WizardLM
text-generation-webui
WizardLM | text-generation-webui | |
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38 | 876 | |
7,531 | 36,827 | |
- | - | |
9.4 | 9.9 | |
8 months ago | 5 days ago | |
Python | Python | |
- | GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 |
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WizardLM
- FLaNK AI-April 22, 2024
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Refact LLM: New 1.6B code model reaches 32% HumanEval and is SOTA for the size
This is interesting work, and a good contribution, but there is no need to mislead people.
[1] https://github.com/nlpxucan/WizardLM
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Continue with LocalAI: An alternative to GitHub's Copilot that runs everything locally
If you pair this with the latest WizardCoder models, which have a fairly better performance than the standard Salesforce Codegen2 and Codegen2.5, you have a pretty solid alternative to GitHub Copilot that runs completely locally.
- WizardCoder context?
- The world's most-powerful AI model suddenly got 'lazier' and 'dumber.' A radical redesign of OpenAI's GPT-4 could be behind the decline in performance.
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Official WizardLM-13B-V1.1 Released! Train with Only 1K Data! Can Achieve 86.32% on AlpacaEval!
(We will update the demo links in our github.)
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GPT-4 API general availability
In terms of speed, we're talking about 140t/s for 7B models, and 40t/s for 33B models on a 3090/4090 now.[1] (1 token ~= 0.75 word) It's quite zippy. llama.cpp performs close on Nvidia GPUs now (but they don't have a handy chart) and you can get decent performance on 13B models on M1/M2 Macs.
You can take a look at a list of evals here: https://llm-tracker.info/books/evals/page/list-of-evals - for general usage, I think home-rolled evals like llm-jeopardy [2] and local-llm-comparison [3] by hobbyists are more useful than most of the benchmark rankings.
That being said, personally I mostly use GPT-4 for code assistance to that's what I'm most interested in, and the latest code assistants are scoring quite well: https://github.com/abacaj/code-eval - a recent replit-3b fine tune the human-eval results for open models (as a point of reference, GPT-3.5 gets 60.4 on pass@1 and 68.9 on pass@10 [4]) - I've only just started playing around with it since replit model tooling is not as good as llamas (doc here: https://llm-tracker.info/books/howto-guides/page/replit-mode...).
I'm interested in potentially applying reflexion or some of the other techniques that have been tried to even further increase coding abilities. (InterCode in particular has caught my eye https://intercode-benchmark.github.io/)
[1] https://github.com/turboderp/exllama#results-so-far
[2] https://github.com/aigoopy/llm-jeopardy
[3] https://github.com/Troyanovsky/Local-LLM-comparison/tree/mai...
[4] https://github.com/nlpxucan/WizardLM/tree/main/WizardCoder
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WizardLM-13B-V1.0-Uncensored
You talking about this? https://github.com/nlpxucan/WizardLM
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What 7b llm to use
The smallest model that is close to competent at code is WizardCoder 15B.. https://github.com/nlpxucan/WizardLM/
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16-Jun-2023
WizardCoder: Empowering Code Large Language Models with Evol-Instruct (https://github.com/nlpxucan/WizardLM/tree/main/WizardCoder)
text-generation-webui
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Ask HN: What is the current (Apr. 2024) gold standard of running an LLM locally?
Some of the tools offer a path to doing tool use (fetching URLs and doing things with them) or RAG (searching your documents). I think Oobabooga https://github.com/oobabooga/text-generation-webui offers the latter through plugins.
Our tool, https://github.com/transformerlab/transformerlab-app also supports the latter (document search) using local llms.
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Ask HN: How to get started with local language models?
You can use webui https://github.com/oobabooga/text-generation-webui
Once you get a version up and running I make a copy before I update it as several times updates have broken my working version and caused headaches.
a decent explanation of parameters outside of reading archive papers: https://github.com/oobabooga/text-generation-webui/wiki/03-%...
a news ai website:
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text-generation-webui VS LibreChat - a user suggested alternative
2 projects | 29 Feb 2024
- Show HN: I made an app to use local AI as daily driver
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Ask HN: People who switched from GPT to their own models. How was it?
The other answers are recommending paths which give you #1. less control and #2. projects with smaller eco-systems.
If you want a truly general purpose front-end for LLMs, the only good solution right now is oobabooga: https://github.com/oobabooga/text-generation-webui
All other alternatives have only small fractions of the features that oobabooga supports. All other alternatives only support a fraction of the LLM backends that oobabooga supports, etc.
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AI Girlfriend Is a Data-Harvesting Horror Show
The example waifu in text-generation-webui is good enough for me.
https://github.com/oobabooga/text-generation-webui/blob/main...
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Nvidia's Chat with RTX is a promising AI chatbot that runs locally on your PC
> Downloading text-generation-webui takes a minute, let's you use any model and get going.
What you're missing here is you're already in this area deep enough to know what ooogoababagababa text-generation-webui is. Let's back out to the "average Windows desktop user" level. Assuming they even know how to find it:
1) Go to https://github.com/oobabooga/text-generation-webui?tab=readm...
2) See a bunch of instructions opening a terminal window and running random batch/powershell scripts. Powershell, etc will likely prompt you with a scary warning. Then you start wondering who ooobabagagagaba is...
3) Assuming you get this far (many users won't even get to step 1) you're greeted with a web interface[0] FILLED to the brim with technical jargon and extremely overwhelming options just to get a model loaded, which is another mind warp because you get to try to select between a bunch of random models with no clear meaning and non-sensical/joke sounding names from someone called "TheBloke". Ok...
Let's say you somehow braved this gauntlet and get this far now you get to chat with it. Ok, what about my local documents? text-generation-webui itself has nothing for that. Repeat this process over the 10 random open source projects from a bunch of names you've never heard of in an attempt to accomplish that.
This is "I saw this thing from Nvidia explode all over media, twitter, youtube, etc. I downloaded it from Nvidia, double-clicked, pointed it at a folder with documents, and it works".
That's the difference and it's very significant.
[0] - https://raw.githubusercontent.com/oobabooga/screenshots/main...
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Ask HN: What are your top 3 coolest software engineering tools?
Maybe a copout answer, but setting up a local LLM on my development machine has been invaluable. I use Deep Seek Coder 6.7 [0] and Oobabooga's UI [1]. It helps me solve simple problems and find bugs, while still leaving the larger architecture decisions to me.
[0] https://huggingface.co/deepseek-ai/deepseek-coder-6.7b-instr...
[1] https://github.com/oobabooga/text-generation-webui
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Meta AI releases Code Llama 70B
You can download it and run it with [this](https://github.com/oobabooga/text-generation-webui). There's an API mode that you could leverage from your VS Code extension.
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Ollama Python and JavaScript Libraries
Same question here. Ollama is fantastic as it makes it very easy to run models locally, But if you already have a lot of code that processes OpenAI API responses (with retry, streaming, async, caching etc), it would be nice to be able to simply switch the API client to Ollama, without having to have a whole other branch of code that handles Alama API responses. One way to do an easy switch is using the litellm library as a go-between but it’s not ideal (and I also recently found issues with their chat formatting for mistral models).
For an OpenAI compatible API my current favorite method is to spin up models using oobabooga TGW. Your OpenAI API code then works seamlessly by simply switching out the api_base to the ooba endpoint. Regarding chat formatting, even ooba’s Mistral formatting has issues[1] so I am doing my own in Langroid using HuggingFace tokenizer.apply_chat_template [2]
[1] https://github.com/oobabooga/text-generation-webui/issues/53...
[2] https://github.com/langroid/langroid/blob/main/langroid/lang...
Related question - I assume ollama auto detects and applies the right chat formatting template for a model?
What are some alternatives?
private-gpt - Interact with your documents using the power of GPT, 100% privately, no data leaks
KoboldAI - KoboldAI is generative AI software optimized for fictional use, but capable of much more!
llm-humaneval-benchmarks
llama.cpp - LLM inference in C/C++
exllama - A more memory-efficient rewrite of the HF transformers implementation of Llama for use with quantized weights.
gpt4all - gpt4all: run open-source LLMs anywhere
airoboros - Customizable implementation of the self-instruct paper.
TavernAI - Atmospheric adventure chat for AI language models (KoboldAI, NovelAI, Pygmalion, OpenAI chatgpt, gpt-4)
promptfoo - Test your prompts, models, and RAGs. Catch regressions and improve prompt quality. LLM evals for OpenAI, Azure, Anthropic, Gemini, Mistral, Llama, Bedrock, Ollama, and other local & private models with CI/CD integration.
KoboldAI-Client
can-ai-code - Self-evaluating interview for AI coders
ollama - Get up and running with Llama 3, Mistral, Gemma, and other large language models.