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  2. DeepSpeed - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DeepSpeed

    Features include mixed precision training, single-GPU, multi-GPU, and multi-node training as well as custom model parallelism. The DeepSpeed source code is licensed under MIT License and available on GitHub. [5] The team claimed to achieve up to a 6.2x throughput improvement, 2.8x faster convergence, and 4.6x less communication. [6]

  3. PyTorch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PyTorch

    In September 2022, Meta announced that PyTorch would be governed by the independent PyTorch Foundation, a newly created subsidiary of the Linux Foundation. [ 24 ] PyTorch 2.0 was released on 15 March 2023, introducing TorchDynamo , a Python-level compiler that makes code run up to 2x faster, along with significant improvements in training and ...

  4. Torch (machine learning) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Torch_(machine_learning)

    The torch package also simplifies object-oriented programming and serialization by providing various convenience functions which are used throughout its packages. The torch.class(classname, parentclass) function can be used to create object factories ().

  5. Comparison of deep learning software - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_deep...

    Linux, macOS, Windows: C, C++, Java, MATLAB: MATLAB: No No Train with Parallel Computing Toolbox and generate CUDA code with GPU Coder [23] No Yes [24] Yes [25] [26] Yes [25] Yes [25] Yes With Parallel Computing Toolbox [27] Yes Microsoft Cognitive Toolkit (CNTK) Microsoft Research: 2016 MIT license [28] Yes Windows, Linux [29] (macOS via ...

  6. CUDA - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CUDA

    In computing, CUDA is a proprietary [1] parallel computing platform and application programming interface (API) that allows software to use certain types of graphics processing units (GPUs) for accelerated general-purpose processing, an approach called general-purpose computing on GPUs.

  7. CuPy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CuPy

    CuPy is an open source library for GPU-accelerated computing with Python programming language, providing support for multi-dimensional arrays, sparse matrices, and a variety of numerical algorithms implemented on top of them. [3] CuPy shares the same API set as NumPy and SciPy, allowing it to be a drop-in replacement to run NumPy/SciPy code on GPU.

  8. ROCm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ROCm

    Installation instructions are provided for Linux and Windows in the official AMD ROCm documentation. ROCm software is currently spread across several public GitHub repositories. Within the main public meta-repository , there is an XML manifest for each official release: using git-repo , a version control tool built on top of Git , is the ...

  9. CatBoost - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catboost

    They implemented and open-sourced the next version of Gradient Boosting library called CatBoost, which has support of categorical and text data, GPU training, model analysis, visualisation tools. CatBoost was open-sourced in July 2017 and is under active development in Yandex and the open-source community.