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What Is Tensor Parallelism and How to Apply It
Watch: Scale ANY Model: PyTorch DDP, ZeRO, Pipeline & Tensor Parallelism Made Simple (2025 Guide) by Zachary Mueller Tensor Parallelism (TP) is a distributed computing strategy that splits large model tensors across multiple GPUs to reduce memory usage and accelerate training/inference. Unlike Data Parallelism, which replicates models across devices, TP divides model components (like weights or activations) into partitions processed in parallel. This method is critical for training models with billions of parameters, such as LLMs, where memory constraints limit single-GPU capabilities. By distributing tensor operations, TP enables efficient use of GPU clusters while maintaining model accuracy and performance. As mentioned in the Fundamentals of Tensor Parallelism section, this approach contrasts with data parallelism by focusing on tensor sharding rather than model replication. TP offers improved scalability and reduced memory overhead , making it ideal for training large-scale models like Gemini v1 or Llama-7B. For instance, splitting a model’s attention layers across GPUs reduces per-device memory load by up to 70% compared to non-parallelized approaches. It’s commonly applied in AI/ML workflows involving vision transformers (e.g., UNet for medical imaging) and NLP models, where high-resolution inputs demand massive computational resources. Adaptive TP (ATP) techniques further optimize performance by dynamically adjusting tensor splits during training, as seen in research on partially synchronized activations. See the Implementing Tensor Parallelism with Hugging Face Transformers section for practical examples of ATP in action.