The PyTorch implementation of Generative Pre-trained Transformers (GPTs) using Kolmogorov-Arnold Networks (KANs) for language modeling
pip install kan_gpt
If you find our work useful cite us!
@misc{GANESH2024KANGPT,
author = {Aditya Nalgunda Ganesh},
title = {KAN-GPT: The PyTorch implementation of Generative Pre-trained Transformers (GPTs) using Kolmogorov-Arnold Networks (KANs) for language modeling},
year = {2024},
month = {May},
note = {Release 1.0.0, 9th May 2024},
url = {https://github.com/AdityaNG/kan-gpt/}
}
Refer to the KAN_GPT.ipynb and kan_gpt/prompt.py for usage examples. The following is an outline of how to use the model:
from kan_gpt.model import GPT
from transformers import GPT2Tokenizer
model_config = GPT.get_default_config()
model_config.model_type = "gpt2"
model_config.vocab_size = 50257
model_config.block_size = 1024
model = GPT(model_config)
tokenizer = GPT2Tokenizer.from_pretrained('gpt2')
prompt = "Bangalore is often described as the "
prompt_encoded = tokenizer.encode(
text=prompt, add_special_tokens=False
)
x = torch.tensor(prompt_encoded).unsqueeze(0)
model.eval()
y = model.generate(x, 50) # sample 50 tokens
result = tokenizer.decode(y[0])
print(result)
# Bangalore is often described as the Silicon Valley of India.
# The city has witnessed rapid growth in the past two decades.....
# Download Repo
git clone https://github.com/AdityaNG/kan-gpt
cd kan-gpt
git pull
# Download Dataset
python3 -m kan_gpt.download_dataset --dataset tinyshakespeare
python3 -m kan_gpt.download_dataset --dataset mnist
python3 -m kan_gpt.download_dataset --dataset webtext
# Install dependencies for development
pip install -r requirements.txt
pip install -e .
Use the following dummy script to make sure everything is working as expected
WANDB_MODE=offline CUDA_VISIBLE_DEVICE="" python3 -m kan_gpt.train --architecture MLP --batch_size 1 --dummy_dataset --device cpu --max_iters 200
WANDB_MODE=offline CUDA_VISIBLE_DEVICE="" python3 -m kan_gpt.train --architecture KAN --batch_size 1 --dummy_dataset --device cpu --max_iters 200
Then make use of the training script
python -m kan_gpt.train
You can prompt the model to produce text as follows
python -m kan_gpt.prompt --prompt "Bangalore is often described as the " --model_path (checkpoint)
We train and compare KAN-GPT with an equivalent MLP-GPT model on the Tiny Shakespeare dataset. We observe that the KAN-GPT performs slightly better than the MLP-GPT. We are looking into further experiments to dive deeper. The results are shown below:
Metrics | ||
---|---|---|
- Integrate minGPT and pykan
- Dataset downloading script for WebText
- PyTorch Dataset parser for WebText
- PyTorch Dataset parser for tinyshakespeare
- Mini training POC for KAN-GPT
- Integrate KAN training logic from
KAN.train_kan
- Train a dummy batch w/o any memory issues
- Integrate KAN training logic from
- Mini training POC for MLP-GPT
- Train MLP-GPT on the webtext dataset as a baseline
- Train KAN-GPT on the webtext dataset as a baseline
- Metrics comparing KAN-GPT and MLP-GPT
- Auto Save checkpoints
- Auto Save checkpoints to W&B
- Auto Download model weights from git / huggingface
- W&B hyperparam sweep script
- Script to load checkpoint in interactive mode
- Reduce requrements.txt constraints
- Define pydantic model for training and sweep args
- Pruning the package, get rid of unused code
- Training script to PyTorch Lighting
- Documentation:
mkdocs gh-deploy
- Integrate with efficient-kan
- Test Cases
- KAN: Forward-Backward test
- GPT: Forward-Backward test
- KAN_GPT: Forward-Backward test
- EFFICIENT_KAN: Forward-Backward test
Read the CONTRIBUTING.md file.