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README.md
Router
Also named webserver
throughout the docs.
This router is handling most of the logic to handle the "batches" tell
when to pass new prefill
requests and pausing decode
requests, which ones etc...
It uses gRPC to communicate with the shards which can therefore be kept much simpler and focus on having the most efficient forward passes as possible.
Continuous batching
One important feature of text-generation-inference
is enabled
by this router
.
Continuous batching is the act of regularly running queries in the same
forward
step of the LLM (a "batch") and also removing them when they are
finished.
In order for continuous batching to be useful, you need to have more compute available with respect to the memory requirements of your model. This is essentially true for LLMs and the larger the model, the truer it gets (since you have to pool multiple GPUs to load the model, you effectively have a lot of compute power at your hands).
Static batching is the act of doing several queries at the same time, but usually this is controlled by the client, and therefore the amount of batching is decided beforehand.
For text-generation, and LLMs which are memory bound we can try to be much more efficient with the available compute, by having client sending us single queries, and let the router mix&match queries into or out of batches to make the use the compute the most efficiently. This is possible because for LLMs the total compute for running the model is much bigger than doing mix&match of the batches themselves.
Simple continuous batching
text-generation works by feeding a prompt to a model, and iteratively calling
forward
on the model to produce new text, 1 token at a time.
The first idea is simple, when a query arrives, we start working on it directly.
When new queries arrive, we simply wait for the current forward
to be finished
then batch the current running prompt with the new query, and call forward
.
Whenever either query is finished: either the model produce EOS (end of sentence) token or the query reached the allowed limit. We simply drop it from the batch, remove all the allocated memory and we can continue with the rest until nothing is left.
This simple idea generalizes very well and we could potentially stack many requests in the same batch.
One thing to note, is that queries can be potentially run with different parameters meaning different way to choose the next token (sampling, not sampling, temperature, top_k etc..). This is not problematic for the proposed approach we just need to do the sampling independantly on each member of the batch.
Prefill, decode and past key values
In order to make LLMs and text-generation efficient, there's actually a very powerful trick that can be used, which is the "caching" of some attention matrices. More on that in the first part of this blog
What this means, is that the first "pass" of a prompt is different from the subsequent
"forward" passes. Since for the first one we have to compute the entire attention matrix, whereas in the follow-ups only require to compute the new token attention.
The first pass is called prefill
throughout this codebase where as the follow-ups are called decode
.
Since prefill
is much more expensive than decode
we don't want to do it all the time,
but a currently running query is probably doing decode
. If we want to do the continuous
batching as explained previously we need to run prefill
at some point in order to create
the attention matrix required to be able to join the decode
group.
text-generation-inference
uses a bunch of different strategies and parameters in
order to enable you to find the sweet spot between exploiting the hardware and perceived latency.
With no continuous batching at all, latency is going to be super good, but throughput (meaning the total number of requests allowed in a given timeframe) is going to be super bad (since it's essentially 1).
With static batching, you can probably reach the maximum throughput (by using the maximum total batch size applicable to your hardware), but the latency is super bad since in order to have maximum throughput you need to wait for requests to come in before processing.
With continuous batching you can find a sweet spot. In general latency is the most critical parameter users care about. But a 2x latency slowdown for 10x more users on the same hardware is an acceptable tradeoff.
Token streaming
This is a very important aspect of client UX. As mentionned above, latency is the most critical perceived quality of an LLM API.
With token streaming, the server can start answering after the first prefill
pass
directly, without waiting for all the generation to be done. For extremely long queries
this means clients can start to see something happening orders of magnitude before
the work is done. Seeing something in progress allows them to cut short if it's not
what's wanted but also it "feels" better.