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ColossalAI/docs/source/en/features/2D_tensor_parallel.md

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# 2D Tensor Parallelism
Author: Zhengda Bian, Yongbin Li
**Prerequisite**
- [Define Your Configuration](../basics/define_your_config.md)
- [Configure Parallelization](../basics/configure_parallelization.md)
- [1D Tensor Parallelism](./1D_tensor_parallel.md)
**Example Code**
- [ColossalAI-Examples - 2D Tensor Parallelism](https://github.com/hpcaitech/ColossalAI-Examples/tree/main/features/tensor_parallel/tensor_parallel_2d.py)
**Related Paper**
- [An Efficient 2D Method for Training Super-Large Deep Learning Models](https://arxiv.org/pdf/2104.05343.pdf)
## Introduction
1D tensor parallelism does not partition activations, which can also consume a great amount of memory in terms of large-scale models.
To evenly distribute the computation and memory load, [an efficient 2D tensor parallelism algorithm](https://arxiv.org/pdf/2104.05343.pdf) was introduced based on SUMMA (Scalable Universal Matrix Multiplication Algorithm).
Let's still take a linear layer $Y = XA$ as an example.
Given $P=q\times q$ processors (necessary condition), e.g. $q=2$, we split both the input $X$ and weight $A$ into
$$
\left[\begin{matrix} X_{10} & X_{11} \\ X_{00} & X_{01} \end{matrix} \right]
\text{~and~}
\left[\begin{matrix} A_{10} & A_{11} \\ A_{00} & A_{01} \end{matrix} \right].
$$
The calculation includes $q$ steps. When $t=1$, $X_{i0}$ is broadcasted in its row, and $A_{0j}$ is broadcasted in its column. So, we have
$$
\left[\begin{matrix} X_{10},A_{00} & X_{10},A_{01} \\ X_{00},A_{00} & X_{00},A_{01} \end{matrix} \right].
$$
Then we multiply $X_{i0}$ and $A_{0j}$ on each processor $(i, j)$ as
$$
\left[\begin{matrix} X_{10}A_{00} & X_{10}A_{01} \\ X_{00}A_{00} & X_{00}A_{01} \end{matrix} \right] (1).
$$
Similarly, when $t=2$, $X_{i1}$ is broadcasted in its row, $A_{1j}$ is broadcasted in its column, and we multiply them as
$$
\left[\begin{matrix} X_{11}A_{10} & X_{11}A_{11} \\ X_{01}A_{10} & X_{01}A_{11} \end{matrix} \right] (2).
$$
By adding $(1)$ and $(2)$ up, we have
$$
Y = XA = \left[\begin{matrix} X_{10}A_{00}+X_{11}A_{10} & X_{10}A_{01}+X_{11}A_{11} \\ X_{00}A_{00}+X_{01}A_{10} & X_{00}A_{01}+X_{01}A_{11} \end{matrix} \right].
$$
## Efficiency
Given $P=q\times q$ processors, we present the theoretical computation and memory cost, as well as the communication cost based on the ring algorithm in both the forward and backward pass of 2D tensor parallelism.
| Computation | Memory (parameters) | Memory (activations) | Communication (bandwidth) | Communication (latency) |
| :-: | :-: | :-: | :-: | :-: |
| $O(1/q^2)$ | $O(1/q^2)$ | $O(1/q^2)$ | $O(6(q-1)/q)$ | $O(6(q-1))$ |
## Usage
To enable 2D tensor parallelism for our model, e.g. on 4 GPUs, we need to configure the parallism setting as below.
```python
CONFIG = dict(parallel=dict(
data=1,
pipeline=1,
tensor=dict(size=4, mode='2d'),
))
```
Then Colossal-AI will automatically apply 2D parallelism to all the layers from `colossalai.nn`.
Let's define a model that consists of a two-layer multi-layer perceptron (MLP) as below.
```python
import colossalai
import colossalai.nn as col_nn
import torch
from colossalai.utils import print_rank_0
class MLP(torch.nn.Module):
def __init__(self, dim: int = 256):
super().__init__()
intermediate_dim = dim * 4
self.dense_1 = col_nn.Linear(dim, intermediate_dim)
print_rank_0(f'Weight of the first linear layer: {self.dense_1.weight.shape}')
self.activation = torch.nn.GELU()
self.dense_2 = col_nn.Linear(intermediate_dim, dim)
print_rank_0(f'Weight of the second linear layer: {self.dense_2.weight.shape}')
self.dropout = col_nn.Dropout(0.1)
def forward(self, x):
x = self.dense_1(x)
print_rank_0(f'Output of the first linear layer: {x.shape}')
x = self.activation(x)
x = self.dense_2(x)
print_rank_0(f'Output of the second linear layer: {x.shape}')
x = self.dropout(x)
return x
```
Launch Colossal-AI on 4 GPUs and build the model
```python
parser = colossalai.get_default_parser()
colossalai.launch(config=CONFIG,
rank=args.rank,
world_size=args.world_size,
local_rank=args.local_rank,
host=args.host,
port=args.port)
m = MLP()
```
We will see the shapes of partitioned parameters(e.g. weights) in the MLP model.
```shell
Weight of the first linear layer: torch.Size([128, 512])
Weight of the second linear layer: torch.Size([512, 128])
```
The complete weight of the first linear layer is supposed to have the shape `[256, 1024]`. After the partitioning of 2D parallelism, it becomes `[128, 512]` on each GPU.
Similarly, the second layer partitions the weight `[1024, 256]` into `[512, 128]`.
We can run the model with some random inputs.
```python
from colossalai.context import ParallelMode
from colossalai.core import global_context as gpc
from colossalai.utils import get_current_device
x = torch.randn((16, 256), device=get_current_device())
# partition input
torch.distributed.broadcast(x, src=0)
x = torch.chunk(x, 2, dim=0)[gpc.get_local_rank(ParallelMode.PARALLEL_2D_COL)]
x = torch.chunk(x, 2, dim=-1)[gpc.get_local_rank(ParallelMode.PARALLEL_2D_ROW)]
print_rank_0(f'Input: {x.shape}')
x = m(x)
```
Then we can see the shapes of activation results.
```shell
Input: torch.Size([8, 128])
Output of the first linear layer: torch.Size([8, 512])
Output of the second linear layer: torch.Size([8, 128])
```
The activation tensors in 2D parallelism are all split in both row and column.
E.g. the output of the first linear layer has the shape `[8, 512]`, while the second layer has the output of `[8, 128]`.