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GateGPT: 56k tokens per second Transformer (KV cache) on FPGA at 80 MHz

21 points by laxmena ago | 7 comments

genxy |next [-]

The context window is 16 characters. Talking about tokens per second is meaningless.

dominotw |root |parent [-]

its not meaningless. there could be usecases like spell correction.

cadamsdotcom |next |previous [-]

Transformers scale poorly vs. context window size and parameter count.

Which means really impressive when those N’s are small!

I’m but a pundit in this area so don’t know much. But one wonders if there’s a future in burning larger models to FPGAs - whether big enough FPGAs exist (or can be built), and whether locating specialized compute right with the memory it needs can speed things up.

Likely would need a lot of algorithm parallelism work that’d translate back to CPUs/GPUs.

amelius |previous [-]

See also:

https://rits.shanghai.nyu.edu/ai/karpathys-microgpt-on-fpga-...

TL;DR: The CPU implementation was 71x faster than the FPGA.

Note: model has only 4192 parameters.

hedgehog |root |parent |next [-]

That post is uninteresting both because they miss the point, and it's not clear a human was even involved to perceive a point to miss. Sure, with an unlimited transistor budget, power budget, and a design clocked at 4GHz fabbed on 5nm one of the best CPU design teams in the world can make a thing that is straight line faster than a one-person project running at 80MHz on a 20 year old 65nm FPGA. Any other answer would be extremely surprising.

Now, there are a bunch of interesting things about this project. Seeing the example of a tiny transformer running on FPGA is informative, and that it was apparently a pretty quick project for one person + robot assistance. Probably some transferable lessons for anyone else doing robo-FPGA development.

https://github.com/fguzman82/gateGPT/tree/main/

cyanydeez |root |parent |previous [-]

yeah, then theres prompt loading too.

but anyone who can fit QWEN-3.6 35B with a sustained ~30 token/s and ~100k context with cache could print money as a hardware vendor.

wmf |root |parent [-]

That just sounds like a 3090.