LMCache
Introduction
LMCache is a high-performance KV cache layer that supercharges LLM serving by enabling prefill-once, reuse-everywhere semantics. As described in the official documentation, LMCache lets LLMs prefill each text only once by storing the KV caches of all reusable texts, allowing reuse of KV caches for any reused text (not necessarily prefix) across any serving engine instance.
This document describes how LMCache is integrated into Dynamo’s vLLM backend to provide enhanced performance and memory efficiency.
Installation Notes
Dynamo’s vLLM runtime expects LMCache to be present in the same Python environment. On supported environments (x86_64, Python 3.10-3.13, PyTorch built against CUDA 12.x), the published wheel installs directly:
LMCache only publishes x86_64 manylinux wheels linked against CUDA 12. For aarch64 hosts, or hosts running PyTorch built against a different CUDA major version, build LMCache from source against your matching torch + CUDA stack — see the official LMCache installation guide.
Compatibility note
LMCacheMPConnectorneeds the fix from LMCache#3282, which is on LMCachemainbut not yet released. Without it, the MP path fails on vLLM ≥ 0.20.0 (including thevllm==0.21.0Dynamo currently pins) withRuntimeError: Unsupported GPUKVFormat: 7— vLLM 0.20+ uses GPU KV formats 6 / 7 that the MP path doesn’t yet handle.Until the next LMCache release, build LMCache from source against that PR.
Aggregated Serving
Configuration
LMCache runs the cache engine as an out-of-process sidecar (lmcache server); the Dynamo worker connects to it via the LMCacheMPConnector. Start the sidecar, then launch the worker:
Customization
The LMCache MP server is configured via CLI arguments. See the Configuration Reference for the full list of lmcache server flags.
LMCache MP uses a two-tier storage architecture: an in-memory L1 cache (sized with --l1-size-gb) plus optional persistent L2 adapters configured with --l2-adapter. The supported L2 storage backends are:
- POSIX: Standard POSIX file I/O on any file system
- GDS / GDS_MT: NVIDIA GPU Direct Storage (single- and multi-threaded), bypassing the CPU for NVMe SSDs that support GDS
- HF3FS: Distributed / shared file-system backend
- OBJ: Object store backend
- AZURE_BLOB: Azure Blob Storage
Deployment
Use the provided launch script for quick setup:
This will:
- Start the LMCache MP server
- Start the Dynamo frontend
- Launch a single vLLM worker with
LMCacheMPConnectorconnected to the sidecar
Architecture for Aggregated Mode
In aggregated mode, the system uses:
- KV Connector:
LMCacheMPConnector - KV Role:
kv_both(handles both reading and writing)
Disaggregated Serving
Disaggregated serving separates prefill and decode operations into dedicated workers. This provides better resource utilization and scalability for production deployments.
Deployment
Use the provided disaggregated launch script (requires at least 2 GPUs):
This will:
- Start the Dynamo frontend
- Launch a decode worker on GPU 0
- Wait for initialization
- Launch a prefill worker on GPU 1 with LMCache enabled
Worker Roles
Decode Worker
- Purpose: Handles token generation (decode phase)
- GPU Assignment: CUDA_VISIBLE_DEVICES=0
- LMCache Config: Uses
NixlConnectoronly for KV transfer between prefill and decode workers
Prefill Worker
- Purpose: Handles prompt processing (prefill phase)
- GPU Assignment: CUDA_VISIBLE_DEVICES=1
- LMCache Config: Uses
MultiConnectorwith both LMCache and NIXL connectors. This enables prefill worker to use LMCache for KV offloading and use NIXL for KV transfer between prefill and decode workers. - Flag:
--disaggregation-mode prefill
Architecture
KV Transfer Configuration
The system automatically configures KV transfer based on the deployment mode and worker type:
Aggregated Mode
Prefill Worker (Disaggregated Mode)
Decode Worker (Disaggregated Mode)
Fallback (No LMCache)
Integration Points
-
Argument Parsing (
args.py):- Configures appropriate KV transfer settings
- Sets up connector configurations based on worker type
-
Engine Setup (
main.py):- Creates vLLM engine with proper KV transfer config
- Handles both aggregated and disaggregated modes
-
Sidecar Lifecycle (launch script):
- Starts the
lmcache serverprocess before the Dynamo worker - Tears it down on exit via the script’s cleanup trap
- Starts the
Best Practices
-
Chunk Size Tuning: Pass
--chunk-sizetolmcache serverbased on your use case:- Smaller chunks (128-256): Better reuse granularity for varied content
- Larger chunks (512-1024): More efficient for repetitive content patterns
-
Memory Allocation: Set
--l1-size-gbonlmcache serverconservatively:- Leave sufficient RAM for other system processes
- Monitor memory usage during peak loads
-
Workload Optimization: LMCache performs best with:
- Repeated prompt patterns (RAG, multi-turn conversations)
- Shared context across sessions
- Long-running services with warm caches
Metrics and Monitoring
The LMCache MP server records metrics through the OpenTelemetry SDK and exposes them on its own HTTP admin port (default :8080/metrics), prefixed lmcache_mp_:
vLLM and Dynamo metrics remain on Dynamo’s :8081/metrics (set DYN_SYSTEM_PORT=8081 on the worker to enable that endpoint).
For detailed information on LMCache metrics, including the complete list of available metrics and how to access them, see the LMCache Metrics section in the vLLM Prometheus Metrics Guide.
Troubleshooting
vLLM log: Found PROMETHEUS_MULTIPROC_DIR was set by user
vLLM v1 uses prometheus_client.multiprocess and stores intermediate metric values in PROMETHEUS_MULTIPROC_DIR.
- If you set
PROMETHEUS_MULTIPROC_DIRyourself, vLLM warns that the directory must be wiped between runs to avoid stale/incorrect metrics. - When running via Dynamo, the vLLM wrapper may set
PROMETHEUS_MULTIPROC_DIRinternally to a temporary directory to avoid vLLM cleanup issues. If you still see the warning, confirm you are not exportingPROMETHEUS_MULTIPROC_DIRin your shell or container environment.
References and Additional Resources
- LMCache Documentation - Comprehensive guide and API reference
- Configuration Reference -
lmcache serverCLI arguments - LMCache Observability Guide - Metrics and monitoring details