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torch.compile

torch.compile compiles PyTorch code to fused kernels to make it run faster. For training, it traces both the forward and backward pass together and compiles them into optimized kernels, reducing the overhead of individual op launches and fusing operations to cut memory bandwidth usage.

Set torch_compile=True in TrainingArguments to enable it. Training compiles both the forward and backward pass, unlike inference which only compiles the forward pass. Compilation happens on the first training step, so expect it to be significantly slower than subsequent steps.

from transformers import TrainingArguments

args = TrainingArguments(
    ...,
    torch_compile=True,
    torch_compile_backend="inductor",
    torch_compile_mode="reduce-overhead",
)

Backend

The default backend is inductor, which compiles to Triton kernels with AOTAutograd. This is the right choice for most training workloads. Use cudagraphs for fixed-shape inputs, or ipex for Intel CPU training.

Compile mode

Use the table below to help select a torch.compile mode.

mode description
default balanced compile time vs runtime
reduce-overhead reduces Python/CPU overhead using CUDA graphs at the cost of some extra memory
max-autotune benchmarks multiple kernel implementations at compile and picks the fastest (longer compilation)
max-autotune-no-cudagraphs same as max-autotune but without CUDA graphs

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