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metadata
pipeline_tag: text-generation
inference:
  parameters:
    temperature: 0.2
    top_p: 0.95
widget:
  - text: 'def print_hello_world():'
    example_title: Hello world
    group: Python
datasets:
  - bigcode/the-stack-v2-train
license: bigcode-openrail-m
library_name: transformers
tags:
  - code
model-index:
  - name: starcoder2-7b
    results:
      - task:
          type: text-generation
        dataset:
          name: CruxEval-I
          type: cruxeval-i
        metrics:
          - type: pass@1
            value: 34.6
      - task:
          type: text-generation
        dataset:
          name: DS-1000
          type: ds-1000
        metrics:
          - type: pass@1
            value: 27.8
      - task:
          type: text-generation
        dataset:
          name: GSM8K (PAL)
          type: gsm8k-pal
        metrics:
          - type: accuracy
            value: 40.4
      - task:
          type: text-generation
        dataset:
          name: HumanEval+
          type: humanevalplus
        metrics:
          - type: pass@1
            value: 29.9
      - task:
          type: text-generation
        dataset:
          name: HumanEval
          type: humaneval
        metrics:
          - type: pass@1
            value: 35.4
      - task:
          type: text-generation
        dataset:
          name: RepoBench-v1.1
          type: repobench-v1.1
        metrics:
          - type: edit-smiliarity
            value: 72.07

StarCoder2

SC2

Table of Contents

  1. Model Summary
  2. Use
  3. Limitations
  4. Training
  5. License
  6. Citation

Model Summary

StarCoder2-7B model is a 7B parameter model trained on 17 programming languages from The Stack v2, with opt-out requests excluded. The model uses Grouped Query Attention, a context window of 16,384 tokens with a sliding window attention of 4,096 tokens, and was trained using the Fill-in-the-Middle objective on 3.5+ trillion tokens.

Use

Intended use

The model was trained on GitHub code as well as additional selected data sources such as Arxiv and Wikipedia. As such it is not an instruction model and commands like "Write a function that computes the square root." do not work well.

Generation

Here are some examples to get started with the model. You can find a script for fine-tuning in StarCoder2's GitHub repository.

First, make sure to install transformers from source:

pip install git+https://github.com/huggingface/transformers.git

Running the model on CPU/GPU/multi GPU

  • Using full precision
# pip install git+https://github.com/huggingface/transformers.git # TODO: merge PR to main
from transformers import AutoModelForCausalLM, AutoTokenizer

checkpoint = "bigcode/starcoder2-7b"
device = "cuda" # for GPU usage or "cpu" for CPU usage

tokenizer = AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained(checkpoint)
# for multiple GPUs install accelerate and do `model = AutoModelForCausalLM.from_pretrained(checkpoint, device_map="auto")`
model = AutoModelForCausalLM.from_pretrained(checkpoint).to(device)

inputs = tokenizer.encode("def print_hello_world():", return_tensors="pt").to(device)
outputs = model.generate(inputs)
print(tokenizer.decode(outputs[0]))
>>> print(f"Memory footprint: {model.get_memory_footprint() / 1e6:.2f} MB")
Memory footprint: 29232.57 MB
  • Using torch.bfloat16
# pip install accelerate
import torch
from transformers import AutoTokenizer, AutoModelForCausalLM

checkpoint = "bigcode/starcoder2-7b"
tokenizer = AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained(checkpoint)

# for fp16 use `torch_dtype=torch.float16` instead
model = AutoModelForCausalLM.from_pretrained(checkpoint, device_map="auto", torch_dtype=torch.bfloat16)

inputs = tokenizer.encode("def print_hello_world():", return_tensors="pt").to("cuda")
outputs = model.generate(inputs)
print(tokenizer.decode(outputs[0]))
>>> print(f"Memory footprint: {model.get_memory_footprint() / 1e6:.2f} MB")
Memory footprint: 14616.29 MB

Quantized Versions through bitsandbytes

  • Using 8-bit precision (int8)
# pip install bitsandbytes accelerate
from transformers import AutoTokenizer, AutoModelForCausalLM, BitsAndBytesConfig

# to use 4bit use `load_in_4bit=True` instead
quantization_config = BitsAndBytesConfig(load_in_8bit=True)

checkpoint = "bigcode/starcoder2-7b"
tokenizer = AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained(checkpoint)
model = AutoModelForCausalLM.from_pretrained(checkpoint, quantization_config=quantization_config)

inputs = tokenizer.encode("def print_hello_world():", return_tensors="pt").to("cuda")
outputs = model.generate(inputs)
print(tokenizer.decode(outputs[0]))
>>> print(f"Memory footprint: {model.get_memory_footprint() / 1e6:.2f} MB")
# load_in_8bit
Memory footprint: 7670.52 MB
# load_in_4bit
>>> print(f"Memory footprint: {model.get_memory_footprint() / 1e6:.2f} MB")
Memory footprint: 4197.64 MB

Attribution & Other Requirements

The pretraining dataset of the model was filtered for permissive licenses and code with no license only. Nevertheless, the model can generate source code verbatim from the dataset. The code's license might require attribution and/or other specific requirements that must be respected. We provide a search index that lets you search through the pretraining data to identify where the generated code came from and apply the proper attribution to your code.

Limitations

The model has been trained on source code from 600+ programming languages. The predominant language in source is English although other languages are also present. As such the model is capable of generating code snippets provided some context but the generated code is not guaranteed to work as intended. It can be inefficient and contain bugs or exploits. See the paper for an in-depth discussion of the model limitations.

Training

Model

  • Architecture: Transformer decoder with grouped-query and sliding window attention and Fill-in-the-Middle objective
  • Pretraining steps: 1 million
  • Pretraining tokens: 3.5+ trillion
  • Precision: bfloat16

Hardware

  • GPUs: 432 H100

Software

License

The model is licensed under the BigCode OpenRAIL-M v1 license agreement. You can find the full agreement here.

Citation

@misc{lozhkov2024starcoder,
      title={StarCoder 2 and The Stack v2: The Next Generation}, 
      author={Anton Lozhkov and Raymond Li and Loubna Ben Allal and Federico Cassano and Joel Lamy-Poirier and Nouamane Tazi and Ao Tang and Dmytro Pykhtar and Jiawei Liu and Yuxiang Wei and Tianyang Liu and Max Tian and Denis Kocetkov and Arthur Zucker and Younes Belkada and Zijian Wang and Qian Liu and Dmitry Abulkhanov and Indraneil Paul and Zhuang Li and Wen-Ding Li and Megan Risdal and Jia Li and Jian Zhu and Terry Yue Zhuo and Evgenii Zheltonozhskii and Nii Osae Osae Dade and Wenhao Yu and Lucas Krauß and Naman Jain and Yixuan Su and Xuanli He and Manan Dey and Edoardo Abati and Yekun Chai and Niklas Muennighoff and Xiangru Tang and Muhtasham Oblokulov and Christopher Akiki and Marc Marone and Chenghao Mou and Mayank Mishra and Alex Gu and Binyuan Hui and Tri Dao and Armel Zebaze and Olivier Dehaene and Nicolas Patry and Canwen Xu and Julian McAuley and Han Hu and Torsten Scholak and Sebastien Paquet and Jennifer Robinson and Carolyn Jane Anderson and Nicolas Chapados and Mostofa Patwary and Nima Tajbakhsh and Yacine Jernite and Carlos Muñoz Ferrandis and Lingming Zhang and Sean Hughes and Thomas Wolf and Arjun Guha and Leandro von Werra and Harm de Vries},
      year={2024},
      eprint={2402.19173},
      archivePrefix={arXiv},
      primaryClass={cs.SE}
}