending on model. model = GeneratorCT2fromHfHub( # load in int8 on CUDA model_name_or_path=model_name, device="cuda", compute_type="int8_float16", tokenizer=AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained("EleutherAI/pythia-160m") ) outputs = model.generate( text=["How do you call a fast Flan-ingo?", "User: How are you doing? Bot:"], ) print(outputs)
This is just a quantized version. Licence conditions are intended to be idential to original huggingface repo.
The Pythia Scaling Suite is a collection of models developed to facilitate interpretability research. It contains two sets of eight models of sizes 70M, 160M, 410M, 1B, 1.4B, 2.8B, 6.9B, and 12B. For each size, there are two models: one trained on the Pile, and one trained on the Pile after the dataset has been globally deduplicated. All 8 model sizes are trained on the exact same data, in the exact same order. We also provide 154 intermediate checkpoints per model, hosted on Hugging Face as branches.
The Pythia model suite was deliberately designed to promote scientific research on large language models, especially interpretability research. Despite not centering downstream performance as a design goal, we find the models match or exceed the performance of similar and same-sized models, such as those in the OPT and GPT-Neo suites.
Details on previous early release and naming convention.Previously, we released an early version of the Pythia suite to the public. However, we decided to retrain the model suite to address a few hyperparameter discrepancies. This model card lists the changes ; see appendix B in the Pythia paper for further discussion. We found no difference in benchmark performance between the two Pythia versions. The old models are still available , but we suggest the retrained suite if you are just starting to use Pythia. This is the current release.
Please note that all models in the Pythia suite were renamed in January 2023. For clarity, a table comparing the old and new names is provided in this model card, together with exact parameter counts.
Pythia model | Non-Embedding Params | Layers | Model Dim | Heads | Batch Size | Learning Rate | Equivalent Models |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
70M | 18,915,328 | 6 | 512 | 8 | 2M | 1.0 x 10 -3 | — |
160M | 85,056,000 | 12 | 768 | 12 | 4M | 6.0 x 10 -4 | GPT-Neo 125M, OPT-125M |
410M | 302,311,424 | 24 | 1024 | 16 | 4M | 3.0 x 10 -4 | OPT-350M |
1.0B | 805,736,448 | 16 | 2048 | 8 | 2M | 3.0 x 10 -4 | — |
1.4B | 1,208,602,624 | 24 | 2048 | 16 | 4M | 2.0 x 10 -4 | GPT-Neo 1.3B, OPT-1.3B |
2.8B | 2,517,652,480 | 32 | 2560 | 32 | 2M | 1.6 x 10 -4 | GPT-Neo 2.7B, OPT-2.7B |
6.9B | 6,444,163,072 | 32 | 4096 | 32 | 2M | 1.2 x 10 -4 | OPT-6.7B |
12B | 11,327,027,200 | 36 | 5120 | 40 | 2M | 1.2 x 10 -4 | — |
The primary intended use of Pythia is research on the behavior, functionality, and limitations of large language models. This suite is intended to provide a controlled setting for performing scientific experiments. We also provide 154 checkpoints per model: initial step0 , 10 log-spaced checkpoints step{1,2,4...512} , and 143 evenly-spaced checkpoints from step1000 to step143000 . These checkpoints are hosted on Hugging Face as branches. Note that branch 143000 corresponds exactly to the model checkpoint on the main branch of each model.
You may also further fine-tune and adapt Pythia-160M for deployment, as long as your use is in accordance with the Apache 2.0 license. Pythia models work with the Hugging Face Transformers Library . If you decide to use pre-trained Pythia-160M as a basis for your fine-tuned model, please conduct your own risk and bias assessment.
The Pythia Suite is not intended for deployment. It is not a in itself a product and cannot be used for human-facing interactions. For example, the model may generate harmful or offensive text. Please evaluate the risks associated with your particular use case.
Pythia models are English-language only, and are not suitable for translation or generating text in other languages.
Pythia-160M has not been fine-tuned for downstream contexts in which language models are commonly deployed, such as writing genre prose, or commercial chatbots. This means Pythia-160M will not respond to a given prompt the way a product like ChatGPT does. This is because, unlike this model, ChatGPT was fine-tuned using methods such as Reinforcement Learning from Human Feedback (RLHF) to better “follow” human instructions.
The core functionality of a large language model is to take a string of text and predict the next token. The token used by the model need not produce the most “accurate” text. Never rely on Pythia-160M to produce factually accurate output.
This model was trained on the Pile , a dataset known to contain profanity and texts that are lewd or otherwise offensive. See Section 6 of the Pile paper for a discussion of documented biases with regards to gender, religion, and race. Pythia-160M may produce socially unacceptable or undesirable text, even if the prompt itself does not include anything explicitly offensive.
If you plan on using text generated through, for example, the Hosted Inference API, we recommend having a human curate the outputs of this language model before presenting it to other people. Please inform your audience that the text was generated by Pythia-160M.
Pythia models can be loaded and used via the following code, demonstrated here for the third pythia-70m-deduped checkpoint:
from transformers import GPTNeoXForCausalLM, AutoTokenizer model = GPTNeoXForCausalLM.from_pretrained( "EleutherAI/pythia-70m-deduped", revision="step3000", cache_dir="./pythia-70m-deduped/step3000", ) tokenizer = AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained( "EleutherAI/pythia-70m-deduped", revision="step3000", cache_dir="./pythia-70m-deduped/step3000", ) inputs = tokenizer("Hello, I am", return_tensors="pt") tokens = model.generate(**inputs) tokenizer.decode(tokens[0])
Revision/branch step143000 corresponds exactly to the model checkpoint on the main branch of each model. For more information on how to use all Pythia models, see documentation on GitHub .
The Pile is a 825GiB general-purpose dataset in English. It was created by EleutherAI specifically for training large language models. It contains texts from 22 diverse sources, roughly broken down into five categories: academic writing (e.g. arXiv), internet (e.g. CommonCrawl), prose (e.g. Project Gutenberg), dialogue (e.g. YouTube subtitles), and miscellaneous (e.g. GitHub, Enron Emails). See the Pile paper for a breakdown of all data sources, methodology, and a discussion of ethical implications. Consult the datasheet for more detailed documentation about the Pile and its component datasets. The Pile can be downloaded from the official website , or from a community mirror . The Pile was not deduplicated before being used to train Pythia-160M.
All models were trained on the exact same data, in the exact same order. Each model saw 299,892,736,000 tokens during training, and 143 checkpoints for each model are saved every 2,097,152,000 tokens, spaced evenly throughout training, from step1000 to step143000 (which is the same as main ). In addition, we also provide frequent early checkpoints: step0 and step{1,2,4...512} . This corresponds to training for just under 1 epoch on the Pile for non-deduplicated models, and about 1.5 epochs on the deduplicated Pile.
All Pythia models trained for 143000 steps at a batch size of 2M (2,097,152 tokens). See GitHub for more details on training procedure, including how to reproduce it . Pythia uses the same tokenizer as GPT-NeoX- 20B .
All 16 Pythia models were evaluated using the LM Evaluation Harness . You can access the results by model and step at results/json/* in the GitHub repository . Expand the sections below to see plots of evaluation results for all Pythia and Pythia-deduped models compared with OPT and BLOOM.
LAMBADA – OpenAI Physical Interaction: Question Answering (PIQA) WinoGrande AI2 Reasoning Challenge—Easy Set SciQThis section compares differences between previously released Pythia v0 and the current models. See Appendix B of the Pythia paper for further discussion of these changes and the motivation behind them. We found that retraining Pythia had no impact on benchmark performance.
Pythia models were renamed in January 2023. It is possible that the old naming convention still persists in some documentation by accident. The current naming convention (70M, 160M, etc.) is based on total parameter count.
current Pythia suffix | old suffix | total params | non-embedding params |
---|---|---|---|
70M | 19M | 70,426,624 | 18,915,328 |
160M | 125M | 162,322,944 | 85,056,000 |
410M | 350M | 405,334,016 | 302,311,424 |
1B | 800M | 1,011,781,632 | 805,736,448 |
1.4B | 1.3B | 1,414,647,808 | 1,208,602,624 |
2.8B | 2.7B | 2,775,208,960 | 2,517,652,480 |
6.9B | 6.7B | 6,857,302,016 | 6,444,163,072 |
12B | 13B | 11,846,072,320 | 11,327,027,200 |