Agent skill

distributed-training-ray-train

Stars 23,776
Forks 2,298

Install this agent skill to your Project

npx add-skill https://github.com/davila7/claude-code-templates/tree/main/cli-tool/components/skills/ai-research/distributed-training-ray-train

SKILL.md

Ray Train - Distributed Training Orchestration

Quick start

Ray Train scales machine learning training from single GPU to multi-node clusters with minimal code changes.

Installation:

bash
pip install -U "ray[train]"

Basic PyTorch training (single node):

python
import ray
from ray import train
from ray.train import ScalingConfig
from ray.train.torch import TorchTrainer
import torch
import torch.nn as nn

# Define training function
def train_func(config):
    # Your normal PyTorch code
    model = nn.Linear(10, 1)
    optimizer = torch.optim.SGD(model.parameters(), lr=0.01)

    # Prepare for distributed (Ray handles device placement)
    model = train.torch.prepare_model(model)

    for epoch in range(10):
        # Your training loop
        output = model(torch.randn(32, 10))
        loss = output.sum()
        loss.backward()
        optimizer.step()
        optimizer.zero_grad()

        # Report metrics (logged automatically)
        train.report({"loss": loss.item(), "epoch": epoch})

# Run distributed training
trainer = TorchTrainer(
    train_func,
    scaling_config=ScalingConfig(
        num_workers=4,  # 4 GPUs/workers
        use_gpu=True
    )
)

result = trainer.fit()
print(f"Final loss: {result.metrics['loss']}")

That's it! Ray handles:

  • Distributed coordination
  • GPU allocation
  • Fault tolerance
  • Checkpointing
  • Metric aggregation

Common workflows

Workflow 1: Scale existing PyTorch code

Original single-GPU code:

python
model = MyModel().cuda()
optimizer = torch.optim.Adam(model.parameters())

for epoch in range(epochs):
    for batch in dataloader:
        loss = model(batch)
        loss.backward()
        optimizer.step()

Ray Train version (scales to multi-GPU/multi-node):

python
from ray.train.torch import TorchTrainer
from ray import train

def train_func(config):
    model = MyModel()
    optimizer = torch.optim.Adam(model.parameters())

    # Prepare for distributed (automatic device placement)
    model = train.torch.prepare_model(model)
    dataloader = train.torch.prepare_data_loader(dataloader)

    for epoch in range(epochs):
        for batch in dataloader:
            loss = model(batch)
            loss.backward()
            optimizer.step()

            # Report metrics
            train.report({"loss": loss.item()})

# Scale to 8 GPUs
trainer = TorchTrainer(
    train_func,
    scaling_config=ScalingConfig(num_workers=8, use_gpu=True)
)
trainer.fit()

Benefits: Same code runs on 1 GPU or 1000 GPUs

Workflow 2: HuggingFace Transformers integration

python
from ray.train.huggingface import TransformersTrainer
from transformers import AutoModelForCausalLM, AutoTokenizer, TrainingArguments

def train_func(config):
    # Load model and tokenizer
    model = AutoModelForCausalLM.from_pretrained("gpt2")
    tokenizer = AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained("gpt2")

    # Training arguments (HuggingFace API)
    training_args = TrainingArguments(
        output_dir="./output",
        num_train_epochs=3,
        per_device_train_batch_size=8,
        learning_rate=2e-5,
    )

    # Ray automatically handles distributed training
    from transformers import Trainer
    trainer = Trainer(
        model=model,
        args=training_args,
        train_dataset=train_dataset,
    )

    trainer.train()

# Scale to multi-node (2 nodes × 8 GPUs = 16 workers)
trainer = TransformersTrainer(
    train_func,
    scaling_config=ScalingConfig(
        num_workers=16,
        use_gpu=True,
        resources_per_worker={"GPU": 1}
    )
)

result = trainer.fit()

Workflow 3: Hyperparameter tuning with Ray Tune

python
from ray import tune
from ray.train.torch import TorchTrainer
from ray.tune.schedulers import ASHAScheduler

def train_func(config):
    # Use hyperparameters from config
    lr = config["lr"]
    batch_size = config["batch_size"]

    model = MyModel()
    optimizer = torch.optim.Adam(model.parameters(), lr=lr)

    model = train.torch.prepare_model(model)

    for epoch in range(10):
        # Training loop
        loss = train_epoch(model, optimizer, batch_size)
        train.report({"loss": loss, "epoch": epoch})

# Define search space
param_space = {
    "lr": tune.loguniform(1e-5, 1e-2),
    "batch_size": tune.choice([16, 32, 64, 128])
}

# Run 20 trials with early stopping
tuner = tune.Tuner(
    TorchTrainer(
        train_func,
        scaling_config=ScalingConfig(num_workers=4, use_gpu=True)
    ),
    param_space=param_space,
    tune_config=tune.TuneConfig(
        num_samples=20,
        scheduler=ASHAScheduler(metric="loss", mode="min")
    )
)

results = tuner.fit()
best = results.get_best_result(metric="loss", mode="min")
print(f"Best hyperparameters: {best.config}")

Result: Distributed hyperparameter search across cluster

Workflow 4: Checkpointing and fault tolerance

python
from ray import train
from ray.train import Checkpoint

def train_func(config):
    model = MyModel()
    optimizer = torch.optim.Adam(model.parameters())

    # Try to resume from checkpoint
    checkpoint = train.get_checkpoint()
    if checkpoint:
        with checkpoint.as_directory() as checkpoint_dir:
            state = torch.load(f"{checkpoint_dir}/model.pt")
            model.load_state_dict(state["model"])
            optimizer.load_state_dict(state["optimizer"])
            start_epoch = state["epoch"]
    else:
        start_epoch = 0

    model = train.torch.prepare_model(model)

    for epoch in range(start_epoch, 100):
        loss = train_epoch(model, optimizer)

        # Save checkpoint every 10 epochs
        if epoch % 10 == 0:
            checkpoint = Checkpoint.from_directory(
                train.get_context().get_trial_dir()
            )
            torch.save({
                "model": model.state_dict(),
                "optimizer": optimizer.state_dict(),
                "epoch": epoch
            }, checkpoint.path / "model.pt")

            train.report({"loss": loss}, checkpoint=checkpoint)

trainer = TorchTrainer(
    train_func,
    scaling_config=ScalingConfig(num_workers=8, use_gpu=True)
)

# Automatically resumes from checkpoint if training fails
result = trainer.fit()

Workflow 5: Multi-node training

python
from ray.train import ScalingConfig

# Connect to Ray cluster
ray.init(address="auto")  # Or ray.init("ray://head-node:10001")

# Train across 4 nodes × 8 GPUs = 32 workers
trainer = TorchTrainer(
    train_func,
    scaling_config=ScalingConfig(
        num_workers=32,
        use_gpu=True,
        resources_per_worker={"GPU": 1, "CPU": 4},
        placement_strategy="SPREAD"  # Spread across nodes
    )
)

result = trainer.fit()

Launch Ray cluster:

bash
# On head node
ray start --head --port=6379

# On worker nodes
ray start --address=<head-node-ip>:6379

When to use vs alternatives

Use Ray Train when:

  • Training across multiple machines (multi-node)
  • Need hyperparameter tuning at scale
  • Want fault tolerance (auto-restart failed workers)
  • Elastic scaling (add/remove nodes during training)
  • Unified framework (same code for PyTorch/TF/HF)

Key advantages:

  • Multi-node orchestration: Easiest multi-node setup
  • Ray Tune integration: Best-in-class hyperparameter tuning
  • Fault tolerance: Automatic recovery from failures
  • Elastic: Add/remove nodes without restarting
  • Framework agnostic: PyTorch, TensorFlow, HuggingFace, XGBoost

Use alternatives instead:

  • Accelerate: Single-node multi-GPU, simpler
  • PyTorch Lightning: High-level abstractions, callbacks
  • DeepSpeed: Maximum performance, complex setup
  • Raw DDP: Maximum control, minimal overhead

Common issues

Issue: Ray cluster not connecting

Check ray status:

bash
ray status

# Should show:
# - Nodes: 4
# - GPUs: 32
# - Workers: Ready

If not connected:

bash
# Restart head node
ray stop
ray start --head --port=6379 --dashboard-host=0.0.0.0

# Restart worker nodes
ray stop
ray start --address=<head-ip>:6379

Issue: Out of memory

Reduce workers or use gradient accumulation:

python
scaling_config=ScalingConfig(
    num_workers=4,  # Reduce from 8
    use_gpu=True
)

# In train_func, accumulate gradients
for i, batch in enumerate(dataloader):
    loss = model(batch) / accumulation_steps
    loss.backward()

    if (i + 1) % accumulation_steps == 0:
        optimizer.step()
        optimizer.zero_grad()

Issue: Slow training

Check if data loading is bottleneck:

python
import time

def train_func(config):
    for epoch in range(epochs):
        start = time.time()
        for batch in dataloader:
            data_time = time.time() - start
            # Train...
            start = time.time()
            print(f"Data loading: {data_time:.3f}s")

If data loading is slow, increase workers:

python
dataloader = DataLoader(dataset, num_workers=8)

Advanced topics

Multi-node setup: See references/multi-node.md for Ray cluster deployment on AWS, GCP, Kubernetes, and SLURM.

Hyperparameter tuning: See references/hyperparameter-tuning.md for Ray Tune integration, search algorithms (Optuna, HyperOpt), and population-based training.

Custom training loops: See references/custom-loops.md for advanced Ray Train usage, custom backends, and integration with other frameworks.

Hardware requirements

  • Single node: 1+ GPUs (or CPUs)
  • Multi-node: 2+ machines with network connectivity
  • Cloud: AWS, GCP, Azure (Ray autoscaling)
  • On-prem: Kubernetes, SLURM clusters

Supported accelerators:

  • NVIDIA GPUs (CUDA)
  • AMD GPUs (ROCm)
  • TPUs (Google Cloud)
  • CPUs

Resources

Expand your agent's capabilities with these related and highly-rated skills.

davila7/claude-code-templates

verl-rl-training

Provides guidance for training LLMs with reinforcement learning using verl (Volcano Engine RL). Use when implementing RLHF, GRPO, PPO, or other RL algorithms for LLM post-training at scale with flexible infrastructure backends.

23,776 2,298
Explore
davila7/claude-code-templates

openrlhf-training

High-performance RLHF framework with Ray+vLLM acceleration. Use for PPO, GRPO, RLOO, DPO training of large models (7B-70B+). Built on Ray, vLLM, ZeRO-3. 2× faster than DeepSpeedChat with distributed architecture and GPU resource sharing.

23,776 2,298
Explore
davila7/claude-code-templates

gguf-quantization

GGUF format and llama.cpp quantization for efficient CPU/GPU inference. Use when deploying models on consumer hardware, Apple Silicon, or when needing flexible quantization from 2-8 bit without GPU requirements.

23,776 2,298
Explore
davila7/claude-code-templates

Claude Code Guide

Master guide for using Claude Code effectively. Includes configuration templates, prompting strategies "Thinking" keywords, debugging techniques, and best practices for interacting with the agent.

23,776 2,298
Explore
davila7/claude-code-templates

qdrant-vector-search

High-performance vector similarity search engine for RAG and semantic search. Use when building production RAG systems requiring fast nearest neighbor search, hybrid search with filtering, or scalable vector storage with Rust-powered performance.

23,776 2,298
Explore
davila7/claude-code-templates

behavioral-modes

AI operational modes (brainstorm, implement, debug, review, teach, ship, orchestrate). Use to adapt behavior based on task type.

23,776 2,298
Explore

Didn't find tool you were looking for?

Be as detailed as possible for better results