SwiftFusion: Scalable Sequence Parallelism for Distributed Inference of Diffusion Transformers on GPUs
read the original abstract
Diffusion Transformers (DiTs) have gained increasing adoption in high-quality image and video generation. As demand for higher-resolution images and longer videos increases, single-GPU inference becomes inefficient due to increased latency and large activation sizes. Current frameworks employ sequence parallelism (SP) techniques such as Ulysses Attention and Ring Attention to scale inference. However, these implementations have three primary limitations: (1) suboptimal communication patterns for network topologies on modern GPU machines, (2) latency bottlenecks from all-to-all operations in inter-machine communication, and (3) GPU sender-receiver synchronization and computation overheads from using two-sided communication libraries. To address these issues, we present StreamFusion, a topology-aware efficient DiT serving engine. StreamFusion incorporates three key innovations: (1) a topology-aware sequence parallelism technique that accounts for inter- and intra-machine bandwidth differences, (2) Torus Attention, a novel SP technique enabling overlapping of inter-machine all-to-all operations with computation, and (3) a one-sided communication implementation that minimizes GPU sender-receiver synchronization and computation overheads. Our experiments demonstrate that StreamFusion outperforms the state-of-the-art approach by an average of $1.35\times$ (up to $1.77\times$).
This paper has not been read by Pith yet.
Forward citations
Cited by 3 Pith papers
-
LongLive-2.0: An NVFP4 Parallel Infrastructure for Long Video Generation
LongLive-2.0 delivers an NVFP4 parallel infrastructure that enables direct training of long multi-shot autoregressive diffusion video models and achieves up to 2.15x training and 1.84x inference speedups on Blackwell ...
-
CoCoDiff: Optimizing Collective Communications for Distributed Diffusion Transformer Inference Under Ulysses Sequence Parallelism
CoCoDiff achieves 3.6x average and 8.4x peak speedup for distributed DiT inference on up to 96 GPU tiles via tile-aware all-to-all, V-first scheduling, and selective V communication.
-
GENSERVE: Efficient Co-Serving of Heterogeneous Diffusion Model Workloads
GENSERVE improves SLO attainment by up to 44% for co-serving heterogeneous T2I and T2V diffusion workloads via step-level preemption, elastic parallelism, and joint scheduling.
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.