"The development roadmap for LoRA-related features can be found in this [issue](https://github.com/sgl-project/sglang/issues/2929). Currently Cuda graph and radix attention are not incompatible with LoRA and must be manually disabled. Other features, including Unified Paging, Cutlass backend, and dynamic loading/unloadingm, are still under development."
"The development roadmap for LoRA-related features can be found in this [issue](https://github.com/sgl-project/sglang/issues/2929). Currently radix attention is incompatible with LoRA and must be manually disabled. Other features, including Unified Paging, Cutlass backend, and dynamic loading/unloadingm, are still under development."
@@ -160,7 +160,7 @@ Please consult the documentation below and [server_args.py](https://github.com/s
| Arguments | Description | Defaults |
|----------|-------------|---------|
| `lora_paths` | List of adapters to apply to your model. Each batch element uses the proper LoRA adapter. `cuda_graph` and `radix_attention`are not supported with this, so they must be disabled manually. See related [issues](https://github.com/sgl-project/sglang/issues/2929). | None |
| `lora_paths` | List of adapters to apply to your model. Each batch element uses the proper LoRA adapter. `radix_attention`is not supported with this, so it must be disabled manually. See related [issues](https://github.com/sgl-project/sglang/issues/2929). | None |
| `max_loras_per_batch` | Maximum number of LoRAs allowed in a running batch, including the base model. | `8` |
| `lora_backend` | Backend used to run GEMM kernels for LoRA modules. Can be `triton` or `flashinfer`. | `triton` |
Llamas are large, long-necked animals with a woolly coat. They have two toes on each foot instead of three like other camelids (camels, dromedaries). Llamas live in the Andean mountains of South America where they graze on grasses and shrubs. Alpaca is another name for domesticated llama. The word "alpaca" comes from an Incan language meaning "golden fleece." Alpacas look very similar to llamas but are smaller than their wild relatives. Both species were used by ancient people as pack animals and for meat. Today both llamas and alpacas are raised primarily for their fiber which can be spun into yarn or knitted into clothing.