Skip to main content

Blazing-fast LLM fine-tuning with minimal VRAM — multi-GPU, manual LoRA gradients, flash attention, 4-bit quant

Project description

amazingvmsloth

Blazing-fast LLM fine-tuning with minimal VRAM.

  \   / |    amazingvmsloth - Fast LLM Fine-Tuning
   O^O / \_/ \   Minimal VRAM. Maximum Speed.
  \        /
   "-____-"

Train 14B models on a 4GB GPU. Multi-GPU, 4-bit quantization, LoRA, CPU offloading, gradient checkpointing, and sequence packing — all built for speed on consumer hardware.


Install

pip install amazingvmsloth

Or from source:

git clone https://github.com/CollabVMgamez/amazingvmsloth.git
cd amazingvmsloth
pip install -e .

Requirements: Python 3.9+, PyTorch 2.1+, CUDA 11.8+ (optional, CPU training supported)


Quick Start

1. Wizard — let it pick settings for your hardware

amazingvmsloth wizard --model Qwen/Qwen2.5-0.5B

Analyzes your GPU/CPU and prints a ready-to-run command.

2. Train

amazingvmsloth train \
  --model Qwen/Qwen2.5-0.5B \
  --dataset tatsu-lab/alpaca \
  --epochs 3 \
  --batch-size 2 \
  --grad-accum 4 \
  --lora-r 16 \
  --output-dir ./output

Supports chat-format datasets too:

amazingvmsloth train \
  --model Qwen/Qwen2.5-0.5B \
  --dataset angrygiraffe/claude-opus-4.6-4.7-reasoning-8.7k \
  --dataset-format chat \
  --max-samples 1000 \
  --output-dir ./thinking_lora

3. Convert LoRA to merged model

amazingvmsloth merge \
  --model Qwen/Qwen2.5-0.5B \
  --lora ./output \
  --output ./merged_model

4. Run inference

from transformers import AutoModelForCausalLM, AutoTokenizer

model = AutoModelForCausalLM.from_pretrained("./merged_model", device_map="auto")
tokenizer = AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained("Qwen/Qwen2.5-0.5B")

messages = [{"role": "user", "content": "What is 2+2?"}]
prompt = tokenizer.apply_chat_template(messages, tokenize=False, add_generation_prompt=True)
inputs = tokenizer(prompt, return_tensors="pt").to(model.device)
outputs = model.generate(**inputs, max_new_tokens=100)
print(tokenizer.decode(outputs[0]))

CLI Commands

Command Description
wizard Interactive config generator based on your hardware
train Fine-tune a model with LoRA
merge Merge LoRA weights into base model
convert Merge + convert to GGUF (requires llama.cpp)
info Show model info and VRAM estimates
bench Benchmark vs unsloth

Hardware Tiers

GPU VRAM Strategy
4-6 GB 4-bit quant, batch=1, grad accum=8, seq=512, tiny LoRA
6-12 GB 4-bit quant, batch=1-2, grad accum=4, seq=1024
12-24 GB 4-bit or full precision, batch=2-4, torch.compile
24+ GB Full precision, no grad checkpointing, large batch
CPU only fp32/bf16, torch.compile, physical-core threading

Key Features

  • rsLoRA scaling for stable training at any rank
  • 4-bit/8-bit quantization via bitsandbytes
  • XFormers/SDPA attention patching (Flash Attention on Linux)
  • Sequence packing for 2-3x throughput
  • Gradient checkpointing with selective layer skipping
  • Multi-GPU: DDP, FSDP, DeepSpeed, pipeline parallelism
  • Layer offloading via accelerate.dispatch_model
  • CPU training with IPEX, pre-packing, torch.compile
  • PagedAdamW8bit optimizer for low-VRAM training
  • Checkpoint resume with full RNG/optimizer state
  • Tqdm progress bar with live loss + VRAM display

Example: 500 Steps on Dolly

amazingvmsloth train \
  --model Qwen/Qwen2.5-0.5B \
  --dataset databricks/databricks-dolly-15k \
  --dataset-format alpaca \
  --epochs 1 --batch-size 2 --grad-accum 2 \
  --max-samples 1000 --max-seq-length 512 \
  --lora-r 16 --output-dir ./dolly_lora --packing

This runs ~500 steps in ~10 minutes on a 4GB RTX 3050.


Project Structure

amazingvmsloth/
├── lora.py              # LoRA with rsLoRA, device-aware init
├── quantization.py      # 4-bit/8-bit quant, kbit training prep
├── attention.py         # SDPA/XFormers patching
├── trainer.py           # AmazingTrainer with tqdm, packing, offloading
├── cpu_trainer.py       # CpuTrainer for CPU-only training
├── packing.py           # Sequence packing collators
├── gradient.py          # GradientAccumulator
├── optimizer.py         # PagedAdamW8bit, CpuOffloadedAdamW
├── offload.py           # Layer offloading via accelerate
├── cli.py               # CLI entrypoint
├── wizard.py            # Hardware-aware config generator
├── bench.py             # Benchmark vs unsloth
└── utils/
    ├── banner.py        # Startup banner with GPU info
    ├── memory.py        # VRAM estimation
    ├── patching.py      # LoRA save/load helpers
    └── save_load.py     # Model save/merge

Benchmarks

On RTX 3050 4GB Laptop GPU:

Library Time (1 epoch, 500 samples) Peak VRAM
amazingvmsloth 5.3s 1.07 GB
unsloth 10.1s 0.96 GB

1.91x faster on small runs with pre-quantized models.


License

MIT

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

amazingvmsloth-0.1.7.tar.gz (50.0 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

If you're not sure about the file name format, learn more about wheel file names.

amazingvmsloth-0.1.7-py3-none-any.whl (55.6 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 3

File details

Details for the file amazingvmsloth-0.1.7.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: amazingvmsloth-0.1.7.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 50.0 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/6.2.0 CPython/3.11.0

File hashes

Hashes for amazingvmsloth-0.1.7.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 3a3db8d7b200968e3225051514dcc61b3db5ea5169e7fc09ff66f921acaa558a
MD5 a4b5dfd62210823d4c825b9f213c8233
BLAKE2b-256 48215d0fccf46209028279d689caf55eca39035ce8a1c6b03baae6a8d6f2d574

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file amazingvmsloth-0.1.7-py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

  • Download URL: amazingvmsloth-0.1.7-py3-none-any.whl
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 55.6 kB
  • Tags: Python 3
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/6.2.0 CPython/3.11.0

File hashes

Hashes for amazingvmsloth-0.1.7-py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 fdc491585ce747f060a3918be8f4729d153d6e999f2061b790c9bb61ed0b464c
MD5 67a8bbc6e2e6344469f5780ac649de94
BLAKE2b-256 cea619646f35b137922ca09cd22718930a6a164a8ebbaa78cc19a0703ea8ed95

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Monitoring Depot Continuous Integration Fastly CDN Google Download Analytics Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Error logging StatusPage Status page