code-eval
private-gpt
code-eval | private-gpt | |
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5 | 131 | |
349 | 52,175 | |
- | 3.2% | |
8.0 | 9.2 | |
8 months ago | 7 days ago | |
Python | Python | |
MIT License | Apache License 2.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
code-eval
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Ask HN: LLM Leaderboard for Code Generation?
You're looking for "HumanEval" tests. Not saying this is the best way to test it, but it's the only standard test I know of that code models are compared with and are commonly benchmarked for
The current best models you'd want to try that I'm aware of is WizardCoder(15B), Starcoder(15B), and replit's code model(3B). Replit's instruct model is interesting because of it's competitive performance while only being a 3B model so it's the easiest/fastest to use.
https://github.com/abacaj/code-eval - This is a large mostly up to date list of benchmarks
https://huggingface.co/WizardLM/WizardCoder-15B-V1.0 - has a chart with a mostly up to date comparison
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LLaMA2 Chat 70B outperformed ChatGPT
You will want to look at HumanEval (https://github.com/abacaj/code-eval) and Eval+ (https://github.com/my-other-github-account/llm-humaneval-ben...) results for coding.
While Llama2 is an improvement over LLaMA v1, it's still nowhere near even the best open models (currently, sans test contamination, WizardCoder-15B, a StarCoder fine tune is at top). It's really not a competition atm though, ChatGPT-4 wipes the floor for coding atm.
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Claude 2
Since I've been on a AI code-helper kick recently. According to the post, Claude 2 now 71.2%, a significant upgrade from 1.3 (56.0%). It isn't specified whether this is pass@1 or pass@10.
For comparison:
* GPT-4 claims 85.4 on HumanEval, in a recent paper https://arxiv.org/pdf/2303.11366.pdf GPT-4 was tested at 80.1 pass@1 and 91 pass@1 using their Reflexion technique. They also include MBPP and Leetcode Hard benchmark comparisons
* WizardCoder, a StarCoder fine-tune is one of the top open models, scoring a 57.3 pass@1, model card here: https://huggingface.co/WizardLM/WizardCoder-15B-V1.0
* The best open model I know of atm is replit-code-instruct-glaive, a replit-code-3b fine tune, which scores a 63.5% pass@1. An independent developer abacaj has reproduced that announcement as part of code-eval, a repo for getting human-eval results: https://github.com/abacaj/code-eval
Those interested in this area may also want to take a look at this repo https://github.com/my-other-github-account/llm-humaneval-ben... that also ranks with Eval+, the CanAiCode Leaderboard https://huggingface.co/spaces/mike-ravkine/can-ai-code-resul... and airate https://github.com/catid/supercharger/tree/main/airate
Also, as with all LLM evals, to be taken with a grain of salt...
Liu, Jiawei, Chunqiu Steven Xia, Yuyao Wang, and Lingming Zhang. “Is Your Code Generated by ChatGPT Really Correct? Rigorous Evaluation of Large Language Models for Code Generation.” arXiv, June 12, 2023. https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2305.01210.
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Which LLM works for taboo questions or programming like webscraping?
To get an idea of programming performance, my can-ai-code Leaderboard is freshly updated this morning, but also check out the excellent llm-eval and code-eval leaderboards.
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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
private-gpt
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Ask HN: Has Anyone Trained a personal LLM using their personal notes?
PrivateGPT is a nice tool for this. It's not exactly what you're asking for, but it gets part of the way there.
https://github.com/zylon-ai/private-gpt
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PrivateGPT exploring the Documentation
Further details available at: https://docs.privategpt.dev/api-reference/api-reference/ingestion
- Show HN: I made an app to use local AI as daily driver
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privateGPT VS quivr - a user suggested alternative
2 projects | 12 Jan 2024
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Ask HN: How do I train a custom LLM/ChatGPT on my own documents in Dec 2023?
Run https://github.com/imartinez/privateGPT
Then
make ingest /path/to/folder/with/files
Then chat to the LLM.
Done.
Docs: https://docs.privategpt.dev/overview/welcome/quickstart
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Mozilla "MemoryCache" Local AI
PrivateGPT repository in case anyone's interested: https://github.com/imartinez/privateGPT . It doesn't seem to be linked from their official website.
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What Is Retrieval-Augmented Generation a.k.a. RAG
I’m preparing a small internal tool for my work to search documents and provide answers (with references), I’m thinking of using GPT4All [0], Danswer [1] and/or privateGPT [2].
The RAG technique is very close to what I have in mind, but I don’t want the LLM to “hallucinate” and generate answers on its own by synthesizing the source documents. As stated by many others, we’re living in interesting times.
[0] https://gpt4all.io/index.html
[1] https://www.danswer.ai/
[2] https://github.com/imartinez/privateGPT
- LM Studio – Discover, download, and run local LLMs
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Ask HN: Local LLM Recommendation?
https://www.reddit.com/r/LocalLLaMA/comments/14niv66/using_a...
https://github.com/imartinez/privateGPT
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Run ChatGPT-like LLMs on your laptop in 3 lines of code
I've been playing around with https://github.com/imartinez/privateGPT and https://github.com/simonw/llm and wanted to create a simple Python package that made it easier to run ChatGPT-like LLMs on your own machine, use them with non-public data, and integrate them into practical applications.
This resulted in Python package I call OnPrem.LLM.
In the documentation, there are examples for how to use it for information extraction, text generation, retrieval-augmented generation (i.e., chatting with documents on your computer), and text-to-code generation: https://amaiya.github.io/onprem/
Enjoy!
What are some alternatives?
llm-humaneval-benchmarks
localGPT - Chat with your documents on your local device using GPT models. No data leaves your device and 100% private.
llama.cpp - LLM inference in C/C++
gpt4all - gpt4all: run open-source LLMs anywhere
azure-search-openai-demo - A sample app for the Retrieval-Augmented Generation pattern running in Azure, using Azure AI Search for retrieval and Azure OpenAI large language models to power ChatGPT-style and Q&A experiences.
h2ogpt - Private chat with local GPT with document, images, video, etc. 100% private, Apache 2.0. Supports oLLaMa, Mixtral, llama.cpp, and more. Demo: https://gpt.h2o.ai/ https://codellama.h2o.ai/
visqol - Perceptual Quality Estimator for speech and audio
ollama - Get up and running with Llama 3, Mistral, Gemma, and other large language models.
llm-humaneval-ben
text-generation-webui - A Gradio web UI for Large Language Models. Supports transformers, GPTQ, AWQ, EXL2, llama.cpp (GGUF), Llama models.