ragas
text-generation-inference
ragas | text-generation-inference | |
---|---|---|
10 | 29 | |
4,874 | 7,995 | |
17.7% | 7.5% | |
9.6 | 9.6 | |
3 days ago | 7 days ago | |
Python | Python | |
Apache License 2.0 | 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.
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ragas
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Show HN: Ragas – the de facto open-source standard for evaluating RAG pipelines
congrats on launching! i think my continuing struggle with looking at Ragas as a company rather than an oss library is that the core of it is like 8 metrics (https://github.com/explodinggradients/ragas/tree/main/src/ra...) that are each 1-200 LOC. i can inline that easily in my app and retain full control, or model that in langchain or haystack or whatever.
why is Ragas a library and a company, rather than an overall "standard" or philosophy (eg like Heroku's 12 Factor Apps) that could maybe be more robust?
(just giving an opp to pitch some underappreciated benefits of using this library)
- FLaNK 04 March 2024
- FLaNK Stack 05 Feb 2024
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SuperDuperDB - how to use it to talk to your documents locally using llama 7B or Mistral 7B?
Also, at some point you'll need to get serious about evaluation (trust me, you will). You may be interested in https://github.com/explodinggradients/ragas
- Ragas – Framework for RAG Evaluation
- Ragas: Open-source Evaluation framework for RAG pipelines
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Building a customer support chatbot using GPT-3.5 and lLamaIndex🚀
The problem becomes worse if you want to inspect outputs from not just one, but several different queries. Luckily, there are several free open source packages such as ragas and DeepEval that can help evaluate your chatbot so you don't have to manually do it 😌
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Patterns for Building LLM-Based Systems and Products
We have build RAGAS framework for this https://github.com/explodinggradients/ragas
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[R] All about evaluating Large language models
Hi u/thecuteturtle, I am building open-source projects for evaluating LLM-based applications. Check it out https://github.com/explodinggradients/ragas and if you like to collaborate let me know :)
text-generation-inference
- FLaNK AI-April 22, 2024
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Zephyr 141B, a Mixtral 8x22B fine-tune, is now available in Hugging Chat
I wanted to write that TGI inference engine is not Open Source anymore, but they have reverted the license back to Apache 2.0 for the new version TGI v2.0: https://github.com/huggingface/text-generation-inference/rel...
Good news!
- Hugging Face reverts the license back to Apache 2.0
- HuggingFace text-generation-inference is reverting to Apache 2.0 License
- FLaNK Stack 05 Feb 2024
- Is there any open source app to load a model and expose API like OpenAI?
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AI Code assistant for about 50-70 users
Setting up a server for multiple users is very different from setting up LLM for yourself. A safe bet would be to just use TGI, which supports continuous batching and is very easy to run via Docker on your server. https://github.com/huggingface/text-generation-inference
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LocalPilot: Open-source GitHub Copilot on your MacBook
Okay, I actually got local co-pilot set up. You will need these 4 things.
1) CodeLlama 13B or another FIM model https://huggingface.co/codellama/CodeLlama-13b-hf. You want "Fill in Middle" models because you're looking at context on both sides of your cursor.
2) HuggingFace llm-ls https://github.com/huggingface/llm-ls A large language mode Language Server (is this making sense yet)
3) HuggingFace inference framework. https://github.com/huggingface/text-generation-inference At least when I tested you couldn't use something like llama.cpp or exllama with the llm-ls, so you need to break out the heavy duty badboy HuggingFace inference server. Just config and run. Now config and run llm-ls.
4) Okay, I mean you need an editor. I just tried nvim, and this was a few weeks ago, so there may be better support. My expereicen was that is was full honest to god copilot. The CodeLlama models are known to be quite good for its size. The FIM part is great. Boilerplace works so much easier with the surrounding context. I'd like to see more models released that can work this way.
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Mistral 7B Paper on ArXiv
A simple microservice would be https://github.com/huggingface/text-generation-inference .
Works flawlessly in Docker on my Windows machine, which is extremely shocking.
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best way to serve llama V2 (llama.cpp VS triton VS HF text generation inference)
I am wondering what is the best / most cost-efficient way to serve llama V2. - llama.cpp (is it production ready or just for playing around?) ? - Triton inference server ? - HF text generation inference ?
What are some alternatives?
deepeval - The LLM Evaluation Framework
llama-cpp-python - Python bindings for llama.cpp
chameleon-llm - Codes for "Chameleon: Plug-and-Play Compositional Reasoning with Large Language Models".
ollama - Get up and running with Llama 3, Mistral, Gemma, and other large language models.
Local-LLM-Langchain - Load local LLMs effortlessly in a Jupyter notebook for testing purposes alongside Langchain or other agents. Contains Oobagooga and KoboldAI versions of the langchain notebooks with examples.
exllama - A more memory-efficient rewrite of the HF transformers implementation of Llama for use with quantized weights.
FastLoRAChat - Instruct-tune LLaMA on consumer hardware with shareGPT data
basaran - Basaran is an open-source alternative to the OpenAI text completion API. It provides a compatible streaming API for your Hugging Face Transformers-based text generation models.
agenta - The all-in-one LLM developer platform: prompt management, evaluation, human feedback, and deployment all in one place.
FlexGen - Running large language models on a single GPU for throughput-oriented scenarios.
text-generation-webui-colab - A colab gradio web UI for running Large Language Models
vllm - A high-throughput and memory-efficient inference and serving engine for LLMs