Adam-mini: Use Fewer Learning Rates To Gain More
Abstract
We propose Adam-mini, an optimizer that achieves on par or better performance than AdamW with 50% less memory footprint. Adam-mini reduces memory by cutting down the learning rate resources in Adam (i.e., 1/v). By investigating the Hessian structure of neural nets, we find Adam's v might not function at its full potential as effectively as we expected. We find that ≥ 99.9% of these learning rates in v could be harmlessly removed if we (1) carefully partition the parameters into blocks following our new principle on Hessian structure; (2) assign a single but good learning rate to each parameter block. We then provide one simple way to find good learning rates and propose Adam-mini. Empirically, we verify that Adam-mini performs on par or better than AdamW on various language models sized from 39M to 13B for pre-training, supervised fine-tuning, and RLHF. The reduced memory footprint of Adam-mini also alleviates communication overheads among GPUs, thereby increasing throughput. For instance, Adam-mini achieves 49.6% higher throughput than AdamW when pre-training Llama 2-7B on 2× A800-80GB GPUs, which saves 33% wall-clock time for pre-training.
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