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Mamba

Mamba

Mamba: Linear-Time Sequence Modeling with Selective State Spaces
Albert Gu*, Tri Dao*
Paper: https://arxiv.org/abs/2312.00752

About

Mamba is a new state space model architecture showing promising performance on information-dense data such as language modeling, where previous subquadratic models fall short of Transformers. It is based on the line of progress on structured state space models, with an efficient hardware-aware design and implementation in the spirit of FlashAttention.

Installation

  • [Option] pip install causal-conv1d>=1.2.0: an efficient implementation of a simple causal Conv1d layer used inside the Mamba block.
  • pip install mamba-ssm: the core Mamba package.

It can also be built from source with pip install . from this repository.

If pip complains about PyTorch versions, try passing --no-build-isolation to pip.

Other requirements:

  • Linux
  • NVIDIA GPU
  • PyTorch 1.12+
  • CUDA 11.6+

Usage

We expose several levels of interface with the Mamba model.

Selective SSM

Mamba is based on a selective SSM layer, which is the focus of the paper (Section 3; Algorithm 2).

Source: ops/selective_scan_interface.py.

Mamba Block

The main module of this repository is the Mamba architecture block wrapping the selective SSM.

Source: modules/mamba_simple.py.

Usage:

import torch
from mamba_ssm import Mamba

batch, length, dim = 2, 64, 16
x = torch.randn(batch, length, dim).to("cuda")
model = Mamba(
    # This module uses roughly 3 * expand * d_model^2 parameters
    d_model=dim, # Model dimension d_model
    d_state=16,  # SSM state expansion factor
    d_conv=4,    # Local convolution width
    expand=2,    # Block expansion factor
).to("cuda")
y = model(x)
assert y.shape == x.shape

Mamba Language Model

Finally, we provide an example of a complete language model: a deep sequence model backbone (with repeating Mamba blocks) + language model head.

Source: models/mixer_seq_simple.py.

This is an example of how to integrate Mamba into an end-to-end neural network. This example is used in the generation scripts below.

Pretrained Models

Pretrained models are uploaded to Hugging Face: mamba-130m, mamba-370m, mamba-790m, mamba-1.4b, mamba-2.8b, trained on 300B tokens on the Pile, as well as mamba-2.8b-slimpj (trained on 600B tokens on the SlimPajama dataset).

The models will be autodownloaded by the generation script below.

These models were trained on the Pile, and follow the standard model dimensions described by GPT-3 and followed by many open source models:

Parameters Layers Model dim.
130M 24 768
370M 48 1024
790M 48 1536
1.4B 48 2048
2.8B 64 2560

(The layer count of Mamba doubles that of a Transformer with similar size, as two Mamba blocks are needed for each "layer" (MHA block + MLP block) of a Transformer.)

Note: these are base models trained only for 300B tokens, without any form of downstream modification (instruction tuning, etc.). Performance is expected to be comparable or better than other architectures trained on similar data, but not to match larger or fine-tuned models.

Evaluations

To run zero-shot evaluations of models (corresponding to Table 3 of the paper), we use the lm-evaluation-harness library.

  1. Pull the lm-evaluation-harness repo by git submodule update --init --recursive. We use the big-refactor branch.
  2. Install lm-evaluation-harness: pip install -e 3rdparty/lm-evaluation-harness. On Python 3.10 you might need to manually install the latest version of promptsource: pip install git+https://github.com/bigscience-workshop/promptsource.git.
  3. Run evaluation with (more documentation at the lm-evaluation-harness repo):
python evals/lm_harness_eval.py --model mamba --model_args pretrained=state-spaces/mamba-130m --tasks lambada_openai,hellaswag,piqa,arc_easy,arc_challenge,winogrande --device cuda --batch_size 64
python evals/lm_harness_eval.py --model hf --model_args pretrained=EleutherAI/pythia-160m --tasks lambada_openai,hellaswag,piqa,arc_easy,arc_challenge,winogrande --device cuda --batch_size 64

To reproduce the results on the mamba-2.8b-slimpj model reported in the blogposts:

python evals/lm_harness_eval.py --model mamba --model_args pretrained=state-spaces/mamba-2.8b-slimpj --tasks boolq,piqa,hellaswag,winogrande,arc_easy,arc_challenge,openbookqa,race,truthfulqa_mc2 --device cuda --batch_size 64
python evals/lm_harness_eval.py --model mamba --model_args pretrained=state-spaces/mamba-2.8b-slimpj --tasks mmlu --num_fewshot 5 --device cuda --batch_size 64

Note that the result of each task might differ from reported values by 0.1-0.3 due to noise in the evaluation process.

Inference

The script benchmarks/benchmark_generation_mamba_simple.py

  1. autoloads a model from the Hugging Face Hub,
  2. generates completions of a user-specified prompt,
  3. benchmarks the inference speed of this generation.

Other configurable options include the top-p (nucleus sampling) probability, and the softmax temperature.

Examples

To test generation latency (e.g. batch size = 1) with different sampling strategies:

python benchmarks/benchmark_generation_mamba_simple.py --model-name "state-spaces/mamba-2.8b" --prompt "My cat wrote all this CUDA code for a new language model and" --topp 0.9 --temperature 0.7 --repetition-penalty 1.2
python benchmarks/benchmark_generation_mamba_simple.py --model-name "EleutherAI/pythia-2.8b" --prompt "My cat wrote all this CUDA code for a new language model and" --topp 0.9 --temperature 0.7 --repetition-penalty 1.2
python benchmarks/benchmark_generation_mamba_simple.py --model-name "state-spaces/mamba-2.8b" --prompt "My cat wrote all this CUDA code for a new language model and" --minp 0.05 --topk 0 --temperature 0.7 --repetition-penalty 1.2

To test generation throughput with random prompts (e.g. large batch size):

python benchmarks/benchmark_generation_mamba_simple.py --model-name "state-spaces/mamba-2.8b" --batch 128
python benchmarks/benchmark_generation_mamba_simple.py --model-name "EleutherAI/pythia-2.8b" --batch 128

Troubleshooting

Precision

Our models were trained using PyTorch AMP for mixed precision. AMP keeps model parameters in float32 and casts to half precision when necessary. On the other hand, other frameworks like DeepSpeed store parameters in float16 and upcasts when necessary (e.g. for optimizer accumulation).

We've observed that higher precision for the main model parameters may be necessary, because SSMs are sensitive to their recurrent dynamics. If you are experiencing instabilities, as a first step please try a framework storing parameters in fp32 (such as AMP).

Initialization

Some parts of the model have initializations inherited from prior work on S4 models. For example, the $\Delta$ parameter has a targeted range by initializing the bias of its linear projection. However, some frameworks may have post-initialization hooks (e.g. setting all bias terms in nn.Linear modules to zero). If this is the case, you may have to add custom logic (e.g. this line turns off re-initializing in our trainer, but would be a no-op in any other framework) that is specific to the training framework.

Citation

If you use this codebase, or otherwise found our work valuable, please cite Mamba:

@article{mamba,
  title={Mamba: Linear-Time Sequence Modeling with Selective State Spaces},
  author={Gu, Albert and Dao, Tri},
  journal={arXiv preprint arXiv:2312.00752},
  year={2023}
}

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  • Python 51.1%
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