pooling_models.md 11.1 KB
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# Pooling Models
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vLLM also supports pooling models, such as embedding, classification and reward models.
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In vLLM, pooling models implement the [VllmModelForPooling][vllm.model_executor.models.VllmModelForPooling] interface.
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These models use a [Pooler][vllm.model_executor.layers.pooler.Pooler] to extract the final hidden states of the input
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before returning them.

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!!! note
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    We currently support pooling models primarily as a matter of convenience. This is not guaranteed to have any performance improvement over using HF Transformers / Sentence Transformers directly.

    We are now planning to optimize pooling models in vLLM. Please comment on <gh-issue:21796> if you have any suggestions!
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## Configuration
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### Model Runner
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Run a model in pooling mode via the option `--runner pooling`.
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!!! tip
    There is no need to set this option in the vast majority of cases as vLLM can automatically
    detect the model runner to use via `--runner auto`.

### Model Conversion

vLLM can adapt models for various pooling tasks via the option `--convert <type>`.

If `--runner pooling` has been set (manually or automatically) but the model does not implement the
[VllmModelForPooling][vllm.model_executor.models.VllmModelForPooling] interface,
vLLM will attempt to automatically convert the model according to the architecture names
shown in the table below.

| Architecture                                    | `--convert` | Supported pooling tasks       |
|-------------------------------------------------|-------------|-------------------------------|
| `*ForTextEncoding`, `*EmbeddingModel`, `*Model` | `embed`     | `encode`, `embed`             |
| `*For*Classification`, `*ClassificationModel`   | `classify`  | `encode`, `classify`, `score` |
| `*ForRewardModeling`, `*RewardModel`            | `reward`    | `encode`                      |

!!! tip
    You can explicitly set `--convert <type>` to specify how to convert the model.

### Pooling Tasks

Each pooling model in vLLM supports one or more of these tasks according to
[Pooler.get_supported_tasks][vllm.model_executor.layers.pooler.Pooler.get_supported_tasks],
enabling the corresponding APIs:
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| Task       | APIs                                 |
|------------|--------------------------------------|
| `encode`   | `LLM.reward(...)`                    |
| `embed`    | `LLM.embed(...)`, `LLM.score(...)`\* |
| `classify` | `LLM.classify(...)`                  |
| `score`    | `LLM.score(...)`                     |
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\* The `LLM.score(...)` API falls back to `embed` task if the model does not support `score` task.
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### Pooler Configuration
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#### Predefined models

If the [Pooler][vllm.model_executor.layers.pooler.Pooler] defined by the model accepts `pooler_config`,
you can override some of its attributes via the `--override-pooler-config` option.

#### Converted models

If the model has been converted via `--convert` (see above),
the pooler assigned to each task has the following attributes by default:
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| Task       | Pooling Type | Normalization | Softmax |
|------------|--------------|---------------|---------|
| `reward`   | `ALL`        | ❌            | ❌     |
| `embed`    | `LAST`       | ✅︎            | ❌      |
| `classify` | `LAST`       | ❌            | ✅︎      |
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When loading [Sentence Transformers](https://huggingface.co/sentence-transformers) models,
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its Sentence Transformers configuration file (`modules.json`) takes priority over the model's defaults.
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You can further customize this via the `--override-pooler-config` option,
which takes priority over both the model's and Sentence Transformers's defaults.

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## Offline Inference

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The [LLM][vllm.LLM] class provides various methods for offline inference.
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See [configuration](../api/summary.md#configuration) for a list of options when initializing the model.
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### `LLM.embed`

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The [embed][vllm.LLM.embed] method outputs an embedding vector for each prompt.
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It is primarily designed for embedding models.

```python
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from vllm import LLM

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llm = LLM(model="intfloat/e5-small", runner="pooling")
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(output,) = llm.embed("Hello, my name is")

embeds = output.outputs.embedding
print(f"Embeddings: {embeds!r} (size={len(embeds)})")
```

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A code example can be found here: <gh-file:examples/offline_inference/basic/embed.py>
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### `LLM.classify`

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The [classify][vllm.LLM.classify] method outputs a probability vector for each prompt.
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It is primarily designed for classification models.

```python
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from vllm import LLM

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llm = LLM(model="jason9693/Qwen2.5-1.5B-apeach", runner="pooling")
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(output,) = llm.classify("Hello, my name is")

probs = output.outputs.probs
print(f"Class Probabilities: {probs!r} (size={len(probs)})")
```

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A code example can be found here: <gh-file:examples/offline_inference/basic/classify.py>
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### `LLM.score`

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The [score][vllm.LLM.score] method outputs similarity scores between sentence pairs.
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It is designed for embedding models and cross-encoder models. Embedding models use cosine similarity, and [cross-encoder models](https://www.sbert.net/examples/applications/cross-encoder/README.html) serve as rerankers between candidate query-document pairs in RAG systems.
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!!! note
    vLLM can only perform the model inference component (e.g. embedding, reranking) of RAG.
    To handle RAG at a higher level, you should use integration frameworks such as [LangChain](https://github.com/langchain-ai/langchain).
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```python
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from vllm import LLM

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llm = LLM(model="BAAI/bge-reranker-v2-m3", runner="pooling")
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(output,) = llm.score("What is the capital of France?",
                      "The capital of Brazil is Brasilia.")

score = output.outputs.score
print(f"Score: {score}")
```

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A code example can be found here: <gh-file:examples/offline_inference/basic/score.py>
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### `LLM.reward`

The [reward][vllm.LLM.reward] method is available to all reward models in vLLM.
It returns the extracted hidden states directly.

```python
from vllm import LLM

llm = LLM(model="internlm/internlm2-1_8b-reward", runner="pooling", trust_remote_code=True)
(output,) = llm.reward("Hello, my name is")

data = output.outputs.data
print(f"Data: {data!r}")
```

A code example can be found here: <gh-file:examples/offline_inference/basic/reward.py>

### `LLM.encode`

The [encode][vllm.LLM.encode] method is available to all pooling models in vLLM.
It returns the extracted hidden states directly.

!!! note
    Please use one of the more specific methods or set the task directly when using `LLM.encode`:

    - For embeddings, use `LLM.embed(...)` or `pooling_task="embed"`.
    - For classification logits, use `LLM.classify(...)` or `pooling_task="classify"`.
    - For rewards, use `LLM.reward(...)` or `pooling_task="reward"`.
    - For similarity scores, use `LLM.score(...)`.  

```python
from vllm import LLM

llm = LLM(model="intfloat/e5-small", runner="pooling")
(output,) = llm.encode("Hello, my name is", pooling_task="embed")

data = output.outputs.data
print(f"Data: {data!r}")
```

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## Online Serving
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Our [OpenAI-Compatible Server](../serving/openai_compatible_server.md) provides endpoints that correspond to the offline APIs:
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- [Pooling API][pooling-api] is similar to `LLM.encode`, being applicable to all types of pooling models.
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- [Embeddings API][embeddings-api] is similar to `LLM.embed`, accepting both text and [multi-modal inputs](../features/multimodal_inputs.md) for embedding models.
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- [Classification API][classification-api] is similar to `LLM.classify` and is applicable to sequence classification models.
- [Score API][score-api] is similar to `LLM.score` for cross-encoder models.
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## Matryoshka Embeddings

[Matryoshka Embeddings](https://sbert.net/examples/sentence_transformer/training/matryoshka/README.html#matryoshka-embeddings) or [Matryoshka Representation Learning (MRL)](https://arxiv.org/abs/2205.13147) is a technique used in training embedding models. It allows user to trade off between performance and cost.

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!!! warning
    Not all embedding models are trained using Matryoshka Representation Learning. To avoid misuse of the `dimensions` parameter, vLLM returns an error for requests that attempt to change the output dimension of models that do not support Matryoshka Embeddings.
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    For example, setting `dimensions` parameter while using the `BAAI/bge-m3` model will result in the following error.
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    ```json
    {"object":"error","message":"Model \"BAAI/bge-m3\" does not support matryoshka representation, changing output dimensions will lead to poor results.","type":"BadRequestError","param":null,"code":400}
    ```
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### Manually enable Matryoshka Embeddings

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There is currently no official interface for specifying support for Matryoshka Embeddings. In vLLM, if `is_matryoshka` is `True` in `config.json,` it is allowed to change the output to arbitrary dimensions. Using `matryoshka_dimensions` can control the allowed output dimensions.
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For models that support Matryoshka Embeddings but not recognized by vLLM, please manually override the config using `hf_overrides={"is_matryoshka": True}`, `hf_overrides={"matryoshka_dimensions": [<allowed output dimensions>]}` (offline) or `--hf_overrides '{"is_matryoshka": true}'`,  `--hf_overrides '{"matryoshka_dimensions": [<allowed output dimensions>]}'`(online).
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Here is an example to serve a model with Matryoshka Embeddings enabled.

```text
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vllm serve Snowflake/snowflake-arctic-embed-m-v1.5 --hf_overrides '{"matryoshka_dimensions":[256]}'
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```

### Offline Inference

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You can change the output dimensions of embedding models that support Matryoshka Embeddings by using the dimensions parameter in [PoolingParams][vllm.PoolingParams].
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```python
from vllm import LLM, PoolingParams

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llm = LLM(model="jinaai/jina-embeddings-v3",
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          runner="pooling",
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          trust_remote_code=True)
outputs = llm.embed(["Follow the white rabbit."],
                    pooling_params=PoolingParams(dimensions=32))
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print(outputs[0].outputs)
```

A code example can be found here: <gh-file:examples/offline_inference/embed_matryoshka_fy.py>

### Online Inference

Use the following command to start vllm server.

```text
vllm serve jinaai/jina-embeddings-v3 --trust-remote-code
```

You can change the output dimensions of embedding models that support Matryoshka Embeddings by using the dimensions parameter.

```text
curl http://127.0.0.1:8000/v1/embeddings \
  -H 'accept: application/json' \
  -H 'Content-Type: application/json' \
  -d '{
    "input": "Follow the white rabbit.",
    "model": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v3",
    "encoding_format": "float",
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    "dimensions": 32
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  }'
```

Expected output:

```json
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{"id":"embd-5c21fc9a5c9d4384a1b021daccaf9f64","object":"list","created":1745476417,"model":"jinaai/jina-embeddings-v3","data":[{"index":0,"object":"embedding","embedding":[-0.3828125,-0.1357421875,0.03759765625,0.125,0.21875,0.09521484375,-0.003662109375,0.1591796875,-0.130859375,-0.0869140625,-0.1982421875,0.1689453125,-0.220703125,0.1728515625,-0.2275390625,-0.0712890625,-0.162109375,-0.283203125,-0.055419921875,-0.0693359375,0.031982421875,-0.04052734375,-0.2734375,0.1826171875,-0.091796875,0.220703125,0.37890625,-0.0888671875,-0.12890625,-0.021484375,-0.0091552734375,0.23046875]}],"usage":{"prompt_tokens":8,"total_tokens":8,"completion_tokens":0,"prompt_tokens_details":null}}
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```

A openai client example can be found here: <gh-file:examples/online_serving/openai_embedding_matryoshka_fy.py>