We introduce lookahead decoding:
- A parallel decoding algorithm to accelerate LLM inference.
- Without the need for a draft model or a data store.
- Linearly decreases #decoding steps relative to log(FLOPs) used per decoding step.
Below is a demo of lookahead decoding accelerating LLaMa-2-Chat 7B generation:
Lookahead decoding is motivated by Jacobi decoding, which views autoregressive decoding as solving nonlinear systems and decodes all future tokens simultaneously using a fixed-point iteration method. Below is a Jacobi decoding example.
However, Jacobi decoding can barely see wall-clock speedup in real-world LLM applications.
Lookahead decoding takes advantage of Jacobi decoding's ability by collecting and caching n-grams generated from Jacobi iteration trajectories.
The following gif shows the process of collecting 2 grams via Jacobi decoding and verifying them to accelerate decoding.
To enhance the efficiency of this process, each lookahead decoding step is divided into two parallel branches: the lookahead branch and the verification branch. The lookahead branch maintains a fixed-sized, 2D window to generate n-grams from the Jacobi iteration trajectory. Simultaneously, the verification branch selects and verifies promising n-gram candidates.
The lookahead branch aims to generate new N-grams. The branch operates with a two-dimensional window defined by two parameters:
- Window size W: How far ahead we look in future token positions to conduct parallel decoding.
- N-gram size N: How many steps we look back into the past Jacobi iteration trajectory to retrieve n-grams.
In the verification branch, we identify n-grams whose first token matches the last input token. This is determined via simple string match. Once identified, these n-grams are appended to the current input and subjected to verification via an LLM forward pass through them.
We implement these branches in one attention mask to further utilize GPU's parallel computing power.
Our study shows lookahead decoding substantially reduces latency, ranging from 1.5x to 2.3x on different datasets on a single GPU. See the figure below.
pip install lade
git clone https://github.com/hao-ai-lab/LookaheadDecoding.git
cd LookaheadDecoding
pip install -r requirements.txt
pip install -e .
You can run the minimal example to see the speedup that Lookahead decoding brings.
python minimal.py #no Lookahead decoding
USE_LADE=1 LOAD_LADE=1 python minimal.py #use Lookahead decoding, 1.6x speedup
You can also enjoy chatting with your own chatbots with Lookahead decoding.
USE_LADE=1 python applications/chatbot.py --model_path meta-llama/Llama-2-7b-chat-hf --debug --chat #chat, with lookahead
USE_LADE=0 python applications/chatbot.py --model_path meta-llama/Llama-2-7b-chat-hf --debug --chat #chat, without lookahead
USE_LADE=1 python applications/chatbot.py --model_path meta-llama/Llama-2-7b-chat-hf --debug #no chat, with lookahead
USE_LADE=0 python applications/chatbot.py --model_path meta-llama/Llama-2-7b-chat-hf --debug #no chat, without lookahead
You can import and use Lookahead decoding in your own code in three LoCs. You also need to set USE_LADE=1
in command line or set os.environ["USE_LADE"]="1"
in Python script. Note that Lookahead decoding only support LLaMA and Greedy Search yet.
import lade
lade.augment_all()
lade.config_lade(LEVEL=5, WINDOW_SIZE=7, GUESS_SET_SIZE=7, DEBUG=0)
#LEVEL, WINDOW_SIZE and GUESS_SET_SIZE are three important configurations (N,W,G) in lookahead decoding, please refer to our blog!
#You can obtain a better performance by tuning LEVEL/WINDOW_SIZE/GUESS_SET_SIZE on your own device.
Then you can speedup the decoding process.
tokenizer = AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained(model_name)
model = AutoModelForCausalLM.from_pretrained(model_name, torch_dtype=torch.float16, device_map=torch_device)
model_inputs = tokenizer(input_text, return_tensors='pt').to(torch_device)
greedy_output = model.generate(**model_inputs, max_new_tokens=1024) #speedup obtained
@misc{fu2023lookahead,
title = {Breaking the Sequential Dependency of LLM Inference Using Lookahead Decoding},
url = {https://lmsys.org/blog/2023-11-21-lookahead-decoding/},
author = {Yichao Fu and Peter Bailis and Ion Stoica and Hao Zhang},
month = {November},
year = {2023}
}
The core implementation is in decoding.py. Lookahead decoding requires an adaptation for each specific model. An example is in models/llama.py.