sd-extension-system-info
ggml
sd-extension-system-info | ggml | |
---|---|---|
51 | 69 | |
267 | 10,002 | |
- | - | |
6.7 | 9.8 | |
7 days ago | 6 days ago | |
Python | C | |
MIT License | MIT License |
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.
sd-extension-system-info
- RTX 4070 vs rx 7800 xt
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AMD for AI
I've been using both SD and various LLM on linux without any issue and have done so for months. Windows support is also starting to roll out slowly, with koboldcpp-rocm recently giving me 20-25+t/s for a13B even on windows. you can see what SD performance is like on sites like these. those numbers roughly match what i get on my RX6800 as well (8t/s).
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Stable Diffusion in pure C/C++
That seems a lot worse than a 2060 SUPER with PyTorch in A1111.
https://vladmandic.github.io/sd-extension-system-info/pages/... (search for 2060 SUPER)
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Iterations per second benchmarking question
But usually A1111 users use benchmark on this extension https://github.com/vladmandic/sd-extension-system-info
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Best AMD SD Guide for 2023?
AMD SD = Setup Diaster? it was quite troublesome googling the few linux/amdgpu/rocm/sd vers/configs/params posts online. Also the whole PC may hang during generation which is bad for the harddisk. Your card is way more powerful so may not hang like mine. People are getting 8it/s https://vladmandic.github.io/sd-extension-system-info/pages/benchmark.html
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Which one is better? Nvidia Tesla M40 vs Nvidia Tesla P4?
According to system info benchmark, M40 is like 1-2 it/s and P4 is barely better than that.
- Video card price/performance ratio
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--medvram. Should I remove this flag? Running 3090
Anyway to properly "benchmark" the impacts different switches on your image generation speed, it is better to use the benchmarking utility from extension https://github.com/vladmandic/sd-extension-system-info (it also creates a very handy table of results from other users at https://vladmandic.github.io/sd-extension-system-info/pages/benchmark.html for you to compare with.
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Searching for install guide for top performance setup on WSL2 (Automatic1111)
I can see that the top performance benchmark results on SD WebUI Benchmark Data (using RTX 4090), are obtained through WSL2 running Automatic1111 on a Linux dist and Python 3.10.11, along with PyTorch 2.1.0.dev+cu121 (like benchmark id: 4126)
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Advice for Optimization on an RTX 8000
You should be able to compare based on the published benchmarks, just replicate the settings based on what's reported https://vladmandic.github.io/sd-extension-system-info/pages/benchmark.html
ggml
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LLMs on your local Computer (Part 1)
git clone https://github.com/ggerganov/ggml cd ggml mkdir build cd build cmake .. make -j4 gpt-j ../examples/gpt-j/download-ggml-model.sh 6B
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GGUF, the Long Way Around
Cool. I was just learning about GGUF by creating my own parser for it based on the spec https://github.com/ggerganov/ggml/blob/master/docs/gguf.md (for educational purposes)
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Ask HN: People who switched from GPT to their own models. How was it?
If you don't care about the details of how those model servers work, then something that abstracts out the whole process like LM Studio or Ollama is all you need.
However, if you want to get into the weeds of how this actually works, I recommend you look up model quantization and some libraries like ggml[1] that actually do that for you.
[1] https://github.com/ggerganov/ggml
- GGUF File Format
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Google just shipped libggml from llama-cpp into its Android AICore
Because the library is called ggml, but it supports gguf.
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Q-Transformer
Apparently this guy like a bunch of others like https://github.com/ggerganov/ggml are implementing transformers from papers for people that want them. Pretty cool.
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[P] Inference Vision Transformer (ViT) in plain C/C++ with ggml
You can access it here: https://github.com/staghado/vit.cpp It has been added to the ggml library on GitHub: https://github.com/ggerganov/ggml
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Falcon 180B Released
https://github.com/ggerganov/ggml
One note is that prompt ingestion is extremely slow on CPU compared to GPU. So short prompts are fine (as tokens can be streamed once the prompt is ingested), but long prompts feel extremely sluggish.
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Stable Diffusion in pure C/C++
I did a quick run under profiler and on my AVX2-laptop the slowest part (>50%) was matrix multiplication (sgemm).
In current version of GGML if OpenBLAS is enabled, they convert matrices to FP32 before running sgemm.
If OpenBLAS is disabled, on AVX2 plaftorm they convert FP16 to FP32 on every FMA operation, which even worse (due to repetition). After that, both ggml_vec_dot_f16 and ggml_vec_dot_f32 took first place in profiler.
Source: https://github.com/ggerganov/ggml/blob/master/src/ggml.c#L10...
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Accessing Llama 2 from the command-line with the LLM-replicate plugin
For those getting started, the easiest one click installer I've used is Nomic.ai's gpt4all: https://gpt4all.io/
This runs with a simple GUI on Windows/Mac/Linux, leverages a fork of llama.cpp on the backend and supports GPU acceleration, and LLaMA, Falcon, MPT, and GPT-J models. It also has API/CLI bindings.
I just saw a slick new tool https://ollama.ai/ that will let you install a llama2-7b with a single `ollama run llama2` command that has a very simple 1-click installer for Apple Silicon Mac (but need to build from source for anything else atm). It looks like it only supports llamas OOTB but it also seems to use llama.cpp (via Go adapter) on the backend - it seemed to be CPU-only on my MBA, but I didn't poke too much and it's brand new, so we'll see.
For anyone on HN, they should probably be looking at https://github.com/ggerganov/llama.cpp and https://github.com/ggerganov/ggml directly. If you have a high-end Nvidia consumer card (3090/4090) I'd highly recommend looking into https://github.com/turboderp/exllama
For those generally confused, the r/LocalLLaMA wiki is a good place to start: https://www.reddit.com/r/LocalLLaMA/wiki/guide/
I've also been porting my own notes into a single location that tracks models, evals, and has guides focused on local models: https://llm-tracker.info/
What are some alternatives?
automatic - SD.Next: Advanced Implementation of Stable Diffusion and other Diffusion-based generative image models
llama.cpp - LLM inference in C/C++
tomesd - Speed up Stable Diffusion with this one simple trick!
alpaca.cpp - Locally run an Instruction-Tuned Chat-Style LLM
voltaML-fast-stable-diffusion - Beautiful and Easy to use Stable Diffusion WebUI
alpaca-lora - Instruct-tune LLaMA on consumer hardware
stable-diffusion-webui-amdgpu - Stable Diffusion web UI
mlc-llm - Universal LLM Deployment Engine with ML Compilation
scribble-diffusion - Turn your rough sketch into a refined image using AI
text-generation-webui - A Gradio web UI for Large Language Models. Supports transformers, GPTQ, AWQ, EXL2, llama.cpp (GGUF), Llama models.
HIP - HIP: C++ Heterogeneous-Compute Interface for Portability
llm - An ecosystem of Rust libraries for working with large language models