m1n1
whisper.cpp
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m1n1 | whisper.cpp | |
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17 | 187 | |
3,376 | 31,174 | |
2.2% | - | |
8.9 | 9.8 | |
20 days ago | 2 days ago | |
Python | C | |
MIT License | MIT License |
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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.
m1n1
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Asahi Linux project's OpenGL support on Apple Silicon officially surpasses Apple
One of the coolest things (IMO) about the entire Asahi effort, and why I'm not at all surprised that they surpassed Apple, was the dedicated effort to build bespoke developer-friendly Python tooling early in the reverse engineering process.
https://asahilinux.org/2021/08/progress-report-august-2021/
> Since the hypervisor is built on m1n1, it works together with Python code running on a separate host machine. Effectively, the Python host can “puppeteer” the M1 and its guest OS remotely. The hypervisor itself is partially written in Python! This allows us to have a very fast test cycle, and we can even update parts of the hypervisor itself live during guest execution, without a reboot.
> We then started building a Python implementation of this RPC protocol and marshaling system. This implementation serves a triple purpose: it allows us to parse the DCP logs from the hypervisor to understand what macOS does, it allows us to build a prototype DCP driver entirely in Python, and it will in the future be used to automatically generate marshaling code for the Linux kernel DCP driver.
Code here: https://github.com/AsahiLinux/m1n1/blob/main/proxyclient/m1n...
If you watch any of Asahi Lina's streams from the time before they had working drivers, she's able to weave together complex bitflag-manipulating pipelines at the speed of thought with self-documenting code, all in Python running on the host machine, all while joking with viewers via her adorable avatar. I've never seen anything like it before. The whole workflow is a tremendous and unprecedented accomplishment by the entire Asahi team.
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Strange (scheduling?) latency on the host when KVM guest runs something demanding
I wrote a m1n1 experiment to test IRQ delivery in EL1 and noticed something was weird. I already knew about that IRQ control register (3 masks IRQs entirely and is the default, that whole thing took like a day or two back when I first added M1 Pro/Max support), so I tried other values and 2 fixed it.
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Apple Silicon - iBoot
They have not dropped hardly any official documentation on iBoot. The best safe documentation is in: https://github.com/AsahiLinux/m1n1/ There's a lot of tainted docs out there because the source to iBoot was illegally leaked a while back, but marcan is known for being a bit of a hardass when it comes to legal reverse engineering (thankfully).
- Everything we know about the Apple Neural Engine (ANE)
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Dumb question - is it possible to install Windows on top of Asahi?
No its uefi boot manager “https://github.com/AsahiLinux/m1n1 “
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Updates galore! November 2022 Progress Report
What makes you say there isn't community participation? The repo for m1n1, at least, has 42 contributors according to Github[1]. There's plenty more reporting bugs and such, and their IRC channel seems relatively active.
1: https://github.com/AsahiLinux/m1n1
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A Secret Apple Silicon (M1) Extension to Accommodate an Intel 8080 Artifact
I can confirm that’s pretty much exactly what happens. I did some digging with the help of m1n1 a while back, and essentially yeah, this is almost exactly what it does. The only difference is that, rather than tracking which cores are running emulated code, the scheduler keeps track of which processes are running in emulation mode, and prior to returning to userland after a context switch, the kernel sets control register bits for features like TSO (which is what I was interested in looking into at the time; I believe that specifically is controlled somewhere in the actlr_el1 register). Although only the P-cores actually implement the necessary x86 emulation behavior, the scheduler of course wants to ensure that a process is not pinned to any one core, and that native and emulated processes alike can preempt and interleave with each other on the P-cores just as they would if there were no emulation.
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Asahi Lina (Linux Developer VTuber) wants to write the new Apple Silicon GPU driver for Linux in Rust!
That shim/stub is m1n1. It is the bootloader for Asahi Linux, but also makes it possible to talk to the hardware over USB as just described by Lina. marcan even implemented a small hypervisor in m1n1, so it can be used to run MacOS and trace how MacOS is accessing the hardware.
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questions about the new architecture
Windows 11 ARM dualboot will come to M1 macs in the near future. See m1n1 for progress.
- First triangle ever rendered on an M1 Mac with a fully open-source driver
whisper.cpp
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Show HN: I created automatic subtitling app to boost short videos
whisper.cpp [1] has a karaoke example that uses ffmpeg's drawtext filter to display rudimentary karaoke-like captions. It also supports diarisation. Perhaps it could be a starting point to create a better script that does what you need.
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1: https://github.com/ggerganov/whisper.cpp/blob/master/README....
- LLaMA Now Goes Faster on CPUs
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LLMs on your local Computer (Part 1)
The ggml library is one of the first library for local LLM interference. It’s a pure C library that converts models to run on several devices, including desktops, laptops, and even mobile device - and therefore, it can also be considered as a tinkering tool, trying new optimizations, that will then be incorporated into other downstream projects. This tool is at the heart of several other projects, powering LLM interference on desktop or even mobile phones. Subprojects for running specific LLMs or LLM families exists, such as whisper.cpp.
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Voxos.ai – An Open-Source Desktop Voice Assistant
I'm not sure if it is _fully_ openai compatible, but whispercpp has a server bundled that says it is "OAI-like": https://github.com/ggerganov/whisper.cpp/tree/master/example...
I don't have any direct experience with it... I've only played around with whisper locally, using scripts.
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Jarvis: A Voice Virtual Assistant in Python (OpenAI, ElevenLabs, Deepgram)
unless i'm misunderstanding `whisper.cpp` seems to support streaming & the repository includes a native example[0] and a WASM example[1] with a demo site[2].
[0]: https://github.com/ggerganov/whisper.cpp/tree/master/example...
- Wchess
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I've open sourced my Flutter plugin to run on-device LLMs on any platform. TestFlight builds available now.
Usage 1: Good to transcribe audio. An example use case could be to summarize YouTube videos or long courses. Usage 2: You talk with voice to your AI that responds with text (later with audio too). - https://github.com/ggerganov/whisper.cpp
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Scrybble is the ReMarkable highlights to Obsidian exporter I have been looking for
🗣️🎙️ whisper.cpp (offline speech-to-text transcription, models trained by OpenAI, CLI based, browser based)
- Whisper.wasm
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Whisper C++ not working for me. Anyone else?
Has anyone played around with Whisper C++ for swift? I'm hitting a snag even on the demo. I've downloaded the github repo and everything matches up with this video [ https://youtu.be/b10OHCDHDQ4 ] but when he hits the transcribe button, it actually prints out the captioning. When I do it, it skips that part and just says "Done...". But it, does everything else - plays the audio, says it's transcribing.. just doesn't show me the transcription: and it's not in the debug window either. But the demo isn't throwing any errors, and I haven't messed with the code really so this is their example. https://github.com/ggerganov/whisper.cpp
What are some alternatives?
HelloSilicon - An introduction to ARM64 assembly on Apple Silicon Macs
faster-whisper - Faster Whisper transcription with CTranslate2
unix-history-repo - Continuous Unix commit history from 1970 until today
Whisper - High-performance GPGPU inference of OpenAI's Whisper automatic speech recognition (ASR) model
pdp7-unix - A project to resurrect Unix on the PDP-7 from a scan of the original assembly code
bark - 🔊 Text-Prompted Generative Audio Model
freebsd-src - The FreeBSD src tree publish-only repository. Experimenting with 'simple' pull requests....
whisper - Robust Speech Recognition via Large-Scale Weak Supervision
rss-proxy - RSS-proxy allows you to do create an RSS or ATOM feed of almost any website, just by analyzing just the static HTML structure.
whisperX - WhisperX: Automatic Speech Recognition with Word-level Timestamps (& Diarization)
nixos-apple-silicon - Resources to install NixOS bare metal on Apple Silicon Macs
llama.cpp - LLM inference in C/C++