deepsparse
BentoML
deepsparse | BentoML | |
---|---|---|
21 | 16 | |
2,873 | 6,558 | |
1.5% | 1.5% | |
9.5 | 9.8 | |
10 days ago | about 7 hours ago | |
Python | Python | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | Apache License 2.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
deepsparse
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Fast Llama 2 on CPUs with Sparse Fine-Tuning and DeepSparse
Interesting company. Yannic Kilcher interviewed Nir Shavit last year and they went into some depth: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0PAiQ1jTN5k DeepSparse is on GitHub: https://github.com/neuralmagic/deepsparse
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The future of quantization techniques in deep learning.
sparsity https://github.com/neuralmagic/deepsparse
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[D] How to get the fastest PyTorch inference and what is the "best" model serving framework?
For 1), what is the easiest way to speed up inference (assume only PyTorch and primarily GPU but also some CPU)? I have been using ONNX and Torchscript but there is a bit of a learning curve and sometimes it can be tricky to get the model to actually work. Is there anything else worth trying? I am enthused by things like TorchDynamo (although I have not tested it extensively) due to its apparent ease of use. I also saw the post yesterday about Kernl using (OpenAI) Triton kernels to speed up transformer models which also looks interesting. Are things like SageMaker Neo or NeuralMagic worth trying? My only reservation with some of these is they still seem to be pretty model/architecture specific. I am a little reluctant to put much time into these unless I know others have had some success first.
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[D] Most efficient open source language model ?
You should look into deepsparse, they are working on delivering GPU level performance on consumer CPUs with some great results: https://github.com/neuralmagic/deepsparse. There is a great interview with the founder, Nir Shavit here: https://piped.kavin.rocks/watch?v=0PAiQ1jTN5k
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[R] New sparsity research (oBERT) enabled 175X increase in CPU performance for MLPerf submission
Utilizing the oBERT research we published at Neural Magic and some further iteration, we’ve enabled an increase in NLP performance of 175X while retaining 99% accuracy on the question-answering task in MLPerf. A combination of distillation, layer dropping, quantization, and unstructured pruning with oBERT enabled these large performance gains through the DeepSparse Engine. All of our contributions and research are open-sourced or free to use. Read through the oBERT paper on arxiv, try out the research in SparseML, and dive into the writeup to learn more about how we achieved these impressive results and utilize them for your own use cases!
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An open-source library for optimizing deep learning inference. (1) You select the target optimization, (2) nebullvm searches for the best optimization techniques for your model-hardware configuration, and then (3) serves an optimized model that runs much faster in inference
Open-source projects leveraged by nebullvm include OpenVINO, TensorRT, Intel Neural Compressor, SparseML and DeepSparse, Apache TVM, ONNX Runtime, TFlite and XLA. A huge thank you to the open-source community for developing and maintaining these amazing projects.
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[R] BERT-Large: Prune Once for DistilBERT Inference Performance
BERT-Large (345 million parameters) is now faster than the much smaller DistilBERT (66 million parameters) all while retaining the accuracy of the much larger BERT-Large model! We made this possible with Intel Labs by applying cutting-edge sparsification and quantization research from their Prune Once For All paper and utilizing it in the DeepSparse engine. It makes BERT-Large 12x smaller while delivering 8x latency speedup on commodity CPUs. We open-sourced the research in SparseML; run through the overview here and give it a try!
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[R] How well do sparse ImageNet models transfer? Prune once and deploy anywhere for inference performance speedups! (arxiv link in comments)
And benchmark/deploy with 8X better performance in DeepSparse!
- Sparseserver.ui – test the performance of Sparse Transformers
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[P] SparseServer.UI : A UI to test performance of Sparse Transformers
Hi _Arsenie, this runs the deepsparse.server command for multiple models. and btw, we recently updated the READMEs for the Deepsparse Engine https://github.com/neuralmagic/deepsparse
BentoML
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Who's hiring developer advocates? (December 2023)
Link to GitHub -->
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project ideas/advice for entry-level grad jobs?
there are a few tools you can use as "cheat mode" shortcuts to give you a leg up as you're getting started. here's one: https://github.com/bentoml/BentoML
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Two high schoolers trying to use Azure/GCP/AWS- need help!
Then you can look into bentoml https://github.com/bentoml/BentoML which is used to deploy ml stuff with many more benifits.
- Ask HN: Who is hiring? (November 2022)
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[D] How to get the fastest PyTorch inference and what is the "best" model serving framework?
For 2), I am aware of a few options. Triton inference server is an obvious one as is the ‘transformer-deploy’ version from LDS. My only reservation here is that they require the model compilation or are architecture specific. I am aware of others like Bento, Ray serving and TorchServe. Ideally I would have something that allows any (PyTorch model) to be used without the extra compilation effort (or at least optionally) and has some convenience things like ease of use, easy to deploy, easy to host multiple models and can perform some dynamic batching. Anyway, I am really interested to hear people's experience here as I know there are now quite a few options! Any help is appreciated! Disclaimer - I have no affiliation or are connected in any way with the libraries or companies listed here. These are just the ones I know of. Thanks in advance.
- PostgresML is 8-40x faster than Python HTTP microservices
- Congratulations on v1.0, BentoML 🍱 ! You are r/mlops OSS of the month!
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Show HN: Truss – serve any ML model, anywhere, without boilerplate code
In this category I’m a big fan of https://github.com/bentoml/BentoML
What I like about it is their idiomatic developer experience. It reminds me of other Pythonic frameworks like Flask and Django in a good way.
I have no affiliation with them whatsoever, just an admirer.
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[P] Introducing BentoML 1.0 - A faster way to ship your models to production
Github Page: https://github.com/bentoml/BentoML
- Show HN: BentoML goes 1.0 – A faster way to ship your models to production
What are some alternatives?
NudeNet - Neural Nets for Nudity Detection and Censoring
fastapi - FastAPI framework, high performance, easy to learn, fast to code, ready for production
yolov5 - YOLOv5 🚀 in PyTorch > ONNX > CoreML > TFLite
seldon-core - An MLOps framework to package, deploy, monitor and manage thousands of production machine learning models
openvino - OpenVINO™ is an open-source toolkit for optimizing and deploying AI inference
haystack - :mag: LLM orchestration framework to build customizable, production-ready LLM applications. Connect components (models, vector DBs, file converters) to pipelines or agents that can interact with your data. With advanced retrieval methods, it's best suited for building RAG, question answering, semantic search or conversational agent chatbots.
model-optimization - A toolkit to optimize ML models for deployment for Keras and TensorFlow, including quantization and pruning.
clearml - ClearML - Auto-Magical CI/CD to streamline your AI workload. Experiment Management, Data Management, Pipeline, Orchestration, Scheduling & Serving in one MLOps/LLMOps solution
sparseml - Libraries for applying sparsification recipes to neural networks with a few lines of code, enabling faster and smaller models
Kedro - Kedro is a toolbox for production-ready data science. It uses software engineering best practices to help you create data engineering and data science pipelines that are reproducible, maintainable, and modular.
tvm - Open deep learning compiler stack for cpu, gpu and specialized accelerators
kubeflow - Machine Learning Toolkit for Kubernetes