Skip to content

allenai/reward-bench

Repository files navigation

RewardBench: Evaluating Reward Models

Leaderboard 📐 | RewardBench Dataset | Existing Test Sets | Results 📊 | Paper📝

Github RewardBench Logo

RewardBench is a benchmark designed to evaluate the capabilities and safety of reward models (including those trained with Direct Preference Optimization, DPO). The repository includes the following:

  • Common inference code for a variety of reward models (Starling, PairRM, OpenAssistant, DPO, and more).
  • Common dataset formatting and tests for fair reward model inference.
  • Analysis and visualization tools.

The two primary scripts to generate results (more in scripts/):

  1. scripts/run_rm.py: Run evaluations for reward models.
  2. scripts/run_dpo.py: Run evaluations for direct preference optimization (DPO) models (and other models using implicit rewards, such as KTO).
  3. scripts/train_rm.py: A basic RM training script built on TRL.

Installation

Please install torch on your system, and then install the following requirements.

pip install -e .

Add the following to your .bashrc:

export HF_TOKEN="{your_token}"

Contribute Your Model

For now, in order to contribute your model to the leaderboard, open an issue with the model name on HuggingFace (you can still evaluate local models with RewardBench, see below). If custom code is needed, please open a PR that enables it in our inference stack (see rewardbench/models for more information).

Evaluating Models

For reference configs, see scripts/configs/eval_configs.yaml. For reference on Chat Templates, many models follow the base / sft model terminology here. A small model for debugging is available at natolambert/gpt2-dummy-rm.

The core scripts automatically evaluate our core evaluation set. To run these on existing preference sets, add the argument --pref_sets.

Running Reward Models

To run individual models with scripts/run_rm.py, use any of the following examples:

python scripts/run_rm.py --model=openbmb/UltraRM-13b --chat_template=openbmb --batch_size=8
python scripts/run_rm.py --model=OpenAssistant/oasst-rm-2.1-pythia-1.4b-epoch-2.5 --chat_template=oasst_pythia
python scripts/run_rm.py --model=PKU-Alignment/beaver-7b-v1.0-cost --chat_template=pku-align --batch_size=16
python scripts/run_rm.py --model=IDEA-CCNL/Ziya-LLaMA-7B-Reward --batch_size=32 --trust_remote_code --chat_template=Ziya

To run these models with AI2 infrastructure, run:

python scripts/submit_eval_jobs.py

Or for example, the best of N sweep on the non-default image:

python scripts/submit_eval_jobs.py --eval_on_bon --image=nathanl/herm_bon

Note: for AI2 users, you must set beaker secret write HF_TOKEN <your_write_token_here> to make the scripts work.

Models using the default abstraction AutoModelForSequenceClassification.from_pretrained can also be loaded locally. Expanding this functionality is TODO. E.g.

python scripts/run_rm.py --model=/net/nfs.cirrascale/allennlp/hamishi/EasyLM/rm_13b_3ep --chat_template=tulu --batch_size=8

Running DPO Models

And for DPO:

python scripts/run_dpo.py --model=stabilityai/stablelm-zephyr-3b --ref_model=stabilityai/stablelm-3b-4e1t --batch_size=8
python scripts/run_dpo.py --model=stabilityai/stablelm-2-zephyr-1_6b --ref_model=stabilityai/stablelm-2-1_6b --batch_size=16

Creating Best of N (BoN) rankings

To create the ranking across the dataset, run (best_of 8 being placeholder, 16 should be fine as eval logic will handle lower best of N numbers):

python scripts/run_bon.py --model=OpenAssistant/oasst-rm-2.1-pythia-1.4b-epoch-2.5 --chat_template=oasst_pythia --best_of=8 --debug

Getting Leaderboard Section Scores

Important: We use prompt-weighed scores for the sections Chat, Chat Hard, Safety, and Reasoning (with math equalized to code here) to avoid assigning too much credit to small subsets (e.g. MT Bench ones). Use the following code to compute the scores for each category, assuming RewardBench is installed:

from rewardbench.constants import EXAMPLE_COUNTS, SUBSET_MAPPING
from rewardbench.utils import calculate_scores_per_section

metrics = {
  "alpacaeval-easy": 0.5,
  "alpacaeval-hard": 0.7052631578947368,
  "alpacaeval-length": 0.5894736842105263,
  "chat_template": "tokenizer",
  "donotanswer": 0.8235294117647058,
  "hep-cpp": 0.6280487804878049,
  "hep-go": 0.6341463414634146,
  "hep-java": 0.7073170731707317,
  "hep-js": 0.6646341463414634,
  "hep-python": 0.5487804878048781,
  "hep-rust": 0.6463414634146342,
  "llmbar-adver-GPTInst": 0.391304347826087,
  "llmbar-adver-GPTOut": 0.46808510638297873,
  "llmbar-adver-manual": 0.3695652173913043,
  "llmbar-adver-neighbor": 0.43283582089552236,
  "llmbar-natural": 0.52,
  "math-prm": 0.2953020134228188,
  "model": "PKU-Alignment/beaver-7b-v1.0-cost",
  "model_type": "Seq. Classifier",
  "mt-bench-easy": 0.5714285714285714,
  "mt-bench-hard": 0.5405405405405406,
  "mt-bench-med": 0.725,
  "refusals-dangerous": 0.97,
  "refusals-offensive": 1,
  "xstest-should-refuse": 1,
  "xstest-should-respond": 0.284
}

# Calculate and print the scores per section
scores_per_section = calculate_scores_per_section(EXAMPLE_COUNTS, SUBSET_MAPPING, metrics)
print(scores_per_section)

Repository structure

├── README.md                   <- The top-level README for researchers using this project
├── analysis/                   <- Directory of tools to analyze RewardBench results or other reward model properties
├── rewardbench/                <- Core utils and modeling files
|   ├── models/                     ├── Standalone files for running existing reward models
|   └── *.py                        └── RewardBench tools and utilities
├── scripts/                    <- Scripts and configs to train and evaluate reward models
├── tests                       <- Unit tests
├── Dockerfile                  <- Build file for reproducible and scaleable research at AI2
├── LICENSE
├── Makefile                    <- Makefile with commands like `make style`
└── setup.py                    <- Makes project pip installable (pip install -e .) so `alignment` can be imported

Maintenance

This section is designed for AI2 usage, but may help others evaluating models with Docker.

Updating the docker image

When updating this repo, the docker image should be rebuilt to include those changes. For AI2 members, please update the list below with any images you use regularly. For example, if you update scripts/run_rm.py and include a new package (or change a package version), you should rebuild the image and verify it still works on known models.

To update the image, run these commands in the root directory of this repo:

  1. docker build -t <local_image_name> . --platform linux/amd64
  2. beaker image create <local_image_name> -n <beaker_image_name>

Notes: Do not use the character - in image names for beaker,

When updating the Dockerfile, make sure to see the instructions at the top to update the base cuda version.

In development, we have the following docker images (most recent first as it's likely what you need). TODO: Update it so one image has VLLM (for generative RM only) and one without. Without will load much faster.

  • nathanl/rb_v16 (with VLLM): add support for vllm + llm as a judge
  • nathanl/rb_v12: add support for llama3
  • nathanl/rewardbench_v10: add support for mightbe/Better-PairRM via jinja2
  • nathanl/rewardbench_v8: add support for openbmb/Eurus-RM-7b and starcoder2
  • nathanl/rewardbench_v5: improve saving with DPO script
  • nathanl/rewardbench_v4: fix EOS token bug on FastChat models (GH #90)
  • nathanl/rewardbench_v2: fix beaver cost model
  • nathanl/rewardbench_v1: release version

Citation

Please cite our work with the following:

@misc{lambert2024rewardbench,
      title={RewardBench: Evaluating Reward Models for Language Modeling}, 
      author={Nathan Lambert and Valentina Pyatkin and Jacob Morrison and LJ Miranda and Bill Yuchen Lin and Khyathi Chandu and Nouha Dziri and Sachin Kumar and Tom Zick and Yejin Choi and Noah A. Smith and Hannaneh Hajishirzi},
      year={2024},
      eprint={2403.13787},
      archivePrefix={arXiv},
      primaryClass={cs.LG}
}