This PR enables all PIE rules on ruff, there are already some enabled rules from this family, the new added rules are
```
PIE796 Enum contains duplicate value: {value}
PIE808 Unnecessary start argument in range
```
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/pull/165814
Approved by: https://github.com/ezyang
This PR enables all PIE rules on ruff, there are already some enabled rules from this family, the new added rules are
```
PIE796 Enum contains duplicate value: {value}
PIE808 Unnecessary start argument in range
```
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/pull/165814
Approved by: https://github.com/ezyang
It's not fully clear why these are not being created, but you can definitely
reproduce this in code. `__name__` is fun, since there appears to be no way to
explicitly set it on the pybind11 layer or c++ layer. I've set this in the
python wrapper code (which works correctly). But let me know if people feel
strongly and want us to go explicitly cast to python within the cpp functions
and set it there.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/pull/147906
Approved by: https://github.com/jansel
ghstack dependencies: #147894
Fixes#10536
Reattempt of #61467. Thank you so much to @mskoh52 for your excellent work!
As I was trying to create a more efficient LLM data collator, I realized that `pad_sequence` only supports right padding, even though left padding is a very common format for LLMs, like Llama and Mistral.
The proposed alternative implementation was to use multiple flips, which tends to be 1.5x-2x slower. Instead we can add a [`padding_side` parameter as there is for for Hugging Face tokenizers](9d6c0641c4/src/transformers/tokenization_utils_base.py (L1565)), which requires only a very small change in the C++ code.
Here are the benchmarks of the new implementation!
`float32`:

`bool`:

Code:
```python
from __future__ import annotations
import random
import time
from typing import Literal
import numpy as np
import torch
def pad_sequence_with_flips(
sequences: list[torch.Tensor],
batch_first: bool = False,
padding_value: int | float | bool = 0.0,
padding_side: Literal["left", "right"] | str = "left",
) -> torch.Tensor:
if padding_side == 'right':
padded_sequence = torch._C._nn.pad_sequence([t.flatten() for t in sequences], batch_first=batch_first, padding_value=padding_value)
elif padding_side=='left':
padded_sequence = torch._C._nn.pad_sequence([t.flatten().flip(0) for t in sequences], batch_first=batch_first, padding_value=padding_value) # pyright: ignore[reportArgumentType]
padded_sequence = padded_sequence.flip(int(batch_first))
else:
raise ValueError(f"padding_side should be either 'right' or 'left', but got {padding_side}")
return padded_sequence
sequence_lengths: list[int] = []
flip_left_pad_times: list[float] = []
flip_left_pad_times_std: list[float] = []
left_pad_times: list[float] = []
left_pad_times_std: list[float] = []
RUNS_PER_LOOP: int = 100
for i in range(1, 7):
sequence_length = i * int(1e6) // 6
sequence_lengths.append(sequence_length)
sequences = [torch.randint(0, 2, (random.randint(1, sequence_length),), dtype=torch.bool) for _ in range(64)]
inner_left_pad_times: list[float] = []
inner_right_pad_times: list[float] = []
inner_flip_left_pad_times: list[float] = []
inner_flip_right_pad_times: list[float] = []
for _ in range(RUNS_PER_LOOP):
start = time.perf_counter()
torch._C._nn.pad_sequence(sequences, batch_first=True, padding_value=False, padding_side="left")
end = time.perf_counter()
inner_left_pad_times.append(end - start)
start = time.perf_counter()
pad_sequence_with_flips(sequences, batch_first=True, padding_value=False, padding_side="left")
end = time.perf_counter()
inner_flip_left_pad_times.append(end - start)
left_pad_times.append(sum(inner_left_pad_times) / len(inner_left_pad_times))
left_pad_times_std.append(np.std(inner_left_pad_times))
flip_left_pad_times.append(sum(inner_flip_left_pad_times) / len(inner_flip_left_pad_times))
flip_left_pad_times_std.append(np.std(inner_flip_left_pad_times))
print(f"Sequence Length: {sequence_length}, Left Pad Time: {left_pad_times[-1]}, Left with Flips Pad Time: {flip_left_pad_times[-1]}")
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
plt.plot(sequence_lengths, left_pad_times, label="new pad_sequence left")
plt.scatter(sequence_lengths, left_pad_times)
plt.errorbar(sequence_lengths, left_pad_times, yerr=left_pad_times_std, linestyle='None', marker='^')
plt.plot(sequence_lengths, flip_left_pad_times, label="old pad_sequence left (2 flips)")
plt.scatter(sequence_lengths, flip_left_pad_times)
plt.errorbar(sequence_lengths, flip_left_pad_times, yerr=flip_left_pad_times_std, linestyle='None', marker='^')
plt.xlabel("Sequence Length")
plt.ylabel("Time (s)")
plt.legend(loc="upper right")
# Sequence Length: 166666, Left Pad Time: 0.06147645162009212, Left with Flips Pad Time: 0.09842291727001794
# Sequence Length: 333333, Left Pad Time: 0.08933195920990329, Left with Flips Pad Time: 0.15597836187991562
# Sequence Length: 500000, Left Pad Time: 0.08863158334006585, Left with Flips Pad Time: 0.15224887342999863
# Sequence Length: 666666, Left Pad Time: 0.10524682551997103, Left with Flips Pad Time: 0.18177212480995877
# Sequence Length: 833333, Left Pad Time: 0.11801802741003485, Left with Flips Pad Time: 0.20821274195001024
# Sequence Length: 1000000, Left Pad Time: 0.131894061660023, Left with Flips Pad Time: 0.23223503091008751
```
Co-authored-by: mskoh52 <mskoh52@users.noreply.github.com>
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/pull/131884
Approved by: https://github.com/ezyang
Add similar semantics for creating a buffer object similar to creating a parameter. This is done by introducing a new Buffer class that can be used for type disambiguation. The underlying functionality of registering a buffer remains the same as the register_buffer method has not been changed. The persistent parameter in the Buffer type is to indicate whether a buffer object should be persistent or not. Other non-test changes have to do with getting the new Buffer type recognized by inductor and dynamo. Remaining changes are test changes to make sure that the Buffer type can be used as a drop in replacement for register_buffer as it just leads to register_buffer being called. The addition of this new functionality still allows for normal tensors to be used as buffers so these changes are intended to be backwards compatible.
Fixes#35735
Co-authored-by: Mikayla Gawarecki <mikaylagawarecki@gmail.com>
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/pull/125971
Approved by: https://github.com/albanD, https://github.com/anijain2305, https://github.com/mlazos
We don't care about the Dynamo x TorchScript composition, so I'm
disabling these tests (so they don't get reported as flaky). Not
disabling all of the TorchScript tests yet because they have been useful
to catch random bugs.
Test Plan:
- CI
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/pull/128731
Approved by: https://github.com/williamwen42
Adds a ruff lint rule to ban raising raw exceptions. Most of these should at the very least be runtime exception, value errors, type errors or some other errors. There are hundreds of instance of these bad exception types already in the codebase, so I have noqa'd most of them. Hopefully this error code will get commiters to rethink what exception type they should raise when they submit a PR.
I also encourage people to gradually go and fix all the existing noqas that have been added so they can be removed overtime and our exception typing can be improved.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/pull/124570
Approved by: https://github.com/ezyang
Fixes#115331.
This PR increases the number of valid GPU devices to 512 (from 64) in order to future-proof PyTorch for providers that offer [single nodes with a large device count](https://www.tensorwave.com/). Until now, `DeviceIndex` was an `int8_t`, thus multiple changes were necessary:
- `DeviceIndex` changed to `int16_t`. Updated consumers that assume it to be an `int8_t`.
- Updated bounds checking for `torch.device()` in the Python frontend. Right now, we allow funny things like `torch.device('cpu', 200).index == -56`, which is undefined behavior. I inserted some checks to only allow values between 0 and `c10::Device::MAX_NUM_DEVICES - 1`.
- Updated the `ArgumentInfo` struct as it hardcodes the device index as 8 bit field [^1]. Might be a breaking change, not sure if users rely on this.
- Introduced `c10::Device::MAX_NUM_DEVICES` as a replacement for the old `C10_COMPILE_TIME_MAX_GPUS`
[^1]: This field was unsigned, so I guess this has also been undef behavior the whole time? Our default device index is -1, so this always wrapped around to 255 when written to the `ArgumentInfo` struct. When I switched the `DeviceIndex` to `int16_t`, it actually stayed 255 after unpacking from `ArgumentInfo` again, as the `DeviceIndex` was now wide enough that it didn't wrap back to -1.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/pull/119639
Approved by: https://github.com/cyyever, https://github.com/albanD, https://github.com/huydhn