wassname fa69e0cac3 README: trim AntiPaSTO section for researcher audience
Replace the per-experiment family breakdown table + comparison prose with a
2-sentence method description (frozen interpretable SVD basis, O(r) gain, the
three variant cores). Experiment findings (rotation comparison, arrow capacity,
cost/timing) belong in the research journal, not the README skim path.

Co-Authored-By: Claudypoo <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-06-15 18:12:31 +08:00
wip
2026-04-27 11:24:19 +08:00
wip
2026-04-27 11:24:19 +08:00

lora-lite

Hackable PyTorch adapters for LoRA-family and small PEFT experiments.

Hackable code

To keep it simple and hackable we make these choices:

  • Simple forward hooks, no module replacement or custom modules.
  • Simple code over fast performance
  • No merge/unmerge
  • Single test where we train on MetaMathQA and test on GSM8K for each variant

Take a look at lora.py

Install

pip install -e git+https://github.com/wassname/lora-lite.git#egg=lora-lite

Quickstart

import torch, lora_lite as ll

model = MyTransformer()
cfg = ll.LoRAConfig(r=8, alpha=16, dtype=torch.bfloat16)
ll.attach(model, cfg)

opt = torch.optim.AdamW([p for p in model.parameters() if p.requires_grad], lr=1e-4)
# train...

ll.save(model, "adapter.safetensors")
ll.detach(model)
ll.load(model, "adapter.safetensors")

Does it work?

just check       # pytest + smoke + package build + metadata check
just bnb-smoke   # required CUDA bitsandbytes 4bit/8bit smoke
just qwen-probe  # Qwen/Qwen3-0.6B train/save-load probe

Variants

Variant 4bit/8bit GSM8K % Params Peak GPU (GB)
LoRA yes 63.2% 4.59M 11.3
PiSSA no 63.2% 4.59M 11.3
DoRA no 62.4% 4.67M 11.3
DeLoRA yes 61.5% 4.59M 11.3
AntiPaSTO no 61.4% 14.3K 11.3
IA3-FF yes 61.4% 86K 11.4
EVA no 60.3% 4.59M 11.3
IA3 yes 60.0% 57K 11.4
HRA yes 61.6% 1.84M 11.3

Params = trainable adapter params. Peak GPU = peak CUDA memory during train+eval (logged from this run onward; older runs predate the column).

Setup: Qwen3-0.6B-Base, MetaMathQA train (5k steps, batch 4 = 20k samples unless noted), r=32, all q/v targets, GSM8K test (1319 examples). HRA used batch 2 (10k samples) due to memory. The AntiPaSTO family used r=256 (default for these variants).

Reference: PEFT reports LoRA at 49.0% on Llama-3.2-3B (different model, different sample count). Our numbers are not directly comparable but suggest the adapters work.

AntiPaSTO freezes the top-r SVD of W and trains only a per-direction gain S_eff = S * (1 + ELU(g)), so the singular basis stays interpretable and the adapter is O(r) params (~320x smaller than LoRA). Variants swap the basis or core: antipasto_corda orients it by input covariance (CorDA), antipasto_ablate learns a contractive directional ablation (Arditi), antipasto_arrow adds a cheap dense block for cross-direction mixing. See src/lora_lite/variants/antipasto*.py.

Developer docs

See docs/developer_guide.md for the variant API, data-calibrated init, and save/load format.

Citation

@misc{wassname2026loralite,
  title = {LoRA-Lite: A Hackable Adapter Library for Research},
  author = {Michael J. Clark},
  year = {2026},
  url = {https://github.com/wassname/lora-lite/}
}
S
Description
A hackable, single-file-per-variant LoRA library built on PyTorch forward hooks.
Readme 1.1 MiB
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