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326 lines
12 KiB
Markdown
326 lines
12 KiB
Markdown
# Fine-tune with Pytorch
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> Use Pytorch to fine-tune models locally
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## Table of Contents
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- [Overview](#overview)
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- [Instructions](#instructions)
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- [Run on two Sparks](#run-on-two-sparks)
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- [Step 1. Configure network connectivity](#step-1-configure-network-connectivity)
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- [Step 2. Configure Docker permissions](#step-2-configure-docker-permissions)
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- [Step 3. Install NVIDIA Container Toolkit & setup Docker environment](#step-3-install-nvidia-container-toolkit-setup-docker-environment)
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- [Step 4. Enable resource advertising](#step-4-enable-resource-advertising)
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- [Step 5. Initialize Docker Swarm](#step-5-initialize-docker-swarm)
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- [Step 6. Join worker nodes and deploy](#step-6-join-worker-nodes-and-deploy)
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- [Step 7. Find your Docker container ID](#step-7-find-your-docker-container-id)
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- [Step 9. Adapt the configuration files](#step-9-adapt-the-configuration-files)
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- [Step 10. Run finetuning scripts](#step-10-run-finetuning-scripts)
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- [Step 14. Cleanup and rollback](#step-14-cleanup-and-rollback)
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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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This playbook guides you through setting up and using Pytorch for fine-tuning large language models on NVIDIA Spark devices.
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## What you'll accomplish
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You'll establish a complete fine-tuning environment for large language models (1-70B parameters) on your NVIDIA Spark device.
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By the end, you'll have a working installation that supports parameter-efficient fine-tuning (PEFT) and supervised fine-tuning (SFT).
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## What to know before starting
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- Previous experience with fine-tuning in Pytorch
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- Working with Docker
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## Prerequisites
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Recipes are specifically for DIGITS SPARK. Please make sure that OS and drivers are latest.
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## Ancillary files
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ALl files required for fine-tuning are included in the folder in [the GitHub repository here](https://github.com/NVIDIA/dgx-spark-playbooks/blob/main/nvidia/pytorch-fine-tune).
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## Time & risk
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* **Time estimate:** 30-45 mins for setup and runing fine-tuning. Fine-tuning run time varies depending on model size
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* **Risks:** Model downloads can be large (several GB), ARM64 package compatibility issues may require troubleshooting.
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## Instructions
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## Step 1. Configure Docker permissions
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To easily manage containers without sudo, you must be in the `docker` group. If you choose to skip this step, you will need to run Docker commands with sudo.
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Open a new terminal and test Docker access. In the terminal, run:
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```bash
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docker ps
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```
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If you see a permission denied error (something like permission denied while trying to connect to the Docker daemon socket), add your user to the docker group so that you don't need to run the command with sudo .
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```bash
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sudo usermod -aG docker $USER
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newgrp docker
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```
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## Step 2. Pull the latest Pytorch container
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```bash
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docker pull nvcr.io/nvidia/pytorch:25.09-py3
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```
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## Step 3. Launch Docker
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```bash
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docker run --gpus all -it --rm --ipc=host \
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-v $HOME/.cache/huggingface:/root/.cache/huggingface \
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-v ${PWD}:/workspace -w /workspace \
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nvcr.io/nvidia/pytorch:25.09-py3
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```
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## Step 4. Install dependencies inside the container
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```bash
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pip install transformers peft datasets "trl==0.19.1" "bitsandbytes==0.48"
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```
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## Step 5: Authenticate with Huggingface
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```bash
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huggingface-cli login
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##<input your huggingface token.
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##<Enter n for git credential>
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```
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## Step 6: Clone the git repo with fine-tuning recipes
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```bash
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git clone https://github.com/NVIDIA/dgx-spark-playbooks
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cd dgx-spark-playbooks/nvidia/pytorch-fine-tune/assets
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```
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## Step7: Run the fine-tuning recipes
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To run LoRA on Llama3-8B use the following command:
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```bash
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python Llama3_8B_LoRA_finetuning.py
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```
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To run qLoRA fine-tuning on llama3-70B use the following command:
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```bash
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python Llama3_70B_qLoRA_finetuning.py
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```
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To run full fine-tuning on llama3-3B use the following command:
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```bash
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python Llama3_3B_full_finetuning.py
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```
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## Run on two Sparks
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### Step 1. Configure network connectivity
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Follow the network setup instructions from the [Connect two Sparks](https://build.nvidia.com/spark/connect-two-sparks/stacked-sparks) playbook to establish connectivity between your DGX Spark nodes.
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This includes:
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- Physical QSFP cable connection
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- Network interface configuration (automatic or manual IP assignment)
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- Passwordless SSH setup
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- Network connectivity verification
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### Step 2. Configure Docker permissions
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To easily manage containers without sudo, you must be in the `docker` group. If you choose to skip this step, you will need to run Docker commands with sudo.
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Open a new terminal and test Docker access. In the terminal, run:
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```bash
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docker ps
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```
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If you see a permission denied error (something like permission denied while trying to connect to the Docker daemon socket), add your user to the docker group so that you don't need to run the command with sudo .
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```bash
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sudo usermod -aG docker $USER
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newgrp docker
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```
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### Step 3. Install NVIDIA Container Toolkit & setup Docker environment
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Ensure the NVIDIA drivers and the NVIDIA Container Toolkit are installed on each node (both manager and workers) that will provide GPU resources. This package enables Docker containers to access the host's GPU hardware. Ensure you complete the [installation steps](https://docs.nvidia.com/datacenter/cloud-native/container-toolkit/latest/install-guide.html), including the [Docker configuration](https://docs.nvidia.com/datacenter/cloud-native/container-toolkit/latest/install-guide.html#configuring-docker) for NVIDIA Container Toolkit.
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### Step 4. Enable resource advertising
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First, find your GPU UUID by running:
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```bash
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nvidia-smi -a | grep UUID
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```
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Next, modify the Docker daemon configuration to advertise the GPU to Swarm. Edit **/etc/docker/daemon.json**:
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```bash
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sudo nano /etc/docker/daemon.json
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```
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Add or modify the file to include the nvidia runtime and GPU UUID (replace **GPU-45cbf7b3-f919-7228-7a26-b06628ebefa1** with your actual GPU UUID):
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```json
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{
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"runtimes": {
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"nvidia": {
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"path": "nvidia-container-runtime",
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"runtimeArgs": []
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}
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},
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"default-runtime": "nvidia",
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"node-generic-resources": [
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"NVIDIA_GPU=GPU-45cbf7b3-f919-7228-7a26-b06628ebefa1"
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]
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}
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```
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Modify the NVIDIA Container Runtime to advertise the GPUs to the Swarm by uncommenting the swarm-resource line in the **config.toml** file. You can do this either with your preferred text editor (e.g., vim, nano...) or with the following command:
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```bash
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sudo sed -i 's/^#\s*\(swarm-resource\s*=\s*".*"\)/\1/' /etc/nvidia-container-runtime/config.toml
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```
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Finally, restart the Docker daemon to apply all changes:
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```bash
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sudo systemctl restart docker
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```
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Repeat these steps on all nodes.
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### Step 5. Initialize Docker Swarm
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On whichever node you want to use as primary, run the following swarm initialization command
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```bash
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docker swarm init --advertise-addr $(ip -o -4 addr show enp1s0f0np0 | awk '{print $4}' | cut -d/ -f1) $(ip -o -4 addr show enp1s0f1np1 | awk '{print $4}' | cut -d/ -f1)
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```
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The typical output of the above would be similar to the following:
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```
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Swarm initialized: current node (node-id) is now a manager.
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To add a worker to this swarm, run the following command:
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docker swarm join --token <worker-token> <advertise-addr>:<port>
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To add a manager to this swarm, run 'docker swarm join-token manager' and follow the instructions.
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```
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### Step 6. Join worker nodes and deploy
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Now we can proceed with setting up the worker nodes of your cluster. Repeat these steps on all worker nodes.
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Run the command suggested by the docker swarm init on each worker node to join the Docker swarm
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```bash
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docker swarm join --token <worker-token> <advertise-addr>:<port>
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```
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On both nodes, download the [**pytorch-ft-entrypoint.sh**](https://github.com/NVIDIA/dgx-spark-playbooks/blob/main/nvidia/pytorch-fine-tune/assets/pytorch-ft-entrypoint.sh) script into the directory containing your finetuning scripts and configuration files and run the following command to make it executable:
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```bash
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chmod +x $PWD/pytorch-ft-entrypoint.sh
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```
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On your primary node, deploy the Finetuning multi-node stack by downloading the [**docker-compose.yml**](https://github.com/NVIDIA/dgx-spark-playbooks/blob/main/nvidia/pytorch-fine-tune/assets/docker-compose.yml) file into the same directory as in the previous step and running the following command:
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```bash
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docker stack deploy -c $PWD/docker-compose.yml finetuning-multinode
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```
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> [!NOTE]
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> Ensure you download both files into the same directory from which you are running the command.
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You can verify the status of your worker nodes using the following
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```bash
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docker stack ps finetuning-multinode
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```
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If everything is healthy, you should see a similar output to the following:
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```
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nvidia@spark-1b3b:~$ docker stack ps finetuning-multinode
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ID NAME IMAGE NODE DESIRED STATE CURRENT STATE ERROR PORTS
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vlun7z9cacf9 finetuning-multinode_finetunine.1 nvcr.io/nvidia/pytorch:25.10-py3 spark-1d84 Running Starting 2 seconds ago
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tjl49zicvxoi finetuning-multinode_finetunine.2 nvcr.io/nvidia/pytorch:25.10-py3 spark-1b3b Running Starting 2 seconds ago
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```
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> [!NOTE]
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> If your "Current state" is not "Running", see troubleshooting section for more information.
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### Step 7. Find your Docker container ID
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You can use `docker ps` to find your Docker container ID. You can save the container ID in a variable as shown below. Run this command on both nodes.
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```bash
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export FINETUNING_CONTAINER=$(docker ps -q -f name=finetuning-multinode)
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```
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### Step 9. Adapt the configuration files
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For multi-node runs, we provide 2 configuration files:
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- [**config_finetuning.yaml**](https://github.com/NVIDIA/dgx-spark-playbooks/blob/main/nvidia/pytorch-fine-tune/assets/configs/config_finetuning.yaml) used for full finetuning of Llama3 3B.
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- [**config_fsdp_lora.yaml**](https://github.com/NVIDIA/dgx-spark-playbooks/blob/main/nvidia/pytorch-fine-tune/assets/configs/config_fsdp_lora.yaml) used for finetuning with LoRa and FSDP of Llama3 8B and Llama3 70B.
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These configuration files need to be adapted:
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- Set `machine_rank` on each of your nodes according to its rank. Your master node should have a rank `0`. The second node has a rank `1`.
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- Set the correct IP address of your master node. Use `ifconfig` to find the correct value for your CX-7 IP address.
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- Set a port number that can be used on your main node.
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The fields that need to be filled in your YAML files:
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```bash
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machine_rank: 0
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main_process_ip: < TODO: specify IP >
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main_process_port: < TODO: specify port >
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```
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### Step 10. Run finetuning scripts
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Once you successfully run the previous steps, you can use one of the `run-multi-llama_*` scripts for finetuning. Here is an example for Llama3 70B using LoRa for finetuning and FSDP2.
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```bash
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## Need to specify huggingface token for model download.
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export HF_TOKEN=<your-huggingface-token>
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docker exec \
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-e HF_TOKEN=$HF_TOKEN \
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-it $FINETUNING_CONTAINER bash -c '
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bash /workspace/install-requirements;
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accelerate launch --config_file=/workspace/configs/config_fsdp_lora.yaml /workspace/Llama3_70B_LoRA_finetuning.py'
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```
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### Step 14. Cleanup and rollback
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Stop and remove containers by using the following command on the leader node:
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```bash
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docker stack rm finetuning-multinode
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```
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Remove downloaded models to free disk space:
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```bash
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rm -rf $HOME/.cache/huggingface/hub/models--meta-llama* $HOME/.cache/huggingface/hub/datasets*
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```
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## Troubleshooting
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| Symptom | Cause | Fix |
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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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> [!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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