Abstract: Optimizing deep learning algorithms currently requires slow, manual derivation, potentially leaving much performance untapped. Methods like FlashAttention have achieved a x6 performance improvement over native PyTorch by avoiding unnecessary data transfers, but required three iterations over three years to be developed. Automated compiled methods have consistently lagged behind. This paper extends Neural Circuit Diagrams for deep learning models to consider resource usage and the distribution of tasks across a GPU hierarchy. We show how diagrams can use simple relabellings to derive high-level streaming and tiling optimization strategies along with performance models. We show how this high-level performance model allows the effects of quantization and multi-level GPU hierarchies to be readily considered. We develop a methodology for representing intermediate-level pseudocode with diagrams, allowing hardware-aware algorithms to be derived step-by-step. Finally, we show how our methodology can be used to better understand existing techniques like FlashAttention. This work uses a theoretical framework to link assumptions about GPU behaviour to claims about performance. We aim to lay the groundwork for a scientific approach to GPU optimization where experiments can address clear hypotheses rather than post-hoc rationalizations.
Submission Length: Long submission (more than 12 pages of main content)
Code: https://github.com/mit-zardini-lab/Napkin
Supplementary Material: zip
Assigned Action Editor: ~Chuan-Sheng_Foo1
Submission Number: 3798
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