`#queue-req` indicates the number of requests in the queue. If you frequently see `#queue-req == 0`, it suggests you are bottlenecked by the request submission speed.
On the other hand, do not make `#queue-req` too large because it will also increase the scheduling overhead on the server, especially when using the default longest-prefix-match schedule policy (`--schedule-policy lpm`).
`token usage` indicates the KV cache memory utilization of the server. `token usage > 0.9` means good utilization.
If you frequently see `token usage < 0.9` and `#queue-req > 0`, it means the server is too conservative about taking in new requests. You can decrease `--schedule-conservativeness` to a value like 0.3.
The case of server being too conservative can happen when users send many requests with a large `max_new_tokens` but the requests stop very early due to EOS or stop strings.
On the other hand, if you see `token usage` very high and you frequently see warnings like
`decode out of memory happened, #retracted_reqs: 1, #new_token_ratio: 0.9998 -> 1.0000`, you can increase `--schedule-conservativeness` to a value like 1.3.
- To enable the experimental overlapped scheduler, add `--enable-overlap-scheduler`. It overlaps CPU scheduler with GPU computation and can accelerate almost all workloads. This does not work for constrained decoding currenly.
- To enable torch.compile acceleration, add `--enable-torch-compile`. It accelerates small models on small batch sizes. This does not work for FP8 currenly.