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[Core] Adding Strict Priority Scheduling #48

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@apatke apatke commented Jun 17, 2024

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Motivation

Currently, vLLM supports first-come-first-served scheduling based on the arrival time of requests. This PR aims to add priorities to requests such that high-priority requests are prioritized better than lower-priority ones in the scheduler. Prioritization has also been mentioned previously in discussion e.g. https://github.com/vllm-project/vllm/issues/3058.



Implementation

There are two major changes implemented:


  1. Addition of a new policy SP (strict priority) to the policy factory in addition to FCFS.
    Adds a user-defined priority variable to sequence. All requests in the running queue and the waiting queue are sorted first based on this priority. If there is a tie, it falls back to the FCFS policy.

  2. Force preemption of request from the running queue back into the waiting queue.
    If there are requests in the running queue whose priority is lower than the requests in the waiting queue, they are forcefully preempted out back into the waiting queue to allow immediate execution of the higher priority request. This force preemption does not use KV cache swapping for now (can be extended in the future).



Evaluation

Evaluation conducted with the benchmark_prioritization.py with Llama-7B and A10 GPU. Requests are randomly assigned low or high priority with equal probability.

  1. Throughput is not impacted significantly in this policy
Request Throughput Token Generation
FCFS 1.26 requets/s 650 tokens/s
SP 1.32 requests/s 672 tokens/s

There is no significant difference in throughput between FCFS and SP policy.

  1. Latency for high priority requests is reduced
High Priority - FCFS Low Priority - FCFS High Priority - SP Low Priority - SP
p50 61s 44s 28s 79s
p75 74s 78s 43s 95s
p90 104s 97s 64s 113s
p99 141s 145s 83s 143s
  1. Head of line blocking time reduction

    Head-of-line blocking time also reduces from waiting for ~100 decode iterations to 1 iteration for the request at the front of the waiting queue. This corresponds to a decrease from 3s to 0.03s.

FIX #xxxx (link existing issues this PR will resolve)

BEFORE SUBMITTING, PLEASE READ THE CHECKLIST BELOW AND FILL IN THE DESCRIPTION ABOVE


PR Checklist (Click to Expand)

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@saurabhjha1
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@njhill please help us review.

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I don't know enough about the swapping to evaluate how complicated it would be to add that but apart from that I think this makes sense. I left some comments with suggestions to make the code more generic to allow for the addition of other policies without changing the scheduler code.

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Actually, maybe instead of adding the priority argument directly a scheduling_metadata dict could be passed instead so that custom scheduling schemes can be supported in the future.

@apatke apatke force-pushed the main branch 4 times, most recently from 143b54e to 98c200b Compare June 19, 2024 18:15
apatke added 14 commits June 19, 2024 20:31
Signed-off-by: Archit Patke <[email protected]>
Signed-off-by: Archit Patke <[email protected]>
Signed-off-by: Archit Patke <[email protected]>
Signed-off-by: Archit Patke <[email protected]>
Signed-off-by: Archit Patke <[email protected]>
Signed-off-by: Archit Patke <[email protected]>
Signed-off-by: Archit Patke <[email protected]>
Signed-off-by: Archit Patke <[email protected]>
Signed-off-by: Archit Patke <[email protected]>
Signed-off-by: Archit Patke <[email protected]>
Signed-off-by: Archit Patke <[email protected]>
Signed-off-by: Archit Patke <[email protected]>
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apatke commented Jun 19, 2024

Thanks for the suggestions. Two changes were made to make the implementation more generalizable: (1) Priority is now under the sched_metadata dict , and (2) Helper functions are added in the policy class (e.g. specifying whether policy supports forced preemption).

Signed-off-by: Archit Patke <[email protected]>
Signed-off-by: Archit Patke <[email protected]>

def _add_request(
self,
inputs: PromptInputs,
params: Union[SamplingParams, PoolingParams],
lora_request: Optional[Union[List[LoRARequest], LoRARequest]] = None,
sched_metadata: Optional[Dict[str, Optional[int]]] = None,
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This can include both priority score and user ID.

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Thanks @apatke this is great!

I'd suggest to open it as a PR to upstream vLLM for others to review. You could prefix with [RFC] too.

It would be great to also include a link to the preprint if/when it's publicly available.

Comment on lines +32 to +36
def forces_preemption(self) -> bool:
raise NotImplementedError

def sort_waiting(self) -> bool:
raise NotImplementedError
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These could just return False by default

arrival_time: float,
lora_request: Optional[LoRARequest],
trace_headers: Optional[Dict[str, str]] = None,
sched_metadata: Optional[Dict[str, Optional[int]]] = None) -> None:
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I think this should be a dataclass or typed dict, i.e. for now with a single priority: int field.

Also not sure about the name sched_metadata, but can't think of a better one rn :)

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@FerranAgulloLopez
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FerranAgulloLopez commented Jul 3, 2024

Hello:) I was reviewing the proposed changes for the new policy, they look very good!

I have some suggestions and questions for future extensions:

  1. It would be nice to have the sched_metadata parameter enter through the openAI API as well
  2. It would be nice to have the policy parameter enter through the CLI (engine/arg_utils.py) as well
  3. In case that a specific policy needs more input parameters for configuration, what would be the right way to proceed in terms of implementation? For example, if implementing a policy based on VTC we would need to configure parameters weight_input_tokens and weight_output_tokens.
  4. In case that a specific policy needs to add more logging through the prometheus endpoint, what would be the right way to proceed in terms of implementation? For example, in VTC, we would like to show the evolution of the user cost counters. I was thinking of adding a new method in the Policy class, i.e., alternative_logging() that is called by the scheduler and llm_engine every time the default logs are executed

What do you think about these suggestions/questions/comments? I can proceed with their implementation if they seem good to you as well.

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6 participants