* docs: deep audit — fix stale config keys, missing commands, and registry drift Cross-checked ~80 high-impact docs pages (getting-started, reference, top-level user-guide, user-guide/features) against the live registries: hermes_cli/commands.py COMMAND_REGISTRY (slash commands) hermes_cli/auth.py PROVIDER_REGISTRY (providers) hermes_cli/config.py DEFAULT_CONFIG (config keys) toolsets.py TOOLSETS (toolsets) tools/registry.py get_all_tool_names() (tools) python -m hermes_cli.main <subcmd> --help (CLI args) reference/ - cli-commands.md: drop duplicate hermes fallback row + duplicate section, add stepfun/lmstudio to --provider enum, expand auth/mcp/curator subcommand lists to match --help output (status/logout/spotify, login, archive/prune/ list-archived). - slash-commands.md: add missing /sessions and /reload-skills entries + correct the cross-platform Notes line. - tools-reference.md: drop bogus '68 tools' headline, drop fictional 'browser-cdp toolset' (these tools live in 'browser' and are runtime-gated), add missing 'kanban' and 'video' toolset sections, fix MCP example to use the real mcp_<server>_<tool> prefix. - toolsets-reference.md: list browser_cdp/browser_dialog inside the 'browser' row, add missing 'kanban' and 'video' toolset rows, drop the stale '38 tools' count for hermes-cli. - profile-commands.md: add missing install/update/info subcommands, document fish completion. - environment-variables.md: dedupe GMI_API_KEY/GMI_BASE_URL rows (kept the one with the correct gmi-serving.com default). - faq.md: Anthropic/Google/OpenAI examples — direct providers exist (not just via OpenRouter), refresh the OpenAI model list. getting-started/ - installation.md: PortableGit (not MinGit) is what the Windows installer fetches; document the 32-bit MinGit fallback. - installation.md / termux.md: installer prefers .[termux-all] then falls back to .[termux]. - nix-setup.md: Python 3.12 (not 3.11), Node.js 22 (not 20); fix invalid 'nix flake update --flake' invocation. - updating.md: 'hermes backup restore --state pre-update' doesn't exist — point at the snapshot/quick-snapshot flow; correct config key 'updates.pre_update_backup' (was 'update.backup'). user-guide/ - configuration.md: api_max_retries default 3 (not 2); display.runtime_footer is the real key (not display.runtime_metadata_footer); checkpoints defaults enabled=false / max_snapshots=20 (not true / 50). - configuring-models.md: 'hermes model list' / 'hermes model set ...' don't exist — hermes model is interactive only. - tui.md: busy_indicator -> tui_status_indicator with values kaomoji|emoji|unicode|ascii (not kawaii|minimal|dots|wings|none). - security.md: SSH backend keys (TERMINAL_SSH_HOST/USER/KEY) live in .env, not config.yaml. - windows-wsl-quickstart.md: there is no 'hermes api' subcommand — the OpenAI-compatible API server runs inside hermes gateway. user-guide/features/ - computer-use.md: approvals.mode (not security.approval_level); fix broken ./browser-use.md link to ./browser.md. - fallback-providers.md: top-level fallback_providers (not model.fallback_providers); the picker is subcommand-based, not modal. - api-server.md: API_SERVER_* are env vars — write to per-profile .env, not 'hermes config set' which targets YAML. - web-search.md: drop web_crawl as a registered tool (it isn't); deep-crawl modes are exposed through web_extract. - kanban.md: failure_limit default is 2, not '~5'. - plugins.md: drop hard-coded '33 providers' count. - honcho.md: fix unclosed quote in echo HONCHO_API_KEY snippet; document that 'hermes honcho' subcommand is gated on memory.provider=honcho; reconcile subcommand list with actual --help output. - memory-providers.md: legacy 'hermes honcho setup' redirect documented. Verified via 'npm run build' — site builds cleanly; broken-link count went from 149 to 146 (no regressions, fixed a few in passing). * docs: round 2 audit fixes + regenerate skill catalogs Follow-up to the previous commit on this branch: Round 2 manual fixes: - quickstart.md: KIMI_CODING_API_KEY mentioned alongside KIMI_API_KEY; voice-mode and ACP install commands rewritten — bare 'pip install ...' doesn't work for curl-installed setups (no pip on PATH, not in repo dir); replaced with 'cd ~/.hermes/hermes-agent && uv pip install -e ".[voice]"'. ACP already ships in [all] so the curl install includes it. - cli.md / configuration.md: 'auxiliary.compression.model' shown as 'google/gemini-3-flash-preview' (the doc's own claimed default); actual default is empty (= use main model). Reworded as 'leave empty (default) or pin a cheap model'. - built-in-plugins.md: added the bundled 'kanban/dashboard' plugin row that was missing from the table. Regenerated skill catalogs: - ran website/scripts/generate-skill-docs.py to refresh all 163 per-skill pages and both reference catalogs (skills-catalog.md, optional-skills-catalog.md). This adds the entries that were genuinely missing — productivity/teams-meeting-pipeline (bundled), optional/finance/* (entire category — 7 skills: 3-statement-model, comps-analysis, dcf-model, excel-author, lbo-model, merger-model, pptx-author), creative/hyperframes, creative/kanban-video-orchestrator, devops/watchers, productivity/shop-app, research/searxng-search, apple/macos-computer-use — and rewrites every other per-skill page from the current SKILL.md. Most diffs are tiny (one line of refreshed metadata). Validation: - 'npm run build' succeeded. - Broken-link count moved 146 -> 155 — the +9 are zh-Hans translation shells that lag every newly-added skill page (pre-existing pattern). No regressions on any en/ page.
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| title | sidebar_label | description |
|---|---|---|
| Optimizing Attention Flash | Optimizing Attention Flash | Optimizes transformer attention with Flash Attention for 2-4x speedup and 10-20x memory reduction |
{/* This page is auto-generated from the skill's SKILL.md by website/scripts/generate-skill-docs.py. Edit the source SKILL.md, not this page. */}
Optimizing Attention Flash
Optimizes transformer attention with Flash Attention for 2-4x speedup and 10-20x memory reduction. Use when training/running transformers with long sequences (>512 tokens), encountering GPU memory issues with attention, or need faster inference. Supports PyTorch native SDPA, flash-attn library, H100 FP8, and sliding window attention.
Skill metadata
| Source | Optional — install with hermes skills install official/mlops/flash-attention |
| Path | optional-skills/mlops/flash-attention |
| Version | 1.0.0 |
| Author | Orchestra Research |
| License | MIT |
| Dependencies | flash-attn, torch, transformers |
| Platforms | linux, macos |
| Tags | Optimization, Flash Attention, Attention Optimization, Memory Efficiency, Speed Optimization, Long Context, PyTorch, SDPA, H100, FP8, Transformers |
Reference: full SKILL.md
:::info The following is the complete skill definition that Hermes loads when this skill is triggered. This is what the agent sees as instructions when the skill is active. :::
Flash Attention - Fast Memory-Efficient Attention
Quick start
Flash Attention provides 2-4x speedup and 10-20x memory reduction for transformer attention through IO-aware tiling and recomputation.
PyTorch native (easiest, PyTorch 2.2+):
import torch
import torch.nn.functional as F
q = torch.randn(2, 8, 512, 64, device='cuda', dtype=torch.float16) # [batch, heads, seq, dim]
k = torch.randn(2, 8, 512, 64, device='cuda', dtype=torch.float16)
v = torch.randn(2, 8, 512, 64, device='cuda', dtype=torch.float16)
# Automatically uses Flash Attention if available
out = F.scaled_dot_product_attention(q, k, v)
flash-attn library (more features):
pip install flash-attn --no-build-isolation
from flash_attn import flash_attn_func
# q, k, v: [batch, seqlen, nheads, headdim]
out = flash_attn_func(q, k, v, dropout_p=0.0, causal=True)
Common workflows
Workflow 1: Enable in existing PyTorch model
Copy this checklist:
Flash Attention Integration:
- [ ] Step 1: Check PyTorch version (≥2.2)
- [ ] Step 2: Enable Flash Attention backend
- [ ] Step 3: Verify speedup with profiling
- [ ] Step 4: Test accuracy matches baseline
Step 1: Check PyTorch version
python -c "import torch; print(torch.__version__)"
# Should be ≥2.2.0
If <2.2, upgrade:
pip install --upgrade torch
Step 2: Enable Flash Attention backend
Replace standard attention:
# Before (standard attention)
attn_weights = torch.softmax(q @ k.transpose(-2, -1) / math.sqrt(d_k), dim=-1)
out = attn_weights @ v
# After (Flash Attention)
import torch.nn.functional as F
out = F.scaled_dot_product_attention(q, k, v, attn_mask=mask)
Force Flash Attention backend:
with torch.backends.cuda.sdp_kernel(
enable_flash=True,
enable_math=False,
enable_mem_efficient=False
):
out = F.scaled_dot_product_attention(q, k, v)
Step 3: Verify speedup with profiling
import torch.utils.benchmark as benchmark
def test_attention(use_flash):
q, k, v = [torch.randn(2, 8, 2048, 64, device='cuda', dtype=torch.float16) for _ in range(3)]
if use_flash:
with torch.backends.cuda.sdp_kernel(enable_flash=True):
return F.scaled_dot_product_attention(q, k, v)
else:
attn = (q @ k.transpose(-2, -1) / 8.0).softmax(dim=-1)
return attn @ v
# Benchmark
t_flash = benchmark.Timer(stmt='test_attention(True)', globals=globals())
t_standard = benchmark.Timer(stmt='test_attention(False)', globals=globals())
print(f"Flash: {t_flash.timeit(100).mean:.3f}s")
print(f"Standard: {t_standard.timeit(100).mean:.3f}s")
Expected: 2-4x speedup for sequences >512 tokens.
Step 4: Test accuracy matches baseline
# Compare outputs
q, k, v = [torch.randn(1, 8, 512, 64, device='cuda', dtype=torch.float16) for _ in range(3)]
# Flash Attention
out_flash = F.scaled_dot_product_attention(q, k, v)
# Standard attention
attn_weights = torch.softmax(q @ k.transpose(-2, -1) / 8.0, dim=-1)
out_standard = attn_weights @ v
# Check difference
diff = (out_flash - out_standard).abs().max()
print(f"Max difference: {diff:.6f}")
# Should be <1e-3 for float16
Workflow 2: Use flash-attn library for advanced features
For multi-query attention, sliding window, or H100 FP8.
Copy this checklist:
flash-attn Library Setup:
- [ ] Step 1: Install flash-attn library
- [ ] Step 2: Modify attention code
- [ ] Step 3: Enable advanced features
- [ ] Step 4: Benchmark performance
Step 1: Install flash-attn library
# NVIDIA GPUs (CUDA 12.0+)
pip install flash-attn --no-build-isolation
# Verify installation
python -c "from flash_attn import flash_attn_func; print('Success')"
Step 2: Modify attention code
from flash_attn import flash_attn_func
# Input: [batch_size, seq_len, num_heads, head_dim]
# Transpose from [batch, heads, seq, dim] if needed
q = q.transpose(1, 2) # [batch, seq, heads, dim]
k = k.transpose(1, 2)
v = v.transpose(1, 2)
out = flash_attn_func(
q, k, v,
dropout_p=0.1,
causal=True, # For autoregressive models
window_size=(-1, -1), # No sliding window
softmax_scale=None # Auto-scale
)
out = out.transpose(1, 2) # Back to [batch, heads, seq, dim]
Step 3: Enable advanced features
Multi-query attention (shared K/V across heads):
from flash_attn import flash_attn_func
# q: [batch, seq, num_q_heads, dim]
# k, v: [batch, seq, num_kv_heads, dim] # Fewer KV heads
out = flash_attn_func(q, k, v) # Automatically handles MQA
Sliding window attention (local attention):
# Only attend to window of 256 tokens before/after
out = flash_attn_func(
q, k, v,
window_size=(256, 256), # (left, right) window
causal=True
)
Step 4: Benchmark performance
import torch
from flash_attn import flash_attn_func
import time
q, k, v = [torch.randn(4, 4096, 32, 64, device='cuda', dtype=torch.float16) for _ in range(3)]
# Warmup
for _ in range(10):
_ = flash_attn_func(q, k, v)
# Benchmark
torch.cuda.synchronize()
start = time.time()
for _ in range(100):
out = flash_attn_func(q, k, v)
torch.cuda.synchronize()
end = time.time()
print(f"Time per iteration: {(end-start)/100*1000:.2f}ms")
print(f"Memory allocated: {torch.cuda.max_memory_allocated()/1e9:.2f}GB")
Workflow 3: H100 FP8 optimization (FlashAttention-3)
For maximum performance on H100 GPUs.
FP8 Setup:
- [ ] Step 1: Verify H100 GPU available
- [ ] Step 2: Install flash-attn with FP8 support
- [ ] Step 3: Convert inputs to FP8
- [ ] Step 4: Run with FP8 attention
Step 1: Verify H100 GPU
nvidia-smi --query-gpu=name --format=csv
# Should show "H100" or "H800"
Step 2: Install flash-attn with FP8 support
pip install flash-attn --no-build-isolation
# FP8 support included for H100
Step 3: Convert inputs to FP8
import torch
q = torch.randn(2, 4096, 32, 64, device='cuda', dtype=torch.float16)
k = torch.randn(2, 4096, 32, 64, device='cuda', dtype=torch.float16)
v = torch.randn(2, 4096, 32, 64, device='cuda', dtype=torch.float16)
# Convert to float8_e4m3 (FP8)
q_fp8 = q.to(torch.float8_e4m3fn)
k_fp8 = k.to(torch.float8_e4m3fn)
v_fp8 = v.to(torch.float8_e4m3fn)
Step 4: Run with FP8 attention
from flash_attn import flash_attn_func
# FlashAttention-3 automatically uses FP8 kernels on H100
out = flash_attn_func(q_fp8, k_fp8, v_fp8)
# Result: ~1.2 PFLOPS, 1.5-2x faster than FP16
When to use vs alternatives
Use Flash Attention when:
- Training transformers with sequences >512 tokens
- Running inference with long context (>2K tokens)
- GPU memory constrained (OOM with standard attention)
- Need 2-4x speedup without accuracy loss
- Using PyTorch 2.2+ or can install flash-attn
Use alternatives instead:
- Standard attention: Sequences <256 tokens (overhead not worth it)
- xFormers: Need more attention variants (not just speed)
- Memory-efficient attention: CPU inference (Flash Attention needs GPU)
Common issues
Issue: ImportError: cannot import flash_attn
Install with no-build-isolation flag:
pip install flash-attn --no-build-isolation
Or install CUDA toolkit first:
conda install cuda -c nvidia
pip install flash-attn --no-build-isolation
Issue: Slower than expected (no speedup)
Flash Attention benefits increase with sequence length:
- <512 tokens: Minimal speedup (10-20%)
- 512-2K tokens: 2-3x speedup
-
2K tokens: 3-4x speedup
Check sequence length is sufficient.
Issue: RuntimeError: CUDA error
Verify GPU supports Flash Attention:
import torch
print(torch.cuda.get_device_capability())
# Should be ≥(7, 5) for Turing+
Flash Attention requires:
- Ampere (A100, A10): ✅ Full support
- Turing (T4): ✅ Supported
- Volta (V100): ❌ Not supported
Issue: Accuracy degradation
Check dtype is float16 or bfloat16 (not float32):
q = q.to(torch.float16) # Or torch.bfloat16
Flash Attention uses float16/bfloat16 for speed. Float32 not supported.
Advanced topics
Integration with HuggingFace Transformers: See references/transformers-integration.md for enabling Flash Attention in BERT, GPT, Llama models.
Performance benchmarks: See references/benchmarks.md for detailed speed and memory comparisons across GPUs and sequence lengths.
Hardware requirements
- GPU: NVIDIA Ampere+ (A100, A10, A30) or AMD MI200+
- VRAM: Same as standard attention (Flash Attention doesn't increase memory)
- CUDA: 12.0+ (11.8 minimum)
- PyTorch: 2.2+ for native support
Not supported: V100 (Volta), CPU inference
Resources
- Paper: "FlashAttention: Fast and Memory-Efficient Exact Attention with IO-Awareness" (NeurIPS 2022)
- Paper: "FlashAttention-2: Faster Attention with Better Parallelism and Work Partitioning" (ICLR 2024)
- Blog: https://tridao.me/blog/2024/flash3/
- GitHub: https://github.com/Dao-AILab/flash-attention
- PyTorch docs: https://pytorch.org/docs/stable/generated/torch.nn.functional.scaled_dot_product_attention.html