Last Updated on 2024-01-02 by Clay
Introduction
DPO (Direct Preference Optimization) is a fine-tuning method that want to replace RLHF (Reinforcement Learning from Human Feedback).
Everybody knows, The large language models can learn about many knowledge and understanding capability after unsupervised learning (some researchers mentioned that only compress and store the information in the weights); And after supervised learning, model learn how to CHAT.
However, it is still difficult for developers to control the LLM generated. so the last step: Alignment, is very essential.
In the RLHF method, we need to add another Reward Model (RM) to be trained to score our fine-tuned LLM, and let the LLM fine-tune again according to the feedback given by the reward model.
At the same time we also added a restriction to the model to calculate the KL divergence from the base model, so that the model would not deviate from its original capabilities.
But this method is not only cumbersome and difficult to control, but also consumes a lot of GPU memory.
Stanford University proposed a new training method to fine-tune aligned values – that is DPO. The goal is the same of RL, but the reward function that should be maximized is converted into minimizing the objective function loss on DPO.
- σ: Sigmoid function, maps input parameters to the [0, 1] interval
- β: The temperature hyper-parameters of the loss function, used to constrain the value of loss. Looking at the original code, it is usually set between 0.1 and 0.5
- y_w: Preference/Win reply
- y_l: No preference/Loss reply
- π_θ(y_w | x): Given input x, it represents the cumulative probability of token decoding for preferred responses (y_w) by the current model being fine-tuned (the sum of probability values for each token in the preferred response that we want to maximize).
- π_ref(y_w | x): Given input x, it represents the cumulative probability of token decoding for preferred responses (y_w) by the original model.
- π_θ(y_l | x): Given input x, it represents the cumulative probability of token decoding for non-preferred responses (y_l) by the current model being fine-tuned (the sum of probability values for each token in the non-preferred response that we want to minimize).
- π_ref(y_l | x): Given input x, it represents the cumulative probability of token decoding for non-preferred responses (y_l) by the original model.
Before starting the DPO fine-tuning, we initialize ‘two models,’ but one model undergoes weight fine-tuning with the additional LoRA branch, while the other model freezes all parameters and does not participate in training. This non-training original model is solely used to calculate the denominator part of the loss function, similar to being used for normalization.
Furthermore, this approach does not require twice the GPU VRAM when fine-tuning Adapters through LoRA. This is because when computing the token decoding probabilities of the fine-tuned model, we pass through the LoRA layer additionally, but when computing the token decoding probabilities of the original model, we do not pass through the LoRA layer. Therefore, fundamentally, we do not incur extra memory usage during training.
(Update as of December 27, 2023: Recently, during training, it has been observed that both the model and ref_model use their respective memory and do not share it, which is different from my initial assumption. I am curious as to why it’s not possible to freeze all base model parameters and only train the LoRA Layer. Why is that?)
From the loss function, we can intuitively understand that it aims to achieve something very similar to contrastive learning. Both approaches aim to bring our outputs closer to positive samples while simultaneously moving away from negative samples.
Looking at the DPO loss function, it means that we want to maximize the left side and minimize the right side.
Source Code of DPO Loss
def dpo_loss(
self,
policy_chosen_logps: torch.FloatTensor,
policy_rejected_logps: torch.FloatTensor,
reference_chosen_logps: torch.FloatTensor,
reference_rejected_logps: torch.FloatTensor,
reference_free: bool = False,
) -> Tuple[torch.FloatTensor, torch.FloatTensor, torch.FloatTensor]:
"""Compute the DPO loss for a batch of policy and reference model log probabilities.
Args:
policy_chosen_logps: Log probabilities of the policy model for the chosen responses. Shape: (batch_size,)
policy_rejected_logps: Log probabilities of the policy model for the rejected responses. Shape: (batch_size,)
reference_chosen_logps: Log probabilities of the reference model for the chosen responses. Shape: (batch_size,)
reference_rejected_logps: Log probabilities of the reference model for the rejected responses. Shape: (batch_size,)
reference_free: If True, we ignore the _provided_ reference model and implicitly use a reference model that assigns equal probability to all responses.
Returns:
A tuple of three tensors: (losses, chosen_rewards, rejected_rewards).
The losses tensor contains the DPO loss for each example in the batch.
The chosen_rewards and rejected_rewards tensors contain the rewards for the chosen and rejected responses, respectively.
"""
pi_logratios = policy_chosen_logps - policy_rejected_logps
if reference_free:
ref_logratios = 0
else:
ref_logratios = reference_chosen_logps - reference_rejected_logps
logits = pi_logratios - ref_logratios
# The beta is a temperature parameter for the DPO loss, typically something in the range of 0.1 to 0.5.
# We ignore the reference model as beta -> 0. The label_smoothing parameter encodes our uncertainty about the labels and
# calculates a conservative DPO loss.
if self.loss_type == "sigmoid":
losses = (
-F.logsigmoid(self.beta * logits) * (1 - self.label_smoothing)
- F.logsigmoid(-self.beta * logits) * self.label_smoothing
)
elif self.loss_type == "hinge":
losses = torch.relu(1 - self.beta * logits)
elif self.loss_type == "ipo":
# eqn (17) of the paper where beta is the regularization parameter for the IPO loss, denoted by tau in the paper.
losses = (logits - 1 / (2 * self.beta)) ** 2
elif self.loss_type == "kto_pair":
# eqn (7) of the HALOs paper
chosen_KL = (policy_chosen_logps - reference_chosen_logps).mean().clamp(min=0)
rejected_KL = (policy_rejected_logps - reference_rejected_logps).mean().clamp(min=0)
chosen_logratios = policy_chosen_logps - reference_chosen_logps
rejected_logratios = policy_rejected_logps - reference_rejected_logps
# As described in the KTO report, the KL term for chosen (rejected) is estimated using the rejected (chosen) half.
losses = torch.cat(
(
1 - F.sigmoid(self.beta * (chosen_logratios - rejected_KL)),
1 - F.sigmoid(self.beta * (chosen_KL - rejected_logratios)),
),
0,
)
else:
raise ValueError(
f"Unknown loss type: {self.loss_type}. Should be one of ['sigmoid', 'hinge', 'ipo', 'kto_pair']"
)
chosen_rewards = self.beta * (policy_chosen_logps - reference_chosen_logps).detach()
rejected_rewards = self.beta * (policy_rejected_logps - reference_rejected_logps).detach()
return losses, chosen_rewards, rejected_rewards
The above is the implement of loss function of DPO Trainer by HuggingFace.
DPO Training Script
The following training is provided by huggingface, too. (trl/examples/research_projects/stack_llama_2/scripts/dpo_llama2.py)
I also started fine-tuning my LLM using the DPO method from this script. It’s worth mentioning that the script assumes that you have already fine-tuned the model using SFT as a prerequisite. However, if you have a model that has already undergone instruct tuning, starting directly from DPO is also an option.
# 0. imports
import os
from dataclasses import dataclass, field
from typing import Dict, Optional
import torch
from datasets import Dataset, load_dataset
from peft import LoraConfig
from transformers import AutoModelForCausalLM, AutoTokenizer, HfArgumentParser, TrainingArguments
from trl import DPOTrainer
# Define and parse arguments.
@dataclass
class ScriptArguments:
"""
The arguments for the DPO training script.
"""
# data parameters
beta: Optional[float] = field(default=0.1, metadata={"help": "the beta parameter for DPO loss"})
# training parameters
model_name_or_path: Optional[str] = field(
default="../sft/results/final_checkpoint",
metadata={"help": "the location of the SFT model name or path"},
)
learning_rate: Optional[float] = field(default=5e-4, metadata={"help": "optimizer learning rate"})
lr_scheduler_type: Optional[str] = field(default="cosine", metadata={"help": "the lr scheduler type"})
warmup_steps: Optional[int] = field(default=100, metadata={"help": "the number of warmup steps"})
weight_decay: Optional[float] = field(default=0.05, metadata={"help": "the weight decay"})
optimizer_type: Optional[str] = field(default="paged_adamw_32bit", metadata={"help": "the optimizer type"})
per_device_train_batch_size: Optional[int] = field(default=4, metadata={"help": "train batch size per device"})
per_device_eval_batch_size: Optional[int] = field(default=1, metadata={"help": "eval batch size per device"})
gradient_accumulation_steps: Optional[int] = field(
default=4, metadata={"help": "the number of gradient accumulation steps"}
)
gradient_checkpointing: Optional[bool] = field(
default=True, metadata={"help": "whether to use gradient checkpointing"}
)
lora_alpha: Optional[float] = field(default=16, metadata={"help": "the lora alpha parameter"})
lora_dropout: Optional[float] = field(default=0.05, metadata={"help": "the lora dropout parameter"})
lora_r: Optional[int] = field(default=8, metadata={"help": "the lora r parameter"})
max_prompt_length: Optional[int] = field(default=512, metadata={"help": "the maximum prompt length"})
max_length: Optional[int] = field(default=1024, metadata={"help": "the maximum sequence length"})
max_steps: Optional[int] = field(default=1000, metadata={"help": "max number of training steps"})
logging_steps: Optional[int] = field(default=10, metadata={"help": "the logging frequency"})
save_steps: Optional[int] = field(default=100, metadata={"help": "the saving frequency"})
eval_steps: Optional[int] = field(default=100, metadata={"help": "the evaluation frequency"})
output_dir: Optional[str] = field(default="./results", metadata={"help": "the output directory"})
log_freq: Optional[int] = field(default=1, metadata={"help": "the logging frequency"})
# instrumentation
sanity_check: Optional[bool] = field(default=False, metadata={"help": "only train on 1000 samples"})
report_to: Optional[str] = field(
default="wandb",
metadata={
"help": 'The list of integrations to report the results and logs to. Supported platforms are `"azure_ml"`,'
'`"comet_ml"`, `"mlflow"`, `"neptune"`, `"tensorboard"`,`"clearml"` and `"wandb"`. '
'Use `"all"` to report to all integrations installed, `"none"` for no integrations.'
},
)
# debug argument for distributed training
ignore_bias_buffers: Optional[bool] = field(
default=False,
metadata={
"help": "fix for DDP issues with LM bias/mask buffers - invalid scalar type,`inplace operation. See"
"https://github.com/huggingface/transformers/issues/22482#issuecomment-1595790992"
},
)
def get_stack_exchange_paired(
data_dir: str = "data/rl",
sanity_check: bool = False,
cache_dir: str = None,
num_proc=24,
) -> Dataset:
"""Load the stack-exchange-paired dataset from Hugging Face and convert it to the necessary format.
The dataset is converted to a dictionary with the following structure:
{
'prompt': List[str],
'chosen': List[str],
'rejected': List[str],
}
Prompts are structured as follows:
"Question: " + <prompt> + "\n\nAnswer: "
"""
dataset = load_dataset(
"lvwerra/stack-exchange-paired",
split="train",
cache_dir=cache_dir,
data_dir=data_dir,
)
original_columns = dataset.column_names
if sanity_check:
dataset = dataset.select(range(min(len(dataset), 1000)))
def return_prompt_and_responses(samples) -> Dict[str, str]:
return {
"prompt": ["Question: " + question + "\n\nAnswer: " for question in samples["question"]],
"chosen": samples["response_j"],
"rejected": samples["response_k"],
}
return dataset.map(
return_prompt_and_responses,
batched=True,
num_proc=num_proc,
remove_columns=original_columns,
)
if __name__ == "__main__":
parser = HfArgumentParser(ScriptArguments)
script_args = parser.parse_args_into_dataclasses()[0]
# 1. load a pretrained model
model = AutoModelForCausalLM.from_pretrained(
script_args.model_name_or_path,
low_cpu_mem_usage=True,
torch_dtype=torch.float16,
load_in_4bit=True,
)
model.config.use_cache = False
if script_args.ignore_bias_buffers:
# torch distributed hack
model._ddp_params_and_buffers_to_ignore = [
name for name, buffer in model.named_buffers() if buffer.dtype == torch.bool
]
model_ref = AutoModelForCausalLM.from_pretrained(
script_args.model_name_or_path,
low_cpu_mem_usage=True,
torch_dtype=torch.float16,
load_in_4bit=True,
)
tokenizer = AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained("meta-llama/Llama-2-7b-hf")
tokenizer.pad_token = tokenizer.eos_token
# 2. Load the Stack-exchange paired dataset
train_dataset = get_stack_exchange_paired(data_dir="data/rl", sanity_check=script_args.sanity_check)
train_dataset = train_dataset.filter(
lambda x: len(x["prompt"]) + len(x["chosen"]) <= script_args.max_length
and len(x["prompt"]) + len(x["rejected"]) <= script_args.max_length
)
# 3. Load evaluation dataset
eval_dataset = get_stack_exchange_paired(data_dir="data/evaluation", sanity_check=True)
eval_dataset = eval_dataset.filter(
lambda x: len(x["prompt"]) + len(x["chosen"]) <= script_args.max_length
and len(x["prompt"]) + len(x["rejected"]) <= script_args.max_length
)
# 4. initialize training arguments:
training_args = TrainingArguments(
per_device_train_batch_size=script_args.per_device_train_batch_size,
per_device_eval_batch_size=script_args.per_device_eval_batch_size,
max_steps=script_args.max_steps,
logging_steps=script_args.logging_steps,
save_steps=script_args.save_steps,
gradient_accumulation_steps=script_args.gradient_accumulation_steps,
gradient_checkpointing=script_args.gradient_checkpointing,
learning_rate=script_args.learning_rate,
evaluation_strategy="steps",
eval_steps=script_args.eval_steps,
output_dir=script_args.output_dir,
report_to=script_args.report_to,
lr_scheduler_type=script_args.lr_scheduler_type,
warmup_steps=script_args.warmup_steps,
optim=script_args.optimizer_type,
bf16=True,
remove_unused_columns=False,
run_name="dpo_llama2",
)
peft_config = LoraConfig(
r=script_args.lora_r,
lora_alpha=script_args.lora_alpha,
lora_dropout=script_args.lora_dropout,
target_modules=[
"q_proj",
"v_proj",
"k_proj",
"out_proj",
"fc_in",
"fc_out",
"wte",
],
bias="none",
task_type="CAUSAL_LM",
)
# 5. initialize the DPO trainer
dpo_trainer = DPOTrainer(
model,
model_ref,
args=training_args,
beta=script_args.beta,
train_dataset=train_dataset,
eval_dataset=eval_dataset,
tokenizer=tokenizer,
peft_config=peft_config,
max_prompt_length=script_args.max_prompt_length,
max_length=script_args.max_length,
)
# 6. train
dpo_trainer.train()
dpo_trainer.save_model(script_args.output_dir)
# 7. save
output_dir = os.path.join(script_args.output_dir, "final_checkpoint")
dpo_trainer.model.save_pretrained(output_dir)
After using accelerate config
to configure the environment, you can use the following instructions to run the script:
accelerate launch examples/research_projects/stack_llama_2/scripts/dpo_llama2.py \
--model_name_or_path="sft/final_checkpoint" \
--output_dir="dpo"
During the process, adjusting any aspect is done according to individual needs or preferences.
References
- arXiv – Direct Preference Optimization: Your Language Model is Secretly a Reward Model
- https://github.com/eric-mitchell/direct-preference-optimization/blob/main/trainers.py