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221 lines
7.3 KiB
Markdown
221 lines
7.3 KiB
Markdown
# LLaMA Factory
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> Install and fine-tune models with LLaMA Factory
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## Table of Contents
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- [Overview](#overview)
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- [Instructions](#instructions)
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- [Step 4. Install LLaMA Factory with dependencies](#step-4-install-llama-factory-with-dependencies)
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- [Troubleshooting](#troubleshooting)
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---
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## Overview
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## Basic idea
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LLaMA Factory is an open-source framework that simplifies the process of training and fine
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tuning large language models. It offers a unified interface for a variety of cutting edge
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methods such as SFT, RLHF, and QLoRA techniques. It also supports a wide range of LLM
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architectures such as LLaMA, Mistral and Qwen. This playbook demonstrates how to fine-tune
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large language models using LLaMA Factory CLI on your NVIDIA Spark device.
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## What you'll accomplish
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You'll set up LLaMA Factory on NVIDIA Spark with Blackwell architecture to fine-tune large
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language models using LoRA, QLoRA, and full fine-tuning methods. This enables efficient
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model adaptation for specialized domains while leveraging hardware-specific optimizations.
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## What to know before starting
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- Basic Python knowledge for editing config files and troubleshooting
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- Command line usage for running shell commands and managing environments
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- Familiarity with PyTorch and Hugging Face Transformers ecosystem
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- GPU environment setup including CUDA/cuDNN installation and VRAM management
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- Fine-tuning concepts: understanding tradeoffs between LoRA, QLoRA, and full fine-tuning
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- Dataset preparation: formatting text data into JSON structure for instruction tuning
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- Resource management: adjusting batch size and memory settings for GPU constraints
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## Prerequisites
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- NVIDIA Spark device with Blackwell architecture
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- CUDA 12.9 or newer version installed: `nvcc --version`
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- Docker installed and configured for GPU access: `docker run --gpus all nvcr.io/nvidia/pytorch:25.11-py3 nvidia-smi`
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- Git installed: `git --version`
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- Python environment with pip: `python --version && pip --version`
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- Sufficient storage space (>50GB for models and checkpoints): `df -h`
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- Internet connection for downloading models from Hugging Face Hub
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## Ancillary files
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- Official LLaMA Factory repository: https://github.com/hiyouga/LLaMA-Factory
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- NVIDIA PyTorch container: https://catalog.ngc.nvidia.com/orgs/nvidia/containers/pytorch
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- Example training configuration: `examples/train_lora/llama3_lora_sft.yaml` (from repository)
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- Documentation: https://llamafactory.readthedocs.io/en/latest/getting_started/data_preparation.html
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## Time & risk
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* **Duration:** 30-60 minutes for initial setup, 1-7 hours for training depending on model size and dataset.
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* **Risks:** Model downloads require significant bandwidth and storage. Training may consume substantial GPU memory and require parameter tuning for hardware constraints.
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* **Rollback:** Remove Docker containers and cloned repositories. Training checkpoints are saved locally and can be deleted to reclaim storage space.
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* **Last Updated:** 12/15/2025
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* Upgrade to latest pytorch container version nvcr.io/nvidia/pytorch:25.11-py3
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## Instructions
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## Step 1. Verify system prerequisites
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Check that your NVIDIA Spark system has the required components installed and accessible.
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```bash
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nvcc --version
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docker --version
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nvidia-smi
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python --version
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git --version
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```
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## Step 2. Launch PyTorch container with GPU support
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Start the NVIDIA PyTorch container with GPU access and mount your workspace directory.
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> [!NOTE]
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> This NVIDIA PyTorch container supports CUDA 13
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```bash
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docker run --gpus all --ipc=host --ulimit memlock=-1 -it --ulimit stack=67108864 --rm -v "$PWD":/workspace nvcr.io/nvidia/pytorch:25.11-py3 bash
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```
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## Step 3. Clone LLaMA Factory repository
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Download the LLaMA Factory source code from the official repository.
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```bash
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git clone --depth 1 https://github.com/hiyouga/LLaMA-Factory.git
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cd LLaMA-Factory
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```
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### Step 4. Install LLaMA Factory with dependencies
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Install the package in editable mode with metrics support for training evaluation.
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```bash
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pip install -e ".[metrics]"
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```
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## Step 5. Verify Pytorch CUDA support.
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PyTorch is pre-installed with CUDA support.
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To verify installation:
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```bash
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python -c "import torch; print(f'PyTorch: {torch.__version__}, CUDA: {torch.cuda.is_available()}')"
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```
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## Step 6. Prepare training configuration
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Examine the provided LoRA fine-tuning configuration for Llama-3.
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```bash
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cat examples/train_lora/llama3_lora_sft.yaml
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```
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## Step 7. Launch fine-tuning training
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> [!NOTE]
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> Login to your hugging face hub to download the model if the model is gated.
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Execute the training process using the pre-configured LoRA setup.
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```bash
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huggingface-cli login # if the model is gated
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llamafactory-cli train examples/train_lora/llama3_lora_sft.yaml
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```
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Example output:
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```bash
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***** train metrics *****
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epoch = 3.0
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total_flos = 22851591GF
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train_loss = 0.9113
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train_runtime = 0:22:21.99
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train_samples_per_second = 2.437
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train_steps_per_second = 0.306
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Figure saved at: saves/llama3-8b/lora/sft/training_loss.png
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```
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## Step 8. Validate training completion
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Verify that training completed successfully and checkpoints were saved.
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```bash
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ls -la saves/llama3-8b/lora/sft/
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```
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Expected output should show:
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- Final checkpoint directory (`checkpoint-21` or similar)
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- Model configuration files (`config.json`, `adapter_config.json`)
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- Training metrics showing decreasing loss values
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- Training loss plot saved as PNG file
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## Step 9. Test inference with fine-tuned model
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Test your fine-tuned model with custom prompts:
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```bash
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llamafactory-cli chat examples/inference/llama3_lora_sft.yaml
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## Type: "Hello, how can you help me today?"
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## Expect: Response showing fine-tuned behavior
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```
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## Step 10. For production deployment, export your model
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```bash
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llamafactory-cli export examples/merge_lora/llama3_lora_sft.yaml
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```
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## Step 11. Cleanup and rollback
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> [!WARNING]
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> This will delete all training progress and checkpoints.
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To remove all generated files and free up storage space:
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```bash
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cd /workspace
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rm -rf LLaMA-Factory/
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docker system prune -f
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```
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To rollback Docker container changes:
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```bash
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exit # Exit container
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docker container prune -f
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```
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## Troubleshooting
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| Symptom | Cause | Fix |
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| CUDA out of memory during training | Batch size too large for GPU VRAM | Reduce `per_device_train_batch_size` or increase `gradient_accumulation_steps` |
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| Cannot access gated repo for URL | Certain HuggingFace models have restricted access | Regenerate your [HuggingFace token](https://huggingface.co/docs/hub/en/security-tokens); and request access to the [gated model](https://huggingface.co/docs/hub/en/models-gated#customize-requested-information) on your web browser |
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| Model download fails or is slow | Network connectivity or Hugging Face Hub issues | Check internet connection, try using `HF_HUB_OFFLINE=1` for cached models |
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| Training loss not decreasing | Learning rate too high/low or insufficient data | Adjust `learning_rate` parameter or check dataset quality |
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> [!NOTE]
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> DGX Spark uses a Unified Memory Architecture (UMA), which enables dynamic memory sharing between the GPU and CPU.
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> With many applications still updating to take advantage of UMA, you may encounter memory issues even when within
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> the memory capacity of DGX Spark. If that happens, manually flush the buffer cache with:
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```bash
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sudo sh -c 'sync; echo 3 > /proc/sys/vm/drop_caches'
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```
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