Free SKILL.md scraped from GitHub. Clone the repo or copy the file directly into your Claude Code skills directory.
npx versuz@latest install aoti-debuggit clone https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch.gitcp pytorch/.claude/skills/aoti-debug/SKILL.md ~/.claude/skills/aoti-debug/SKILL.md---
name: aoti-debug
description: Debug AOTInductor (AOTI) errors and crashes. Use when encountering AOTI segfaults, device mismatch errors, constant loading failures, or runtime errors from aot_compile, aot_load, aoti_compile_and_package, or aoti_load_package.
---
# AOTI Debugging Guide
This skill helps diagnose and fix common AOTInductor issues.
## Error Pattern Routing
**Check the error message and route to the appropriate sub-guide:**
### Triton Index Out of Bounds
If the error matches this pattern:
```
Assertion `index out of bounds: 0 <= tmpN < ksM` failed
```
**→ Follow the guide in `triton-index-out-of-bounds.md`**
### All Other Errors
Continue with the sections below.
---
## First Step: Always Check Device and Shape Matching
**For ANY AOTI error (segfault, exception, crash, wrong output), ALWAYS check these first:**
1. **Compile device == Load device**: The model must be loaded on the same device type it was compiled on
2. **Input devices match**: Runtime inputs must be on the same device as the compiled model
3. **Input shapes match**: Runtime input shapes must match the shapes used during compilation (or satisfy dynamic shape constraints)
```python
# During compilation - note the device and shapes
model = MyModel().eval() # What device? CPU or .cuda()?
inp = torch.randn(2, 10) # What device? What shape?
compiled_so = torch._inductor.aot_compile(model, (inp,))
# During loading - device type MUST match compilation
loaded = torch._export.aot_load(compiled_so, "???") # Must match model/input device above
# During inference - device and shapes MUST match
out = loaded(inp.to("???")) # Must match compile device, shape must match
```
**If any of these don't match, you will get errors ranging from segfaults to exceptions to wrong outputs.**
## Key Constraint: Device Type Matching
**AOTI requires compile and load to use the same device type.**
- If you compile on CUDA, you must load on CUDA (device index can differ)
- If you compile on CPU, you must load on CPU
- Cross-device loading (e.g., compile on GPU, load on CPU) is NOT supported
## Common Error Patterns
### 1. Device Mismatch Segfault
**Symptom**: Segfault, exception, or crash during `aot_load()` or model execution.
**Example error messages**:
- `The specified pointer resides on host memory and is not registered with any CUDA device`
- Crash during constant loading in AOTInductorModelBase
- `Expected out tensor to have device cuda:0, but got cpu instead`
**Cause**: Compile and load device types don't match (see "First Step" above).
**Solution**: Ensure compile and load use the same device type. If compiled on CPU, load on CPU. If compiled on CUDA, load on CUDA.
### 2. Input Device Mismatch at Runtime
**Symptom**: RuntimeError during model execution.
**Cause**: Input device doesn't match compile device (see "First Step" above).
**Better Debugging**: Run with `AOTI_RUNTIME_CHECK_INPUTS=1` for clearer errors. This flag validates all input properties including device type, dtype, sizes, and strides:
```bash
AOTI_RUNTIME_CHECK_INPUTS=1 python your_script.py
```
This produces actionable error messages like:
```
Error: input_handles[0]: unmatched device type, expected: 0(cpu), but got: 1(cuda)
```
## Debugging CUDA Illegal Memory Access (IMA) Errors
If you encounter CUDA illegal memory access errors, follow this systematic approach:
### Step 1: Sanity Checks
Before diving deep, try these debugging flags:
```bash
AOTI_RUNTIME_CHECK_INPUTS=1
TORCHINDUCTOR_NAN_ASSERTS=1
```
These flags take effect at compilation time (at codegen time):
- `AOTI_RUNTIME_CHECK_INPUTS=1` checks if inputs satisfy the same guards used during compilation
- `TORCHINDUCTOR_NAN_ASSERTS=1` adds codegen before and after each kernel to check for NaN
### Step 2: Pinpoint the CUDA IMA
CUDA IMA errors can be non-deterministic. Use these flags to trigger the error deterministically:
```bash
PYTORCH_NO_CUDA_MEMORY_CACHING=1
CUDA_LAUNCH_BLOCKING=1
```
These flags take effect at runtime:
- `PYTORCH_NO_CUDA_MEMORY_CACHING=1` disables PyTorch's Caching Allocator, which allocates bigger buffers than needed immediately. This is usually why CUDA IMA errors are non-deterministic.
- `CUDA_LAUNCH_BLOCKING=1` forces kernels to launch one at a time. Without this, you get "CUDA kernel errors might be asynchronously reported" warnings since kernels launch asynchronously.
### Step 3: Identify Problematic Kernels with Intermediate Value Debugger
Use the AOTI Intermediate Value Debugger to pinpoint the problematic kernel:
```bash
AOT_INDUCTOR_DEBUG_INTERMEDIATE_VALUE_PRINTER=3
```
This prints kernels one by one at runtime. Together with previous flags, this shows which kernel was launched right before the error.
To inspect inputs to a specific kernel:
```bash
AOT_INDUCTOR_FILTERED_KERNELS_TO_PRINT="triton_poi_fused_add_ge_logical_and_logical_or_lt_231,_add_position_embeddings_kernel_5" AOT_INDUCTOR_DEBUG_INTERMEDIATE_VALUE_PRINTER=2
```
If inputs to the kernel are unexpected, inspect the kernel that produces the bad input.
## Additional Debugging Tools
### Logging and Tracing
- **tlparse / TORCH_TRACE**: Provides complete output codes and records guards used
- **TORCH_LOGS**: Use `TORCH_LOGS="+inductor,output_code"` to see more PT2 internal logs
- **TORCH_SHOW_CPP_STACKTRACES**: Set to `1` to see more stack traces
### Common Sources of Issues
- **Dynamic shapes**: Historically a source of many IMAs. Pay special attention when debugging dynamic shape scenarios.
- **Custom ops**: Especially when implemented in C++ with dynamic shapes. The meta function may need to be Symint'ified.
## API Notes
### Deprecated API
```python
torch._export.aot_compile() # Deprecated
torch._export.aot_load() # Deprecated
```
### Current API
```python
torch._inductor.aoti_compile_and_package()
torch._inductor.aoti_load_package()
```
The new API stores device metadata in the package, so `aoti_load_package()` automatically uses the correct device type. You can only change the device *index* (e.g., cuda:0 vs cuda:1), not the device *type*.
## Environment Variables Summary
| Variable | When | Purpose |
|----------|------|---------|
| `AOTI_RUNTIME_CHECK_INPUTS=1` | Compile time | Validate inputs match compilation guards |
| `TORCHINDUCTOR_NAN_ASSERTS=1` | Compile time | Check for NaN before/after kernels |
| `PYTORCH_NO_CUDA_MEMORY_CACHING=1` | Runtime | Make IMA errors deterministic |
| `CUDA_LAUNCH_BLOCKING=1` | Runtime | Force synchronous kernel launches |
| `AOT_INDUCTOR_DEBUG_INTERMEDIATE_VALUE_PRINTER=3` | Compile time | Print kernels at runtime |
| `TORCH_LOGS="+inductor,output_code"` | Runtime | See PT2 internal logs |
| `TORCH_SHOW_CPP_STACKTRACES=1` | Runtime | Show C++ stack traces |