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Scripts to Train and Evaluate Chat Models

Fine-tuning

In the handbook, we provide three main ways to align LLMs for chat:

  • Full fine-tuning on a multi-GPU machine with DeepSpeed ZeRO-3 (tested on an 8 x A100 (80GB) node).
  • LoRA or QLoRA fine-tuning on a single consumer 24GB GPU (tested on an RTX 4090).
  • LoRA fine-tuning on a multi-GPU machine with DeepSpeed ZeRO-3 (tested on a 2 x A100s (80GB)).
  • QLoRA fine-tuning on multi-GPU machine with FSDP (tested on a 2 x A6000s (48GB)).

In practice, we find comparable performance for both full and QLoRA fine-tuning, with the latter having the advantage of producing small adapter weights that are fast to upload and download from the Hugging Face Hub. Here are the general commands to fine-tune your models:

# Full training with ZeRO-3 on 8 GPUs
ACCELERATE_LOG_LEVEL=info accelerate launch --config_file recipes/accelerate_configs/deepspeed_zero3.yaml scripts/run_{task}.py recipes/{model_name}/{task}/config_full.yaml

# QLoRA 4-bit training on a single GPU
ACCELERATE_LOG_LEVEL=info accelerate launch --config_file recipes/accelerate_configs/multi_gpu.yaml --num_processes=1 scripts/run_{task}.py recipes/{model_name}/{task}/config_qlora.yaml

# LoRA training on a single GPU
ACCELERATE_LOG_LEVEL=info accelerate launch --config_file recipes/accelerate_configs/multi_gpu.yaml --num_processes=1 scripts/run_{task}.py recipes/{model_name}/{task}/config_qlora.yaml --load_in_4bit=false

# LoRA training with ZeRO-3 on two or more GPUs
ACCELERATE_LOG_LEVEL=info accelerate launch --config_file recipes/accelerate_configs/deepspeed_zero3.yaml --num_processes={num_gpus} scripts/run_{task}.py recipes/{model_name}/{task}/config_qlora.yaml --load_in_4bit=false

# QLoRA training with FSDP on two or more GPUs
ACCELERATE_LOG_LEVEL=info accelerate launch --config_file recipes/accelerate_configs/fsdp+qlora.yaml --num_processes={num_gpus} scripts/run_{task}.py recipes/{model_name}/{task}/config_qlora.yaml --torch_dtype=bfloat16 --bnb_4bit_quant_storage=bfloat16

Here {task} refers to the type of training you wish to run. Currently the following tasks are supported:

  • continued pretraining cpt (note that cpt is only present in the gpt-nl example recipe)
  • supervised finetuning sft
  • direct preference optimisation dpo
  • odds ratio preference optimisation orpo

{model_name} refers to the choice of a recipe in the recipes directory. For example, to replicate Zephyr-7B-β you can run:

# Step 1 - train SFT policy
ACCELERATE_LOG_LEVEL=info accelerate launch --config_file recipes/accelerate_configs/deepspeed_zero3.yaml scripts/run_sft.py recipes/zephyr-7b-beta/sft/config_full.yaml

# Step 2 - align with DPO
ACCELERATE_LOG_LEVEL=info accelerate launch --config_file recipes/accelerate_configs/deepspeed_zero3.yaml scripts/run_dpo.py recipes/zephyr-7b-beta/dpo/config_full.yaml

💡 Tip: If you scale up/down the number of GPUs, we recommend also scaling up the per-device batch size or number of gradient accumulation steps to keep the global batch size constant (and thus replicate our results).

By default, these scripts will push each model to your Hugging Face Hub username, i.e. {username}/{model_name}-{task}. You can override the parameters in each YAML config by appending them to the command as follows:

# Change batch size, number of epochs etc
ACCELERATE_LOG_LEVEL=info accelerate launch --config_file recipes/accelerate_configs/deepspeed_zero3.yaml scripts/run_{task}.py recipes/{model_name}/{task}/config_full.yaml --per_device_train_batch_size=42 --num_train_epochs=5

Logging with Weights and Biases

By default all training metrics are logged with TensorBoard. If you have a Weights and Biases account and are logged in, you can view the training metrics by appending --report_to=wandb, e.g.

ACCELERATE_LOG_LEVEL=info accelerate launch --config_file recipes/accelerate_configs/deepspeed_zero3.yaml scripts/run_{task}.py recipes/{model_name}/{task}/config_full.yaml --report_to=wandb

Launching jobs on a Slurm cluster

If you have access to a Slurm cluster, we provide a recipes/launch.slurm script that will automatically queue training jobs for you. Here's how you can use it:

sbatch --job-name=handbook_{task} --nodes=1 recipes/launch.slurm {model_name} {task} {precision} {accelerator}

Here {model_name} and {task} are defined as above, while {precision} refers to the type of training (full vs qlora) and {accelerator} refers to the choice of 🤗 Accelerate config in recipes/accelerate_configs. If you wish to override the default config parameters, you can provide them by appending a space-separated string like `'--arg1=value1 --arg2=value2'. Here's a concrete example to run SFT on 1 node of 8 GPUs:

# Launch on Slurm and override default hyperparameters
sbatch --job-name=handbook_sft --nodes=1 recipes/launch.slurm zephyr-7b-beta sft full deepspeed_zero3 '--per_device_train_batch_size=42 --num_train_epochs=5'

You can scale the number of nodes by increasing the --nodes flag.

⚠️ Note: the configuration in recipes/launch.slurm is optimised for the Hugging Face Compute Cluster and may require tweaking to be adapted to your own compute nodes.

Fine-tuning on your datasets

Under the hood, each training script uses the get_datasets() function which allows one to easily combine multiple datasets with varying proportions. For instance, this is how one can specify multiple datasets and which splits to combine in one of the YAML configs:

datasets_mixer:
    dataset_1: 0.5  # Use 50% of the training examples
    dataset_2: 0.66 # Use 66% of the training examples
    dataset_3: 0.10 # Use 10% of the training examples
dataset_splits:
- train_xxx         # The training splits to mix
- test_xxx          # The test splits to mix

If you want to fine-tune on your datasets, the main thing to keep in mind is how the chat templates are applied to the dataset blend. Since each task (SFT, DPO, ORPO, etc), requires a different format, we assume the datasets have the following columns:

SFT

  • messages: A list of dicts in the form {"role": "{role}", "content": {content}}.
  • See ultrachat_200k for an example.

DPO and ORPO

  • chosen: A list of dicts in the form {"role": "{role}", "content": {content}} corresponding to the preferred dialogue.
  • rejected: A list of dicts in the form {"role": "{role}", "content": {content}} corresponding to the dispreferred dialogue.
  • See ultrafeedback_binarized for an example.

We also find it useful to include dedicated splits per task in our datasets, so e.g. we have:

  • {train,test}_sft: Splits for SFT training.
  • {train,test}_gen: Splits for generation ranking like rejection sampling or PPO.
  • {train,test}_prefs: Splits for preference modelling, like reward modelling or DPO.

If you format your dataset in the same way, our training scripts should work out of the box!

Evaluating chat models

We recommend benchmarking chat models on:

  • MT-Bench: a multi-turn benchmark spanning 80 dialogues and 10 domains.
  • AlpacaEval: a single-turn benchmark which evaluates the helpfulness of chat and instruct models against text-davinci-003.

For both benchmarks, we have added support for the Zephyr chat template (which is the default produced by our scripts), so you can evaluate models produced by our scripts as follows:

MT-Bench

  • Follow the installation instructions here
  • Make sure the word zephyr exists in the --model-path argument when generating the model responses here. This will ensure the correct chat template is loaded. For example, the following model name is valid: --model-path {hub_username}/my-baby-zephyr
  • Generate the model responses and GPT-4 rankings.

AlpacaEval

  • Follow the installation instructions here
  • Copy-paste the config for zephyr-7b-beta and place it in the model_configs directory under {your_zephyr_model}.
  • Follow the steps to evaluate your model here.

Note that MT-Bench and AlpacaEval rely on LLMs like GPT-4 to judge the quality of the model responses, and thus the ranking exhibit various biases including a preference for models distilled from GPTs. For that reason, we also recommend submitting your best models for human evaluation in:

  • Chatbot Arena: a live, human evaluation of chat models in head-to-head comparisons.