Pretraining with Downstream Validation#

On this page, you’ll build on the Pretraining with Upstream Validation guide to also configure downstream validation as part of your pre-training run.

The example will be for pre-training Llama-3-8B model. For downstream validation, you will use the external frameworks Eleuther Eval Harness (EEH) and BigCode Eval Harness (BCEH).

By the end of this guide, you should be comfortable kicking off your own pre-training run for the model of your choice, combining both upstream and downstream validation.

Prerequisites#

Please ensure that you have installed the Cerebras Model Zoo package by going through the installation guide.

Make sure to have read through Trainer Overview and Trainer Configuration Overview which provide the basic overview of how to run Model Zoo models.

Please also make sure to read Pretraining with Upstream Validation since this page directly builds on the walkthrough there.

Lastly, please read though Downstream Validation using Eleuther Eval Harness and Downstream Validation using BigCode Eval Harness for a detailed description on the supported external downstream validation frameworks, along with the limitations of each (see EEH limitations and BCEH limitations).

Specifically, this guide presupposes your understanding of the BigCodeEvalHarness and EleutherEvalHarness callbacks.

Configuring the Run#

Similar to Pretraining with Upstream Validation, this page will present the YAML configuration file as well as the equivalent pure Python setup side-by-side for your ease of comparison.

You will add downstream validation to the pre-training configuration set up in Pretraining with Upstream Validation for Llama-3-8B. Recall the full configuration you put together from that tutorial:

trainer:
  init:
    backend:
      backend_type: CSX
      cluster_config:
        num_csx: 16
    seed: 2024
    model:
      # Embedding
      vocab_size: 128256
      hidden_size: 4096
      position_embedding_type: "rotary"
      pos_scaling_factor: 1.0
      rope_theta: 500000.0
      rotary_dim: 128
      share_embedding_weights: false
      max_position_embeddings: 8192
      embedding_dropout_rate: 0.0
      embedding_layer_norm: false

      # Decoder
      num_hidden_layers: 32
      dropout_rate: 0.0
      layer_norm_epsilon: 1.0e-5
      norm_type: "rmsnorm"

      # Decoder - Attention
      num_heads: 32
      attention_type: "scaled_dot_product"
      attention_module: "multiquery_attention"
      attention_dropout_rate: 0.0
      use_projection_bias_in_attention: false
      use_ffn_bias_in_attention: false
      extra_attention_params:
          num_kv_groups: 8

      # Decoder - ffn
      filter_size: 14336
      nonlinearity: "swiglu"
      use_ffn_bias: false

      # Task-specific
      use_bias_in_output: false
      loss_scaling: "num_tokens"
      loss_weight: 1.0

      # Initializer
      initializer_range: 0.02

      # Cerebras parameters
      mixed_precision: True
      fp16_type: "cbfloat16"

    optimizer:
      AdamW:
        betas: [0.9, 0.95]
        correct_bias: True
        weight_decay: 0.1

    schedulers:
    - CosineDecayLR:
        initial_learning_rate: 3.0e-5
        end_learning_rate: 3.0e-6
        total_iters: 528

    precision:
      fp16_type: cbfloat16
      loss_scaling_factor: dynamic
      max_gradient_norm: 1.0

    loop:
      num_steps: 10000
      eval_frequency: 1000
      eval_steps: 1000

    checkpoint:
      steps: 1000

    callbacks:
    - ComputeNorm: {}
    - CheckLoss: {}
    - ModelEvalMetrics: {}

    loggers:
    - ProgressLogger: {}
    - TensorBoardLogger: {}
  fit:
    train_dataloader:
      data_processor: GptHDF5MapDataProcessor
      data_dir: "/data/llama_v3_dataset_vocab128256/train"
      batch_size: 80
      micro_batch_size: 20
      shuffle: False
      shuffle_seed: 1337
      num_workers: 8
      prefetch_factor: 10
      persistent_workers: True # Important to avoid seeding at each epoch
    val_dataloader:
    - data_processor: GptHDF5MapDataProcessor
      data_dir: "/data/llama_v3_dataset_vocab128256/val"
      batch_size: 80
      micro_batch_size: 20
      shuffle: False
      shuffle_seed: 1337
      num_workers: 8
      prefetch_factor: 10
      persistent_workers: True # Important to avoid seeding at each epoch

Configure EEH#

Let’s add downstream validation on a single EEH multiple-choice task winogrande as part of the pre-training run. To do this, you will need to augment the configuration with the EleutherEvalHarness callback as such:

Simply add the callback to the list of callbacks in the YAML.

trainer:
  init:
    backend:  # CSX
      ...
    model:  # llama
      ...
    optimizer:  # AdamW
      ...
    schedulers:  # CosineDecayLR
      ...
    precision:  # DLS
      ...
    loop:
      ...
    checkpoint:
      ...
    callbacks:
      ...
      - EleutherEvalHarness:
        # Eleuther Eval Harness settings
        eeh_args:
          tasks: winogrande
          num_fewshot: 0
        # CSX-specific eval harness settings
        keep_data_dir: false
        # Dataloader settings
        batch_size: 4
        shuffle: false
        max_sequence_length: 8192
        num_workers: 1
        data_dir: <path_to_mounted_dir>
        tokenizer_file_path: <path_to_llama3_tokenizer_json_file>
        eos_id: 128001
        pretrained_model_name_or_path: null
    loggers:
      ...
    seed: 2024
    ...

And that is all! As part of your pre-training run’s configuration, you have now set up downstream validation on EEH task winogrande.

Note

  1. The eval_frequency specified as part of the trainer’s loop (YAML) or in the TrainingLoop object (Python) also controls the frequency of downstream validation; i.e., for your example above, validation on EEH task winogrande will be run every 1K steps.

  2. Update the tasks argument to configure downstream validation for more EEH tasks. Note that only a single generative EEH task may be specified per callback.

Configure BCEH#

Configuring downstream validation using BCEH is no different than it is for EEH. For example, if you want to configure the pre-training run on the code generative task humaneval, please augment the YAML configuration file with the the BigCodeEvalHarness callback as such:

Simply add the callback to the list of callbacks in the YAML. Don’t forget to include the inference settings under model configuration!

trainer:
  init:
    backend:  # CSX
      ...
    model:  # llama
      ...
      # Inference Settings
      start_token: 128256   # Set to `vocab_size`
      stop_sequences: []    # Left empty as stop_sequences are overridden from the BCEH task
      max_tokens: 256       # Default from HF implementations
      loop_dim: 1
    optimizer:  # AdamW
      ...
    schedulers:  # CosineDecayLR
      ...
    precision:  # DLS
      ...
    loop:
      ...
    checkpoint:
      ...
    callbacks:
      ...
      - BigCodeEvalHarness:
        # BigCode Eval Harness settings
        bceh_args:
          tasks: humaneval
        # CSX-specific eval harness settings
        keep_data_dir: false
        # Dataloader settings
        batch_size: 4
        shuffle: false
        max_sequence_length: 8192
        num_workers: 1
        data_dir: <path_to_mounted_dir>
        tokenizer_file_path: <path_to_llama3_tokenizer_json_file>
        eos_id: 128001
        pretrained_model_name_or_path: null
    loggers:
      ...
    seed: 2024
    ...

And that is all! As part of your pre-training run’s configuration, you have now set up downstream validation on BCEH task humaneval.

Note

  1. Since only running one generative eval harness task is supported per callback, please create a separate BigCodeEvalHarness callback to run downstream validation for more BCEH tasks.

  2. To obtain the final eval metrics for BCEH, please run the code execution and evaluation flow separately using the Downstream Validation using BigCode Eval Harness guide.

Configure EEH and BCEH#

Configuring downstream validation for both EEH and BCEH is also straightforward via the use of both the BigCodeEvalHarness and EleutherEvalHarness callbacks.

Let’s augment the full YAML configuration file to run downstream validation on EEH tasks hellaswag, gsm8k and winogrande, and BCEH task mbpp with the callbacks as follows:

Simply add both callbacks to the list of callbacks in the YAML. Since you are running generative eval harness tasks, don’t forget to include the inference settings under model configuration!

trainer:
  init:
    backend:  # CSX
      ...
    model:  # llama
      ...
      # Inference Settings
      start_token: 128256   # Set to `vocab_size`
      stop_sequences: []    # Left empty as stop_sequences are overridden from the BCEH task
      max_tokens: 256       # Default from HF implementations
      loop_dim: 1
    optimizer:  # AdamW
      ...
    schedulers:  # CosineDecayLR
      ...
    precision:  # DLS
      ...
    loop:
      ...
    checkpoint:
      ...
    callbacks:
      ...
      - BigCodeEvalHarness:
        # BigCode Eval Harness settings
        bceh_args:
          tasks: mbpp
        # CSX-specific eval harness settings
        keep_data_dir: false
        # Dataloader settings
        batch_size: 4
        shuffle: false
        max_sequence_length: 8192
        num_workers: 1
        data_dir: <path_to_mounted_dir>
        tokenizer_file_path: <path_to_llama3_tokenizer_json_file>
        eos_id: 128001
        pretrained_model_name_or_path: null
      - EleutherEvalHarness:
        # Eleuther Eval Harness settings
        eeh_args:
          tasks: hellaswag,gsm8k,winogrande
          num_fewshot: 0
        # CSX-specific eval harness settings
        keep_data_dir: false
        # Dataloader settings
        batch_size: 4
        shuffle: false
        max_sequence_length: 8192
        num_workers: 1
        data_dir: <path_to_mounted_dir>
        tokenizer_file_path: <path_to_llama3_tokenizer_json_file>
        eos_id: 128001
        pretrained_model_name_or_path: null
    loggers:
      ...
    seed: 2024
    ...

And that is all! As part of your pre-training run’s configuration, you have now set up downstream validation on both BCEH and EEH tasks.

Start Pre-Training#

Once you have a fully configured Trainer, with your choice of downstream validation, all you need to do now is to kick off the run and start pre-training.

Let’s assume that the YAML configuration that you put together above is written to a file called ./pretrain_downstream_llama_8b.yaml.

Then, to run pre-training using the training script that comes packaged as part of ModelZoo, you can run the following on the command line

python modelzoo/models/nlp/llama/run.py CSX \
    --mode train_and_eval \
    --params ./pretrain_downstream_llama_8b.yaml \

Conclusion#

With that, you have augmented your pre-training run with downstream validation on the Cerebras Wafer-Scale Cluster using the ModelZoo Trainer!

Now you have what it takes to write your own Trainer configuration to set up training jobs on your choice of models as well as downstream validation tasks on the Cerebras Wafer-Scale Cluster.