Gahow Wang 7a4f69e430 model: add per-head QK-norm (Qwen3-compat) for xserv export
xserv's Qwen3 forward unconditionally applies per-head RMSNorm to Q and K
(q_norm/k_norm, shape [head_dim]) before RoPE — even gamma=1 is a real RMS
divide, not identity. xtrain never had this, so an exact xserv<->xtrain loop
was structurally impossible. Add it (reusing the 2D rms_norm op on the
[seq*nh, hd] head rows, inserted between reshape and rope to mirror
qwen3.rs's order) so the trained model is genuinely Qwen3-compatible.

params() inserts q_norm,k_norm after wv; num_params() counts them; the
PyTorch parity refs (parity.py / adamw_parity.py) + their name lists add the
same step so the dumps stay self-consistent.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.8 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-06-15 17:33:19 +08:00
2026-06-15 16:53:09 +08:00
2026-06-15 17:14:56 +08:00

xtrain

A from-scratch Rust + CUDA LLM training engine — the sibling of xserv (the inference side). GPU-first.

The goal is to learn the full training-systems stack by hand: autograd / backward passes / optimizers (AdamW) / the training loop / distributed logic. Heavy lifting is borrowed where it makes sense (GEMM → cuBLAS after a hand-written version, multi-GPU comms → NCCL, tokenizer → reused from xserv), but the core is written from scratch. The target architecture is a tiny modern transformer (RoPE + RMSNorm + SwiGLU, ~130M params) whose forward aligns with xserv's Qwen3, so the backward passes map one-to-one onto xserv's existing forward kernels and trained weights can flow back into xserv.

Status

Bootstrapping (P0). This repo currently contains only the project skeleton and a working Rust↔CUDA build chain, verified by a trivial vector-add CUDA kernel.

Layout

xtrain/
├── Cargo.toml              # workspace
├── csrc/                   # CUDA sources (.cu)
│   └── test/vecadd.cu      # trivial element-wise vector-add (smoke test)
└── crates/
    └── xtrain-cuda/        # CUDA Runtime FFI + build.rs (nvcc → sm_120)
        ├── build.rs        # compiles csrc/*.cu via the `cc` crate, links cudart
        ├── src/            # ffi / error / device / memory
        └── tests/          # vecadd smoke test

The build mirrors xserv's approach: build.rs invokes nvcc (via the cc crate) to compile csrc/*.cu targeting sm_120 (RTX 5090) and links them into the Rust crate over hand-written extern "C" FFI.

Building & testing

CUDA compilation and execution happen on a GPU box (dash5, 8× RTX 5090, sm_120):

export PATH=/usr/local/cuda/bin:$HOME/.cargo/bin:$PATH
cargo build
cargo test -p xtrain-cuda -- --nocapture   # runs the vecadd smoke test

On a machine without nvcc/GPU, build.rs detects the missing toolchain, skips CUDA compilation, and sets a no_cuda cfg — so host-side cargo check still works (the GPU smoke test is compiled out).

Description
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