ByteScale: Efficient Scaling of LLM Training with a 2048K Context Length on More Than 12,000 GPUs
February 28, 2025 Β· Declared Dead Β· π Conference on Applications, Technologies, Architectures, and Protocols for Computer Communication
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Authors
Hao Ge, Junda Feng, Qi Huang, Fangcheng Fu, Xiaonan Nie, Lei Zuo, Haibin Lin, Bin Cui, Xin Liu
arXiv ID
2502.21231
Category
cs.DC: Distributed Computing
Cross-listed
cs.AI,
cs.LG
Citations
7
Venue
Conference on Applications, Technologies, Architectures, and Protocols for Computer Communication
Last Checked
4 months ago
Abstract
Scaling long-context ability is essential for Large Language Models (LLMs). To amortize the memory consumption across multiple devices in long-context training, inter-data partitioning (a.k.a. Data Parallelism) and intra-data partitioning (a.k.a. Context Parallelism) are commonly used. Current training frameworks predominantly treat the two techniques as orthogonal, and establish static communication groups to organize the devices as a static mesh (e.g., a 2D mesh). However, the sequences for LLM training typically vary in lengths, no matter for texts, multi-modalities or reinforcement learning. The mismatch between data heterogeneity and static mesh causes redundant communication and imbalanced computation, degrading the training efficiency. In this work, we introduce ByteScale, an efficient, flexible, and scalable LLM training framework for large-scale mixed training of long and short sequences. The core of ByteScale is a novel parallelism strategy, namely Hybrid Data Parallelism (HDP), which unifies the inter- and intra-data partitioning with a dynamic mesh design. In particular, we build a communication optimizer, which eliminates the redundant communication for short sequences by data-aware sharding and dynamic communication, and further compresses the communication cost for long sequences by selective offloading. Besides, we also develop a balance scheduler to mitigate the imbalanced computation by parallelism-aware data assignment. We evaluate ByteScale with the model sizes ranging from 7B to 141B, context lengths from 256K to 2048K, on a production cluster with more than 12,000 GPUs. Experiment results show that ByteScale outperforms the state-of-the-art training system by up to 7.89x.
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