Originally PyTorch used an eager mode where each PyTorch operation that forms the model is run independently as soon as it’s reached. PyTorch 2.0 introduced torch.compile to speed up PyTorch code over the default eager mode. In contrast to eager mode, the torch.compile pre-compiles the entire model into a single graph in a manner that’s optimal for running on a given hardware platform. AWS optimized the PyTorch torch.compile feature for AWS Graviton3 processors. This optimization results in up to 2x better performance for Hugging Face model inference (based on geomean of performance improvement for 33 models) and up to 1.35x better performance for TorchBench model inference (geomean of performance improvement for 45 models) compared to the default eager mode inference across several natural language processing (NLP), computer vision (CV), and recommendation models on AWS Graviton3-based Amazon EC2 instances. Starting with PyTorch 2.3.1, the optimizations are available in torch Python wheels and AWS Graviton PyTorch deep learning container (DLC).

In this blog post, we show how we optimized torch.compile performance on AWS Graviton3-based EC2 instances, how to use the optimizations to improve inference performance, and the resulting speedups.

Why torch.compile and what’s the goal?

In eager mode, operators in a model are run immediately as they are encountered. It’s easier to use, more suitable for machine learning (ML) researchers, and hence is the default mode. However, eager mode incurs runtime overhead because of redundant kernel launch and memory read overhead. Whereas in torch compile mode, operators are first synthesized into a graph, wherein one operator is merged with another to reduce and localize memory reads and total kernel launch overhead.

The goal for the AWS Graviton team was to optimize torch.compile backend for Graviton3 processors. PyTorch eager mode was already optimized for Graviton3 processors with Arm Compute Library (ACL) kernels using oneDNN (also known as MKLDNN). So, the question was, how to reuse those kernels in torch.compile mode to get the best of graph compilation and the optimized kernel performance together?

Results

The AWS Graviton team extended the torch inductor and oneDNN primitives that reused the ACL kernels and optimized compile mode performance on Graviton3 processors. Starting with PyTorch 2.3.1, the optimizations are available in the torch Python wheels and AWS Graviton DLC. Please see the Running an inference section that follows for the instructions on installation, runtime configuration, and how to run the tests.

To demonstrate the performance improvements, we used NLP, CV, and recommendation models from TorchBench and the most downloaded NLP models from Hugging Face across Question Answering, Text Classification, Token Classification, Translation, Zero-Shot Classification, Translation, Summarization, Feature Extraction, Text Generation, Text2Text Generation, Fill-Mask, and Sentence Similarity tasks to cover a wide variety of customer use cases.

We started with measuring TorchBench model inference latency, in milliseconds (msec), for the eager mode, which is marked 1.0 with a red dotted line in the following graph. Then we compared the improvements from torch.compile for the same model inference, the normalized results are plotted in the graph. You can see that for the 45 models we benchmarked, there is a 1.35x latency improvement (geomean for the 45 models).

Image 1: PyTorch model inference performance improvement with torch.compile on AWS Graviton3-based c7g instance using TorchBench framework. The reference eager mode performance is marked as 1.0. (higher is better)

Similar to the preceding TorchBench inference performance graph, we started with measuring the Hugging Face NLP model inference latency, in msec, for the eager mode, which is marked 1.0 with a red dotted line in the following graph. Then we compared the improvements from torch.compile for the same model inference, the normalized results are plotted in the graph. You can see that for the 33 models we benchmarked, there is around 2x performance improvement (geomean for the 33 models).

Image 2: Hugging Face NLP model inference performance improvement with torch.compile on AWS Graviton3-based c7g instance using Hugging Face example scripts. The reference eager mode performance is marked as 1.0. (higher is better)

Running an inference

Starting with PyTorch 2.3.1, the optimizations are available in the torch Python wheel and in AWS Graviton PyTorch DLC. This section shows how to run inference in eager and torch.compile modes using torch Python wheels and benchmarking scripts from Hugging Face and TorchBench repos.

To successfully run the scripts and reproduce the speedup numbers mentioned in this post, you need an instance from the Graviton3 family (c7g/r7g/m7g/hpc7g) of hardware. For this post, we used the c7g.4xl (16 vcpu) instance. The instance, the AMI details, and the required torch library versions are mentioned in the following snippet.

Instance: c7g.4xl instance
Region: us-west-2
AMI: ami-05cc25bfa725a144a (Ubuntu 22.04/Jammy with 6.5.0-1017-aws kernel)

# Install Python
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install -y python3 python3-pip

# Upgrade pip3 to the latest version
python3 -m pip install –upgrade pip

# Install PyTorch and extensions
python3 -m pip install torch==2.3.1 torchvision==0.18.1 torchaudio==2.3.1

The generic runtime tunings implemented for eager mode inference are equally applicable for the torch.compile mode, so, we set the following environment variables to further improve the torch.compile performance on AWS Graviton3 processors.

# Enable the fast math GEMM kernels, to accelerate fp32 inference with bfloat16 gemm
export DNNL_DEFAULT_FPMATH_MODE=BF16

# Enable Linux Transparent Huge Page (THP) allocations,
# to reduce the tensor memory allocation latency
export THP_MEM_ALLOC_ENABLE=1

# Set LRU Cache capacity to cache the primitives and avoid redundant
# memory allocations
export LRU_CACHE_CAPACITY=1024

TorchBench benchmarking scripts

TorchBench is a collection of open source benchmarks used to evaluate PyTorch performance. We benchmarked 45 models using the scripts from the TorchBench repo. Following code shows how to run the scripts for the eager mode and the compile mode with inductor backend.

# Set OMP_NUM_THREADS to number of vcpus, 16 for c7g.4xl instance
export OMP_NUM_THREADS=16

# Install the dependencies
sudo apt-get install -y libgl1-mesa-glx
sudo apt-get install -y libpangocairo-1.0-0
python3 -m pip install psutil numpy transformers pynvml numba onnx onnxruntime scikit-learn timm effdet gym doctr opencv-python h5py==3.10.0 python-doctr

# Clone pytorch benchmark repo
git clone https://github.com/pytorch/benchmark.git
cd benchmark
# PyTorch benchmark repo doesn’t have any release tags. So,
# listing the commit we used for collecting the performance numbers
git checkout 9a5e4137299741e1b6fb7aa7f5a6a853e5dd2295

# Setup the models
python3 install.py

# Colect eager mode performance using the following command. The results will be
# stored at .userbenchmark/cpu/metric-<timestamp>.json.
python3 run_benchmark.py cpu –model BERT_pytorch,hf_Bert,hf_Bert_large,hf_GPT2,hf_Albert,hf_Bart,hf_BigBird,hf_DistilBert,hf_GPT2_large,dlrm,hf_T5,mnasnet1_0,mobilenet_v2,mobilenet_v3_large,squeezenet1_1,timm_efficientnet,shufflenet_v2_x1_0,timm_regnet,resnet50,soft_actor_critic,phlippe_densenet,resnet152,resnet18,resnext50_32x4d,densenet121,phlippe_resnet,doctr_det_predictor,timm_vovnet,alexnet,doctr_reco_predictor,vgg16,dcgan,yolov3,pytorch_stargan,hf_Longformer,timm_nfnet,timm_vision_transformer,timm_vision_transformer_large,nvidia_deeprecommender,demucs,tts_angular,hf_Reformer,pytorch_CycleGAN_and_pix2pix,functorch_dp_cifar10,pytorch_unet –test eval –metrics=”latencies,cpu_peak_mem”

# Collect torch.compile mode performance with inductor backend
# and weights pre-packing enabled. The results will be stored at
# .userbenchmark/cpu/metric-<timestamp>.json
python3 run_benchmark.py cpu –model BERT_pytorch,hf_Bert,hf_Bert_large,hf_GPT2,hf_Albert,hf_Bart,hf_BigBird,hf_DistilBert,hf_GPT2_large,dlrm,hf_T5,mnasnet1_0,mobilenet_v2,mobilenet_v3_large,squeezenet1_1,timm_efficientnet,shufflenet_v2_x1_0,timm_regnet,resnet50,soft_actor_critic,phlippe_densenet,resnet152,resnet18,resnext50_32x4d,densenet121,phlippe_resnet,doctr_det_predictor,timm_vovnet,alexnet,doctr_reco_predictor,vgg16,dcgan,yolov3,pytorch_stargan,hf_Longformer,timm_nfnet,timm_vision_transformer,timm_vision_transformer_large,nvidia_deeprecommender,demucs,tts_angular,hf_Reformer,pytorch_CycleGAN_and_pix2pix,functorch_dp_cifar10,pytorch_unet –test eval –torchdynamo inductor –freeze_prepack_weights –metrics=”latencies,cpu_peak_mem”

On successful completion of the inference runs, the script stores the results in JSON format. The following is the sample output:

{
“name”: “cpu”
“environ”: {
“pytorch_git_version”: “d44533f9d073df13895333e70b66f81c513c1889”
},

“metrics”: {
“BERT_pytorch-eval_latency”: 56.3769865,
“BERT_pytorch-eval_cmem”: 0.4169921875
}
}

Hugging Face benchmarking scripts

Google T5 Small Text Translation model is one of the around 30 Hugging Face models we benchmarked. We’re using it as a sample model to demonstrate how to run inference in eager and compile modes. The additional configurations and APIs required to run it in compile mode are highlighted in BOLD. Save the following script as google_t5_small_text_translation.py .

import argparse
from transformers import T5Tokenizer, T5Model
import torch
from torch.profiler import profile, record_function, ProfilerActivity
import torch._inductor.config as config config.cpp.weight_prepack=True config.freezing=True

def test_inference(mode, num_iter):
tokenizer = T5Tokenizer.from_pretrained(“t5-small”)
model = T5Model.from_pretrained(“t5-small”)

input_ids = tokenizer(
“Studies have been shown that owning a dog is good for you”, return_tensors=”pt”
).input_ids  # Batch size 1
decoder_input_ids = tokenizer(“Studies show that”, return_tensors=”pt”).input_ids  # Batch size 1

    if (mode == ‘compile’):         model = torch.compile(model)

with torch.no_grad():
for _ in range(50):
outputs = model(input_ids=input_ids, decoder_input_ids=decoder_input_ids)

with profile(activities=[ProfilerActivity.CPU]) as prof:
with record_function(“model_inference”):
for _ in range(num_iter):
outputs = model(input_ids=input_ids, decoder_input_ids=decoder_input_ids)

print(prof.key_averages().table(sort_by=”self_cpu_time_total”))

def main() -> None:
global m, args
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(__doc__)
parser.add_argument(
“-m”,
“–mode”,
choices=[“eager”, “compile”],
default=”eager”,
help=”Which test to run.”,
)
parser.add_argument(
“-n”,
“–number”,
type=int,
default=100,
help=”how many iterations to run.”,
)
args = parser.parse_args()
test_inference(args.mode, args.number)

if __name__ == “__main__”:
main()

Run the script with the following steps.

# Set OMP_NUM_THREADS to number of vcpus to 4 because
# the scripts are running inference in sequence, and
# they don’t need large number of vcpus
export OMP_NUM_THREADS=4

# Install the dependencies
python3 -m pip install transformers

# Run the inference script in Eager mode
# using number of iterations as 1 just to show the torch profiler output
# but for the benchmarking, we used 1000 iterations.
python3 google_t5_small_text_translation.py -n 1 -m eager

# Run the inference script in torch compile mode
python3 google_t5_small_text_translation.py -n 1 -m compile

On successful completion of the inference runs, the script prints the torch profiler output with the latency breakdown for the torch operators. The following is the sample output from torch profiler:

# Torch profiler output for the eager mode run on c7g.xl (4vcpu)
————— ————  ———–  ————  ———–  ————  ————
Name     Self CPU %   Self CPU   CPU total %   CPU total   CPU time avg    # of Calls
————— ————  ———–  ————  ———–  ————  ————
aten::mm         40.71%       12.502ms       40.71%      12.502ms     130.229us            96
model_inference     26.44%       8.118ms       100.00%      30.708ms      30.708ms             1
aten::bmm         6.85%       2.102ms         9.47%       2.908ms      80.778us            36
aten::matmul         3.73%       1.146ms        57.26%      17.583ms     133.205us           132
aten::select         1.88%     576.000us         1.90%     583.000us       0.998us           584
aten::transpose      1.51%     464.000us         1.83%     563.000us       3.027us           186
————— ———— ———– ———— ———– ———— ————-
Self CPU time total: 30.708ms

# Torch profiler output for the compile mode run for the same model on the same instance
————————- ———-  ———–  ————  ————  ————  ————
Name     Self CPU %    Self CPU   CPU total %    CPU total   CPU time avg   # of Calls
————————- ———-  ———–  ————  ————  ————  ————
mkldnn::_linear_pointwise   37.98%       5.461ms        45.91%       6.602ms      68.771us            96
Torch-Compiled Region       29.56%       4.251ms        98.53%      14.168ms      14.168ms             1
aten::bmm         14.90%       2.143ms        21.73%       3.124ms      86.778us            36
aten::select         4.51%     648.000us         4.62%     665.000us       1.155us           576
aten::view         3.29%     473.000us         3.29%     473.000us       1.642us           288
aten::empty         2.53%     364.000us         2.53%     364.000us       3.165us           115
————————- ——— ———– ———— ———— ———— ————-
Self CPU time total: 14.379ms

What’s next

Next, we’re extending the torch inductor CPU backend support to compile Llama model, and adding support for fused GEMM kernels to enable torch inductor operator fusion optimization on AWS Graviton3 processors.

Conclusion

In this tutorial, we covered how we optimized torch.compile performance on AWS Graviton3-based EC2 instances, how to use the optimizations to improve PyTorch model inference performance, and demonstrated the resulting speedups. We hope that you will give it a try! If you need any support with ML software on Graviton, please open an issue on the AWS Graviton Technical Guide GitHub.

About the Author

Sunita Nadampalli is a Software Development Manager and AI/ML expert at AWS. She leads AWS Graviton software performance optimizations for AI/ML and HPC workloads. She is passionate about open source software development and delivering high-performance and sustainable software solutions for SoCs based on the Arm ISA.

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