llm
llama
llm | llama | |
---|---|---|
41 | 184 | |
5,954 | 53,502 | |
3.1% | 3.2% | |
9.4 | 8.1 | |
about 2 months ago | 6 days ago | |
Rust | Python | |
Apache License 2.0 | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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.
llm
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Open-sourcing a simple automation/agent workflow builder
We're open-sourcing a project that lets you build simple automations/agent workflows that use LLMs for different tasks. Kinda like Zapier or IFTTT but focused on using natural language to accomplish your tasks.It's super early but we'd love to start getting feedback to steer it in the right direction. It currently supports OpenAI and local models through llm.
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Meta's Segment Anything written with C++ / GGML
> Tensorflow is a C++ framework that has Python bindings and a Python library, but when the models are served they are running on C++
Sure, and it's only a simple 20 step process that involves building Tensorflow from source. Yeay!
https://medium.com/@hamedmp/exporting-trained-tensorflow-mod...
Let me see what the process for compiling a LLM written in Rust is....
https://github.com/rustformers/llm
cargo install llm-cli
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Announcing Floneum (A open source graph editor for local AI workflows written in rust)
Floneum is a graph editor for local AI workflows. It uses llm to run large language models locally, egui, and dioxus for the frontend, and wasmtime for the plugin system. If you are interested in the project, consider joining the discord, or building a plugin for Floneum in rust using WASI
- are there anytools or frameworks similar to "langchain" or "llamaindexbut implemented or designed in a language other than python?
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(1/2) May 2023
Run inference for Large Language Models on CPU, with Rust (https://github.com/rustformers/llm)
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I built a multi-platform desktop app to easily download and run models, open source btw
On the rustformers github page I see that one of the commands to generate the answer is llm llama infer -m ggml-gpt4all-j-v1.3-groovy.bin -p "Rust is a cool programming language because", my basic idea for now is to change the Tauri app to let it do -p prompt, which receives from my code through the link or through a shared variable (if I don't use the link and start different times your app)
- Weekly Megathread - 14 May 2023
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rustformers/llm: Run inference for Large Language Models on CPU, with Rust 🦀🚀🦙
wonnx has done some fantastic work in this regard, so that's where we plan to start once we get there. In terms of general discussion of alternate backends, see this issue.
- llm: a Rust crate/CLI for CPU inference of LLMs, including LLaMA, GPT-NeoX, GPT-J and more
llama
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Mark Zuckerberg: Llama 3, $10B Models, Caesar Augustus, Bioweapons [video]
derivative works thereof).”
https://github.com/meta-llama/llama/blob/b8348da38fde8644ef0...
Also even if you did use Llama for something, they could unilaterally pull the rug on you when you got 700 million years, AND anyone who thinks Meta broke their copyright loses their license. (Checking if you are still getting screwed is against the rules)
Therefore, Zuckerberg is accountable for explicitly anticompetitive conduct, I assumed an MMA fighter would appreciate the value of competition, go figure.
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Hello OLMo: A Open LLM
One thing I wanted to add and call attention to is the importance of licensing in open models. This is often overlooked when we blindly accept the vague branding of models as “open”, but I am noticing that many open weight models are actually using encumbered proprietary licenses rather than standard open source licenses that are OSI approved (https://opensource.org/licenses). As an example, Databricks’s DBRX model has a proprietary license that forces adherence to their highly restrictive Acceptable Use Policy by referencing a live website hosting their AUP (https://github.com/databricks/dbrx/blob/main/LICENSE), which means as they change their AUP, you may be further restricted in the future. Meta’s Llama is similar (https://github.com/meta-llama/llama/blob/main/LICENSE ). I’m not sure who can depend on these models given this flaw.
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Reaching LLaMA2 Performance with 0.1M Dollars
It looks like Llama 2 7B took 184,320 A100-80GB GPU-hours to train[1]. This one says it used a 96Ă—H100 GPU cluster for 2 weeks, for 32,256 hours. That's 17.5% of the number of hours, but H100s are faster than A100s [2] and FP16/bfloat16 performance is ~3x better.
If they had tried to replicate Llama 2 identically with their hardware setup, it'd cost a little bit less than twice their MoE model.
[1] https://github.com/meta-llama/llama/blob/main/MODEL_CARD.md#...
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DBRX: A New Open LLM
Ironically, the LLaMA license text [1] this is lifted verbatim from is itself copyrighted [2] and doesn't grant you the permission to copy it or make changes like s/meta/dbrx/g lol.
[1] https://github.com/meta-llama/llama/blob/main/LICENSE#L65
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How Chain-of-Thought Reasoning Helps Neural Networks Compute
This is kind of an epistemological debate at this level, and I make an effort to link to some source code [1] any time it seems contentious.
LLMs (of the decoder-only, generative-pretrained family everyone means) are next token predictors in a literal implementation sense (there are some caveats around batching and what not, but none that really matter to the philosophy of the thing).
But, they have some emergent behaviors that are a trickier beast. Probably the best way to think about a typical Instruct-inspired “chat bot” session is of them sampling from a distribution with a KL-style adjacency to the training corpus (sidebar: this is why shops that do and don’t train/tune on MMLU get ranked so differently than e.g. the arena rankings) at a response granularity, the same way a diffuser/U-net/de-noising model samples at the image batch (NCHW/NHWC) level.
The corpus is stocked with everything from sci-fi novels with computers arguing their own sentience to tutorials on how to do a tricky anti-derivative step-by-step.
This mental model has adequate explanatory power for anything a public LLM has ever been shown to do, but that only heavily implies it’s what they’re doing.
There is active research into whether there is more going on that is thus far not conclusive to the satisfaction of an unbiased consensus. I personally think that research will eventually show it’s just sampling, but that’s a prediction not consensus science.
They might be doing more, there is some research that represents circumstantial evidence they are doing more.
[1] https://github.com/meta-llama/llama/blob/54c22c0d63a3f3c9e77...
- Asking Meta to stop using the term "open source" for Llama
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Markov Chains Are the Original Language Models
Predicting subsequent text is pretty much exactly what they do. Lots of very cool engineering that’s a real feat, but at its core it’s argmax(P(token|token,corpus)):
https://github.com/facebookresearch/llama/blob/main/llama/ge...
The engineering feats are up there with anything, but it’s a next token predictor.
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Meta AI releases Code Llama 70B
https://github.com/facebookresearch/llama/pull/947/
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Stuff we figured out about AI in 2023
> Instead, it turns out a few hundred lines of Python is genuinely enough to train a basic version!
actually its not just a basic version. Llama 1/2's model.py is 500 lines: https://github.com/facebookresearch/llama/blob/main/llama/mo...
Mistral (is rumored to have) forked llama and is 369 lines: https://github.com/mistralai/mistral-src/blob/main/mistral/m...
and both of these are SOTA open source models.
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[D] What is a good way to maintain code readability and code quality while scaling up complexity in libraries like Hugging Face?
In transformers, they tried really hard to have a single function or method to deal with both self and cross attention mechanisms, masking, positional and relative encodings, interpolation etc. While it allows a user to use the same function/method for any model, it has led to severe parameter bloat. Just compare the original implementation of llama by FAIR with the implementation by HF to get an idea.
What are some alternatives?
llama.cpp - LLM inference in C/C++
langchain - ⚡ Building applications with LLMs through composability ⚡ [Moved to: https://github.com/langchain-ai/langchain]
ggml - Tensor library for machine learning
text-generation-webui - A Gradio web UI for Large Language Models. Supports transformers, GPTQ, AWQ, EXL2, llama.cpp (GGUF), Llama models.
GPTQ-for-LLaMa - 4 bits quantization of LLaMA using GPTQ
chatgpt-vscode - A VSCode extension that allows you to use ChatGPT
alpaca-lora - Instruct-tune LLaMA on consumer hardware
DeepSpeed - DeepSpeed is a deep learning optimization library that makes distributed training and inference easy, efficient, and effective.
alpaca.cpp - Locally run an Instruction-Tuned Chat-Style LLM
ollama - Get up and running with Llama 3, Mistral, Gemma, and other large language models.
SD-CN-Animation - This script allows to automate video stylization task using StableDiffusion and ControlNet.
transformers - 🤗 Transformers: State-of-the-art Machine Learning for Pytorch, TensorFlow, and JAX.