NeMo 2.0
We've released NeMo 2.0, an update on the NeMo Framework which prioritizes modularity and ease-of-use. Please refer to the NeMo Framework User Guide to get started.Large Language Models and Multimodal Models
New Llama 3.1 Support (2024-07-23)
The NeMo Framework now supports training and customizing the Llama 3.1 collection of LLMs from Meta.Accelerate your Generative AI Distributed Training Workloads with the NVIDIA NeMo Framework on Amazon EKS (2024-07-16)
NVIDIA NeMo Framework now runs distributed training workloads on an Amazon Elastic Kubernetes Service (Amazon EKS) cluster. For step-by-step instructions on creating an EKS cluster and running distributed training workloads with NeMo, see the GitHub repository here.NVIDIA NeMo Accelerates LLM Innovation with Hybrid State Space Model Support (2024/06/17)
NVIDIA NeMo and Megatron Core now support pre-training and fine-tuning of state space models (SSMs). NeMo also supports training models based on the Griffin architecture as described by Google DeepMind.NVIDIA releases 340B base, instruct, and reward models pretrained on a total of 9T tokens. (2024-06-18)
See documentation and tutorials for SFT, PEFT, and PTQ with Nemotron 340B in the NeMo Framework User Guide.NVIDIA sets new generative AI performance and scale records in MLPerf Training v4.0 (2024/06/12)
Using NVIDIA NeMo Framework and NVIDIA Hopper GPUs NVIDIA was able to scale to 11,616 H100 GPUs and achieve near-linear performance scaling on LLM pretraining. NVIDIA also achieved the highest LLM fine-tuning performance and raised the bar for text-to-image training.Accelerate your generative AI journey with NVIDIA NeMo Framework on GKE (2024/03/16)
An end-to-end walkthrough to train generative AI models on the Google Kubernetes Engine (GKE) using the NVIDIA NeMo Framework is available at https://github.com/GoogleCloudPlatform/nvidia-nemo-on-gke. The walkthrough includes detailed instructions on how to set up a Google Cloud Project and pre-train a GPT model using the NeMo Framework.Speech Recognition
Accelerating Leaderboard-Topping ASR Models 10x with NVIDIA NeMo (2024/09/24)
NVIDIA NeMo team released a number of inference optimizations for CTC, RNN-T, and TDT models that resulted in up to 10x inference speed-up. These models now exceed an inverse real-time factor (RTFx) of 2,000, with some reaching RTFx of even 6,000.New Standard for Speech Recognition and Translation from the NVIDIA NeMo Canary Model (2024/04/18)
The NeMo team just released Canary, a multilingual model that transcribes speech in English, Spanish, German, and French with punctuation and capitalization. Canary also provides bi-directional translation, between English and the three other supported languages.Pushing the Boundaries of Speech Recognition with NVIDIA NeMo Parakeet ASR Models (2024/04/18)
NVIDIA NeMo, an end-to-end platform for the development of multimodal generative AI models at scale anywhere—on any cloud and on-premises—released the Parakeet family of automatic speech recognition (ASR) models. These state-of-the-art ASR models, developed in collaboration with Suno.ai, transcribe spoken English with exceptional accuracy.Turbocharge ASR Accuracy and Speed with NVIDIA NeMo Parakeet-TDT (2024/04/18)
NVIDIA NeMo, an end-to-end platform for developing multimodal generative AI models at scale anywhere—on any cloud and on-premises—recently released Parakeet-TDT. This new addition to the NeMo ASR Parakeet model family boasts better accuracy and 64% greater speed over the previously best model, Parakeet-RNNT-1.1B.NVIDIA NeMo Framework is a scalable and cloud-native generative AI framework built for researchers and PyTorch developers working on Large Language Models (LLMs), Multimodal Models (MMs), Automatic Speech Recognition (ASR), Text to Speech (TTS), and Computer Vision (CV) domains. It is designed to help you efficiently create, customize, and deploy new generative AI models by leveraging existing code and pre-trained model checkpoints.
For technical documentation, please see the NeMo Framework User Guide.
NVIDIA NeMo 2.0 introduces several significant improvements over its predecessor, NeMo 1.0, enhancing flexibility, performance, and scalability.
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Python-Based Configuration - NeMo 2.0 transitions from YAML files to a Python-based configuration, providing more flexibility and control. This shift makes it easier to extend and customize configurations programmatically.
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Modular Abstractions - By adopting PyTorch Lightning’s modular abstractions, NeMo 2.0 simplifies adaptation and experimentation. This modular approach allows developers to more easily modify and experiment with different components of their models.
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Scalability - NeMo 2.0 seamlessly scaling large-scale experiments across thousands of GPUs using NeMo-Run, a powerful tool designed to streamline the configuration, execution, and management of machine learning experiments across computing environments.
Overall, these enhancements make NeMo 2.0 a powerful, scalable, and user-friendly framework for AI model development.
Important
NeMo 2.0 is currently supported by the LLM (large language model) and VLM (vision language model) collections.
- Refer to the Quickstart for examples of using NeMo-Run to launch NeMo 2.0 experiments locally and on a slurm cluster.
- For more information about NeMo 2.0, see the NeMo Framework User Guide.
- NeMo 2.0 Recipes contains additional examples of launching large-scale runs using NeMo 2.0 and NeMo-Run.
- For an in-depth exploration of the main features of NeMo 2.0, see the Feature Guide.
- To transition from NeMo 1.0 to 2.0, see the Migration Guide for step-by-step instructions.
All NeMo models are trained with Lightning. Training is automatically scalable to 1000s of GPUs.
When applicable, NeMo models leverage cutting-edge distributed training techniques, incorporating parallelism strategies to enable efficient training of very large models. These techniques include Tensor Parallelism (TP), Pipeline Parallelism (PP), Fully Sharded Data Parallelism (FSDP), Mixture-of-Experts (MoE), and Mixed Precision Training with BFloat16 and FP8, as well as others.
NeMo Transformer-based LLMs and MMs utilize NVIDIA Transformer Engine for FP8 training on NVIDIA Hopper GPUs, while leveraging NVIDIA Megatron Core for scaling Transformer model training.
NeMo LLMs can be aligned with state-of-the-art methods such as SteerLM, Direct Preference Optimization (DPO), and Reinforcement Learning from Human Feedback (RLHF). See NVIDIA NeMo Aligner for more information.
In addition to supervised fine-tuning (SFT), NeMo also supports the latest parameter efficient fine-tuning (PEFT) techniques such as LoRA, P-Tuning, Adapters, and IA3. Refer to the NeMo Framework User Guide for the full list of supported models and techniques.
NeMo LLMs and MMs can be deployed and optimized with NVIDIA NeMo Microservices.
NeMo ASR and TTS models can be optimized for inference and deployed for production use cases with NVIDIA Riva.
Important
NeMo Framework Launcher is compatible with NeMo version 1.0 only. NeMo-Run is recommended for launching experiments using NeMo 2.0.
NeMo Framework Launcher is a cloud-native tool that streamlines the NeMo Framework experience. It is used for launching end-to-end NeMo Framework training jobs on CSPs and Slurm clusters.
The NeMo Framework Launcher includes extensive recipes, scripts, utilities, and documentation for training NeMo LLMs. It also includes the NeMo Framework Autoconfigurator, which is designed to find the optimal model parallel configuration for training on a specific cluster.
To get started quickly with the NeMo Framework Launcher, please see the NeMo Framework Playbooks. The NeMo Framework Launcher does not currently support ASR and TTS training, but it will soon.
Getting started with NeMo Framework is easy. State-of-the-art pretrained NeMo models are freely available on Hugging Face Hub and NVIDIA NGC. These models can be used to generate text or images, transcribe audio, and synthesize speech in just a few lines of code.
We have extensive tutorials that can be run on Google Colab or with our NGC NeMo Framework Container. We also have playbooks for users who want to train NeMo models with the NeMo Framework Launcher.
For advanced users who want to train NeMo models from scratch or fine-tune existing NeMo models, we have a full suite of example scripts that support multi-GPU/multi-node training.
- Python 3.10 or above
- Pytorch 1.13.1 or above
- NVIDIA GPU (if you intend to do model training)
Version | Status | Description |
---|---|---|
Latest | Documentation of the latest (i.e. main) branch. | |
Stable | Documentation of the stable (i.e. most recent release) |
The NeMo Framework can be installed in a variety of ways, depending on your needs. Depending on the domain, you may find one of the following installation methods more suitable.
- Conda / Pip - Refer to Conda and Pip for
installation instructions.
- This is the recommended method for ASR and TTS domains.
- When using a Nvidia PyTorch container as the base, this is the recommended method for all domains.
- Docker Containers - Refer to Docker containers
for installation instructions.
- NeMo Framework container - [nvcr.io/nvidia/nemo:24.05]{.title-ref}
- LLMs and MMs Dependencies - Refer to LLMs and MMs Dependencies for installation instructions.
Important: We strongly recommended that you start with a base NVIDIA PyTorch container: nvcr.io/nvidia/pytorch:24.02-py3.
Install NeMo in a fresh Conda environment:
conda create --name nemo python==3.10.12
conda activate nemo
Install PyTorch using their configurator:
conda install pytorch torchvision torchaudio pytorch-cuda=11.8 -c pytorch -c nvidia
The command to install PyTorch may depend on your system. Use the configurator linked above to find the right command for your system.
Then, install NeMo via Pip or from Source. We do not provide NeMo on the conda-forge or any other Conda channel.
To install the nemo_toolkit, use the following installation method:
apt-get update && apt-get install -y libsndfile1 ffmpeg
pip install Cython packaging
pip install nemo_toolkit['all']
Depending on the shell used, you may need to use the
"nemo_toolkit[all]"
specifier instead in the above command.
To install a specific domain of NeMo, you must first install the nemo_toolkit using the instructions listed above. Then, you run the following domain-specific commands:
pip install nemo_toolkit['asr']
pip install nemo_toolkit['nlp']
pip install nemo_toolkit['tts']
pip install nemo_toolkit['vision']
pip install nemo_toolkit['multimodal']
If you want to work with a specific version of NeMo from a particular GitHub branch (e.g main), use the following installation method:
apt-get update && apt-get install -y libsndfile1 ffmpeg
pip install Cython packaging
python -m pip install git+https://github.com/NVIDIA/NeMo.git@{BRANCH}#egg=nemo_toolkit[all]
If you want to clone the NeMo GitHub repository and contribute to NeMo open-source development work, use the following installation method:
apt-get update && apt-get install -y libsndfile1 ffmpeg
git clone https://github.com/NVIDIA/NeMo
cd NeMo
./reinstall.sh
If you only want the toolkit without the additional Conda-based
dependencies, you can replace reinstall.sh
with pip install -e .
when your PWD is the root of the NeMo repository.
To install NeMo on Mac computers with the Apple M-Series GPU, you need to create a new Conda environment, install PyTorch 2.0 or higher, and then install the nemo_toolkit.
Important: This method is only applicable to the ASR domain.
Run the following code:
# [optional] install mecab using Homebrew, to use sacrebleu for NLP collection
# you can install Homebrew here: https://brew.sh
brew install mecab
# [optional] install pynini using Conda, to use text normalization
conda install -c conda-forge pynini
# install Cython manually
pip install cython packaging
# clone the repo and install in development mode
git clone https://github.com/NVIDIA/NeMo
cd NeMo
pip install 'nemo_toolkit[all]'
# Note that only the ASR toolkit is guaranteed to work on MacBook - so for MacBook use pip install 'nemo_toolkit[asr]'
To install the Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL), run the following code in PowerShell:
wsl --install
# [note] If you run wsl --install and see the WSL help text, it means WSL is already installed.
To learn more about installing WSL, refer to Microsoft's official documentation.
After installing your Linux distribution with WSL, two options are available:
Option 1: Open the distribution (Ubuntu by default) from the Start menu and follow the instructions.
Option 2: Launch the Terminal application. Download it from Microsoft's Windows Terminal page if not installed.
Next, follow the instructions for Linux systems, as provided above. For example:
apt-get update && apt-get install -y libsndfile1 ffmpeg
git clone https://github.com/NVIDIA/NeMo
cd NeMo
./reinstall.sh
For optimal performance of a Recurrent Neural Network Transducer (RNNT), install the Numba package from Conda.
Run the following code:
conda remove numba
pip uninstall numba
conda install -c conda-forge numba
If you work with the LLM and MM domains, three additional dependencies are required: NVIDIA Apex, NVIDIA Transformer Engine, and NVIDIA Megatron Core. When working with the [main]{.title-ref} branch, these dependencies may require a recent commit.
The most recent working versions of these dependencies are here:
export apex_commit=810ffae374a2b9cb4b5c5e28eaeca7d7998fca0c
export te_commit=bfe21c3d68b0a9951e5716fb520045db53419c5e
export mcore_commit=02871b4df8c69fac687ab6676c4246e936ce92d0
export nv_pytorch_tag=24.02-py3
When using a released version of NeMo, please refer to the Software Component Versions for the correct versions.
We recommended that you start with a base NVIDIA PyTorch container: nvcr.io/nvidia/pytorch:24.02-py3.
If starting with a base NVIDIA PyTorch container, you must first launch the container:
docker run \
--gpus all \
-it \
--rm \
--shm-size=16g \
--ulimit memlock=-1 \
--ulimit stack=67108864 \
nvcr.io/nvidia/pytorch:$nv_pytorch_tag
Next, you need to install the dependencies.
NVIDIA Apex is required for LLM and MM domains. Although Apex is pre-installed in the NVIDIA PyTorch container, you may need to update it to a newer version.
To install Apex, run the following code:
git clone https://github.com/NVIDIA/apex.git
cd apex
git checkout $apex_commit
pip install . -v --no-build-isolation --disable-pip-version-check --no-cache-dir --config-settings "--build-option=--cpp_ext --cuda_ext --fast_layer_norm --distributed_adam --deprecated_fused_adam --group_norm"
When attempting to install Apex separately from the NVIDIA PyTorch container, you might encounter an error if the CUDA version on your system is different from the one used to compile PyTorch. To bypass this error, you can comment out the relevant line in the setup file located in the Apex repository on GitHub here: https://github.com/NVIDIA/apex/blob/master/setup.py#L32.
cuda-nvprof is needed to install Apex. The version should match the CUDA version that you are using.
To install cuda-nvprof, run the following code:
conda install -c nvidia cuda-nvprof=11.8
Finally, install the packaging:
pip install packaging
To install the most recent versions of Apex locally, it might be necessary to remove the [pyproject.toml]{.title-ref} file from the Apex directory.
NVIDIA Transformer Engine is required for LLM and MM domains. Although the Transformer Engine is pre-installed in the NVIDIA PyTorch container, you may need to update it to a newer version.
The Transformer Engine facilitates training with FP8 precision on NVIDIA Hopper GPUs and introduces many enhancements for the training of Transformer-based models. Refer to Transformer Engine for information.
To install Transformer Engine, run the following code:
git clone https://github.com/NVIDIA/TransformerEngine.git && \
cd TransformerEngine && \
git checkout $te_commit && \
git submodule init && git submodule update && \
NVTE_FRAMEWORK=pytorch NVTE_WITH_USERBUFFERS=1 MPI_HOME=/usr/local/mpi pip install .
Transformer Engine requires PyTorch to be built with at least CUDA 11.8.
Megatron Core is required for LLM and MM domains. Megatron Core is a library for scaling large Transformer-based models. NeMo LLMs and MMs leverage Megatron Core for model parallelism, transformer architectures, and optimized PyTorch datasets.
To install Megatron Core, run the following code:
git clone https://github.com/NVIDIA/Megatron-LM.git && \
cd Megatron-LM && \
git checkout $mcore_commit && \
pip install . && \
cd megatron/core/datasets && \
make
NeMo Text Processing, specifically Inverse Text Normalization, is now a separate repository. It is located here: https://github.com/NVIDIA/NeMo-text-processing.
NeMo containers are launched concurrently with NeMo version updates. NeMo Framework now supports LLMs, MMs, ASR, and TTS in a single consolidated Docker container. You can find additional information about released containers on the NeMo releases page.
To use a pre-built container, run the following code:
docker pull nvcr.io/nvidia/nemo:24.05
To build a nemo container with Dockerfile from a branch, run the following code:
DOCKER_BUILDKIT=1 docker build -f Dockerfile -t nemo:latest
If you choose to work with the main branch, we recommend using NVIDIA's PyTorch container version 23.10-py3 and then installing from GitHub.
docker run --gpus all -it --rm -v <nemo_github_folder>:/NeMo --shm-size=8g \
-p 8888:8888 -p 6006:6006 --ulimit memlock=-1 --ulimit \
stack=67108864 --device=/dev/snd nvcr.io/nvidia/pytorch:23.10-py3
The NeMo Framework Launcher does not currently support ASR and TTS training, but it will soon.
FAQ can be found on the NeMo Discussions board. You are welcome to ask questions or start discussions on the board.
We welcome community contributions! Please refer to CONTRIBUTING.md for the process.
We provide an ever-growing list of publications that utilize the NeMo Framework.
To contribute an article to the collection, please submit a pull request
to the gh-pages-src
branch of this repository. For detailed
information, please consult the README located at the gh-pages-src
branch.
Large Language Models and Multimodal Models
Bria Builds Responsible Generative AI for Enterprises Using NVIDIA NeMo, Picasso (2024/03/06)
Bria, a Tel Aviv startup at the forefront of visual generative AI for enterprises now leverages the NVIDIA NeMo Framework. The Bria.ai platform uses reference implementations from the NeMo Multimodal collection, trained on NVIDIA Tensor Core GPUs, to enable high-throughput and low-latency image generation. Bria has also adopted NVIDIA Picasso, a foundry for visual generative AI models, to run inference.New NVIDIA NeMo Framework Features and NVIDIA H200 (2023/12/06)
NVIDIA NeMo Framework now includes several optimizations and enhancements, including: 1) Fully Sharded Data Parallelism (FSDP) to improve the efficiency of training large-scale AI models, 2) Mix of Experts (MoE)-based LLM architectures with expert parallelism for efficient LLM training at scale, 3) Reinforcement Learning from Human Feedback (RLHF) with TensorRT-LLM for inference stage acceleration, and 4) up to 4.2x speedups for Llama 2 pre-training on NVIDIA H200 Tensor Core GPUs.NVIDIA now powers training for Amazon Titan Foundation models (2023/11/28)
NVIDIA NeMo Framework now empowers the Amazon Titan foundation models (FM) with efficient training of large language models (LLMs). The Titan FMs form the basis of Amazon’s generative AI service, Amazon Bedrock. The NeMo Framework provides a versatile framework for building, customizing, and running LLMs.- NeMo GitHub Apache 2.0 license
- NeMo is licensed under the NVIDIA AI PRODUCT AGREEMENT. By pulling and using the container, you accept the terms and conditions of this license.