This repository implements MultiWorld framework for PyTorch. It enables fault management functionality for collective communication libraries (CCL) such as NCCL on top of the PyTorch distributed package. The fault management functionality includes (i) detection, (ii) tolerance (or resilience) and (iii) recovery. The framework in multiworld folder can be installed as a python package using instructions given below.
In the world of machine learning (ML) and artificial intelligence (AI), it's crucial for models to be reliable. But as ML models are used more and more in real life, they face all sorts of problems such as hardware and network failures. Since ML inference is a long-running service, it is crucial that ML inference workloads handle these problems fast and gracefully. Especially, as models become larger, it becomes unavoidable to deploy them across GPUs and hosts, which renders fault management challenging.
MultiWorld is an innovative framework aimed at supporting fault management in ML inference workloads. Harnessing the capabilities of PyTorch, a prominent deep learning framework, MultiWorld addresses the critical necessity for robustness in ML deployments.
The framework is built on top of PyTorch, a widely-used deep learning framework, and will support various backends such as NCCL and Gloo for distributed computing.
MultiWorld framework allows each worker to be a part of multiple worlds as displayed in the above figure. Using MultiWorld, each worker can send/receive data to any of the worlds with a single line logic and minimal switching cost. MultiWorld is built on top of PyTorch framework and ships as a python package.
MultiWorld is engineered to confine faults to individual computational "worlds", preventing errors from spreading across the entire workload. This means that if something goes wrong in one worker, the worlds where the worker belongs will be only affected, but it won't affect the others. Despite adding fault management mechanisms, MultiWorld maintains the integrity of each computational context, preserving the underlying structure and minimizing overhead. This approach allows developers to enhance fault management without requiring significant changes to their existing codebase or workflow. In many cases, the developers only need to replace PyTorch's  send/recv with the counter part of MultiWorld (send/recv under WorldCommunicator's module).
- docscontains additional documents
- examplescontain examples to demonstrate the usage of the- multiworldframework.
- multiworldcontains the source code for the- multiworldpackage.
- patchcontains patch files to install the- multiworldsource code into the installed PyTorch package.
- scriptscontains scripts for generating the patch file, primarily for developers contributing to the- multiworldsource code.
- multiworld/world_manager.pycontains- WorldManagerclass to create and manage multiple worlds.
- multiworld/world_communicator.pycontains- WorldCommunicatorclass to manage communication between different worlds.
- multiworld/watchdog.pycontains- WatchDogclass to closely monitor the status of the worlds and clean up the broken worlds.
- PyTorch version: 2.4.0
To use the latest official package,
pip install multiworldTo install the package from source,
pip install .The list of all examples that are available can be found in the examples folder.
We recommend to start with send_recv example
If you wish to contribute or suggest any additional funtionalities, please check out Contributing Guidelines
@misc{m8d2024,
      title={Enabling Elastic Model Serving with MultiWorld}, 
      author={Myungjin Lee and Akshay Jajoo and Ramana Rao Kompella},
      year={2024},
      eprint={2407.08980},
      archivePrefix={arXiv},
      primaryClass={cs.DC},
      url={https://arxiv.org/abs/2407.08980}, 
}
