Note
Click here to download the full example code
Multi-GPU Examples¶
Data Parallelism is when we split the mini-batch of samples into multiple smaller mini-batches and run the computation for each of the smaller mini-batches in parallel.
Data Parallelism is implemented using torch.nn.DataParallel
.
One can wrap a Module in DataParallel
and it will be parallelized
over multiple GPUs in the batch dimension.
DataParallel¶
import torch
import torch.nn as nn
class DataParallelModel(nn.Module):
def __init__(self):
super().__init__()
self.block1 = nn.Linear(10, 20)
# wrap block2 in DataParallel
self.block2 = nn.Linear(20, 20)
self.block2 = nn.DataParallel(self.block2)
self.block3 = nn.Linear(20, 20)
def forward(self, x):
x = self.block1(x)
x = self.block2(x)
x = self.block3(x)
return x
The code does not need to be changed in CPU-mode.
The documentation for DataParallel can be found here.
Attributes of the wrapped module
After wrapping a Module with DataParallel
, the attributes of the module
(e.g. custom methods) became inaccessible. This is because DataParallel
defines a few new members, and allowing other attributes might lead to
clashes in their names. For those who still want to access the attributes,
a workaround is to use a subclass of DataParallel
as below.
class MyDataParallel(nn.DataParallel):
def __getattr__(self, name):
return getattr(self.module, name)
Primitives on which DataParallel is implemented upon:
In general, pytorch’s nn.parallel primitives can be used independently. We have implemented simple MPI-like primitives:
- replicate: replicate a Module on multiple devices
- scatter: distribute the input in the first-dimension
- gather: gather and concatenate the input in the first-dimension
- parallel_apply: apply a set of already-distributed inputs to a set of already-distributed models.
To give a better clarity, here function data_parallel
composed using
these collectives
def data_parallel(module, input, device_ids, output_device=None):
if not device_ids:
return module(input)
if output_device is None:
output_device = device_ids[0]
replicas = nn.parallel.replicate(module, device_ids)
inputs = nn.parallel.scatter(input, device_ids)
replicas = replicas[:len(inputs)]
outputs = nn.parallel.parallel_apply(replicas, inputs)
return nn.parallel.gather(outputs, output_device)
Part of the model on CPU and part on the GPU¶
Let’s look at a small example of implementing a network where part of it is on the CPU and part on the GPU
device = torch.device("cuda:0")
class DistributedModel(nn.Module):
def __init__(self):
super().__init__(
embedding=nn.Embedding(1000, 10),
rnn=nn.Linear(10, 10).to(device),
)
def forward(self, x):
# Compute embedding on CPU
x = self.embedding(x)
# Transfer to GPU
x = x.to(device)
# Compute RNN on GPU
x = self.rnn(x)
return x
This was a small introduction to PyTorch for former Torch users. There’s a lot more to learn.
Look at our more comprehensive introductory tutorial which introduces
the optim
package, data loaders etc.: Deep Learning with PyTorch: A 60 Minute Blitz.
Also look at
- Train neural nets to play video games
- Train a state-of-the-art ResNet network on imagenet
- Train an face generator using Generative Adversarial Networks
- Train a word-level language model using Recurrent LSTM networks
- More examples
- More tutorials
- Discuss PyTorch on the Forums
- Chat with other users on Slack
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