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Reverse weight decay #567
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Reverse weight decay #567
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I think this PR needs to go into the train-olmo-large
branch, no?
You are right. Then we need to make sure we compute this every time.
…On Fri, May 3, 2024, 08:45 Akshita Bhagia ***@***.***> wrote:
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------------------------------
In olmo/train.py
<#567 (comment)>:
> + if should_log_optim_metrics_this_step:
+ emb_decay_factor = 1.0 - optim_metrics["param/transformer.wte.weight.norm"]
+ else:
+ emb_decay_factor = 1.0
We compute the norm of the gradient every step (
grad/transformer.wte.weight.norm), not the norm of the parameter itself (
param/transformer.wte.weight.norm). Don't we need the latter?
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Done |
@epwalsh , can you look at this as well? This gets all up in your code. |
olmo/optim.py
Outdated
if cfg.optimizer.decay_embeddings: | ||
decay.add(fpn) | ||
elif cfg.optimizer.reverse_embedding_decay: | ||
embeddings_decay.add(fpn) |
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What happens if these are both set? We should check against that somewhere.
CHANGELOG.md
Outdated
@@ -23,6 +23,7 @@ shared memory implementation can be used by passing `use_legacy_shared_mem_impl` | |||
- Added MMLU multiple choice (A/B/C/D) 5-shot variant downstream tasks | |||
- Tokenizer patch | |||
- Added option to specify number of model replicas when using hybrid sharding. | |||
- Added reverse_embedding_decay option. |
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This name also needs to be updated.
@@ -43,6 +43,7 @@ def clip_grads_and_collect_metrics( | |||
global_step: int, | |||
collect_param_metrics: bool = True, | |||
process_group: Optional[dist.ProcessGroup] = None, | |||
regularize_embeddings: bool = False, |
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Why is this a parameter to this function? Shouldn't it be just captured in the parameter groups? That's how all the other regularization works.
if group["name"] == "embedding_decay_group": | ||
group["weight_decay"] *= emb_decay_factor |
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Does't this multiply up emb_decay_factor
across batches? It feels like this should just be set, not multiplied? Or is there some other bit that resets group["weight_decay"]
every time?
emb_norm = optim_metrics["param/transformer.wte.weight.norm"] | ||
emb_size = self.cfg.model.embedding_size or self.cfg.model.vocab_size | ||
emb_std = math.sqrt(math.pow(emb_norm, 2) / float(emb_size * self.cfg.model.vocab_size)) | ||
emb_decay_factor = 1.0 - emb_std |
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If we're using this to plug into the value for WD, that means it needs to be negative when we want to pull up the values. So then it would be emb_std - 1
?
) | ||
|
||
emb_norm = optim_metrics["param/transformer.wte.weight.norm"] | ||
emb_size = self.cfg.model.embedding_size or self.cfg.model.vocab_size | ||
emb_std = math.sqrt(math.pow(emb_norm, 2) / float(emb_size * self.cfg.model.vocab_size)) |
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I believe the denominator should be float(self.cfg.model.d_model * emb_size)
. And I'm not sure about the numerator either... I don't see how this is equivalent to standard deviation since the summation terms in the norm are not centered by the mean, no?
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update: @AkshitaB and I discussed this, we think we need to calculate this metric separately in optim.py
.
We also talked about how this standard deviation will be a little biased since it will include parts of the embedding that never are never used, since we inflate the embedding size beyond vocab size to be a multiple of 128. But this is probably okay since that's only a small part of the embeddings.
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Actually, I think this is a big problem. Embeddings will want to be small, so this will push them up. Unused, or rarely used embeddings will never get updated, so they will get bigger and bigger, skewing the calculation of the stddev more and more.
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Figuring out which embeddings to exclude from the stddev computation is going to be tricky in the distributed setting though.
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Thinking out loud here... what if we force the unused params to be zero from the beginning? They would still bias standard deviation by as much as they are different from the mean, but they would always be zero.. I think
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That would work if we were starting with this from scratch, but what about the case when we want to use this to "rescue" a run? Can we explicitly make the unused embeddings zero when we load the model? And will it matter if we do so halfway through training?
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Can we explicitly make the unused embeddings zero when we load the model?
I think that's our best bet. I can't think of any issues that would introduce in the middle of training. I suspect those parameters are 0 anyway due to weight decay and zero gradients.
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Rare tokens would still be an issue, but not any more than they always are.
Goal: Perform reverse weight decay on embeddings
Multiply weight_decay factor for the embeddings layer by
(1 - norm(embeddings))
TODO:
I tried this on a tiny test model config and got an overflow error. Possibly this will not be an issue with the actual model.
Note: I created the branch from
train-olmo-large
. See this for actual diffs for this PR.