* Do not use _GNU_SOURCE gratuitously.
What is needed to build llama.cpp and examples is availability of
stuff defined in The Open Group Base Specifications Issue 6
(https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/009695399/) known also as
Single Unix Specification v3 (SUSv3) or POSIX.1-2001 + XSI extensions,
plus some stuff from BSD that is not specified in POSIX.1.
Well, that was true until NUMA support was added recently,
so enable GNU libc extensions for Linux builds to cover that.
Not having feature test macros in source code gives greater flexibility
to those wanting to reuse it in 3rd party app, as they can build it with
FTMs set by Makefile here or other FTMs depending on their needs.
It builds without issues in Alpine (musl libc), Ubuntu (glibc), MSYS2.
* make : enable Darwin extensions for macOS to expose RLIMIT_MEMLOCK
* make : enable BSD extensions for DragonFlyBSD to expose RLIMIT_MEMLOCK
* make : use BSD-specific FTMs to enable alloca on BSDs
* make : fix OpenBSD build by exposing newer POSIX definitions
* cmake : follow recent FTM improvements from Makefile
* build : on Mac OS enable Metal by default
* make : try to fix build on Linux
* make : move targets back to the top
* make : fix target clean
* llama : enable GPU inference by default with Metal
* llama : fix vocab_only logic when GPU is enabled
* common : better `n_gpu_layers` assignment
* readme : update Metal instructions
* make : fix merge conflict remnants
* gitignore : metal
* tests : add a C compliance test
* make : build C compliance test by default
* make : fix clean and make sure C test fails on clang
* make : move -Werror=implicit-int to CFLAGS
* use hipblas based on cublas
* Update Makefile for the Cuda kernels
* Expand arch list and make it overrideable
* Fix multi GPU on multiple amd architectures with rocblas_initialize() (#5)
* add hipBLAS to README
* new build arg LLAMA_CUDA_MMQ_Y
* fix half2 decomposition
* Add intrinsics polyfills for AMD
* AMD assembly optimized __dp4a
* Allow overriding CC_TURING
* use "ROCm" instead of "CUDA"
* ignore all build dirs
* Add Dockerfiles
* fix llama-bench
* fix -nommq help for non CUDA/HIP
---------
Co-authored-by: YellowRoseCx <80486540+YellowRoseCx@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: ardfork <134447697+ardfork@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: funnbot <22226942+funnbot@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Engininja2 <139037756+Engininja2@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Kerfuffle <44031344+KerfuffleV2@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: jammm <2500920+jammm@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: jdecourval <7315817+jdecourval@users.noreply.github.com>
* metal: matrix-matrix multiplication kernel
This commit removes MPS and uses custom matrix-matrix multiplication
kernels for all quantization types. This commit also adds grouped-query
attention to support llama2 70B.
* metal: fix performance degradation from gqa
Integers are slow on the GPU, and 64-bit divides are extremely slow.
In the context of GQA, we introduce a 64-bit divide that cannot be
optimized out by the compiler, which results in a decrease of ~8% in
inference performance. This commit fixes that issue by calculating a
part of the offset with a 32-bit divide. Naturally, this limits the
size of a single matrix to ~4GB. However, this limitation should
suffice for the near future.
* metal: fix bugs for GQA and perplexity test.
I mixed up ne02 and nb02 in previous commit.
* ggml : add graph tensor allocator
* ggml : don't calculate data pointer of unallocated tensors when creating a view with an offset
* ggml : refactor ggml_view_Nd into ggml_view_tensor_offset
NixOS's mkl misses some libraries like mkl-sdl.pc. See #2261
Currently NixOS doesn't have intel C compiler (icx, icpx). See https://discourse.nixos.org/t/packaging-intel-math-kernel-libraries-mkl/975
So remove it from flake.nix
Some minor changes:
- Change pkgs.python310 to pkgs.python3 to keep latest
- Add pkgconfig to devShells.default
- Remove installPhase because we have `cmake --install` from #2256
* MPI support, first cut
* fix warnings, update README
* fixes
* wrap includes
* PR comments
* Update CMakeLists.txt
* Add GH workflow, fix test
* Add info to README
* mpi : trying to move more MPI stuff into ggml-mpi (WIP) (#2099)
* mpi : add names for layer inputs + prep ggml_mpi_graph_compute()
* mpi : move all MPI logic into ggml-mpi
Not tested yet
* mpi : various fixes - communication now works but results are wrong
* mpi : fix output tensor after MPI compute (still not working)
* mpi : fix inference
* mpi : minor
* Add OpenMPI to GH action
* [mpi] continue-on-error: true
* mpi : fix after master merge
* [mpi] Link MPI C++ libraries to fix OpenMPI
* tests : fix new llama_backend API
* [mpi] use MPI_INT32_T
* mpi : factor out recv / send in functions and reuse
* mpi : extend API to allow usage with outer backends (e.g. Metal)
---------
Co-authored-by: Georgi Gerganov <ggerganov@gmail.com>
* expose simple web interface on root domain
* embed index and add --path for choosing static dir
* allow server to multithread
because web browsers send a lot of garbage requests we want the server
to multithread when serving 404s for favicon's etc. To avoid blowing up
llama we just take a mutex when it's invoked.
* let's try this with the xxd tool instead and see if msvc is happier with that
* enable server in Makefiles
* add /completion.js file to make it easy to use the server from js
* slightly nicer css
* rework state management into session, expose historyTemplate to settings
---------
Co-authored-by: Georgi Gerganov <ggerganov@gmail.com>
It's currently not possible to cross-compile llama.cpp for aarch64
because CMakeLists.txt forces -mcpu=native for that target.
-mcpu=native doesn't make sense if your build host is not the
target architecture, and clang rejects it for that reason, aborting the
build. This can be easily reproduced using the current Android NDK to build
for aarch64 on an x86_64 host.
If there is not a specific CPU-tuning target for aarch64 then -mcpu
should be omitted completely. I think that makes sense, there is not
enough variance in the aarch64 instruction set to warrant a fixed -mcpu
optimization at this point. And if someone is building natively and wishes
to enable any possible optimizations for the host device, then there is
already the LLAMA_NATIVE option available.
Fixes#495.
* k_quants: WIP super-blocks with 64 weights
* k_quants: WIP super-blocks with 64 weights
Q6_K scalar and AVX2 works
* k_quants: WIP super-blocks with 64 weights
Q4_K scalar and AVX2 works
* k_quants: WIP super-blocks with 64 weights
Q2_K scalar and AVX2 works. Q2_K is way too slow (it is actually slower
than the scalar implementation)
* k_quants: WIP super-blocks with 64 weights
Q3_K scalar and AVX2 works.
* k_quants: WIP super-blocks with 64 weights
Q5_K scalar and AVX2 works, and with that all
k_quants are done on AVX2 and scalar
* k_quants: WIP super-blocks with 64 weights
Q6_K working on CUDA. Cannot make it run quite as gast as
with super-blocks with 256 weigths: 8% slower on 4080,
20% slower on the 1660 (but there we fit 1 less layer on the
GPU because pf the larger model size), so some fraction of
these 20% is due to that,
* k_quants: WIP super-blocks with 64 weights
Q4_K working on CUDA. ~10% slower on GTX-1660,
16% slower on 4080.
* k_quants: WIP super-blocks with 64 weights
Q2_K working on CUDA. ~3% slower on GTX-1660,
10% slower on 4080.
* k_quants: WIP super-blocks with 64 weights
Q3_K working on CUDA.
* k_quants: WIP super-blocks with 64 weights
Q5_K working on CUDA, and with this CUDA is done.
* k_quants: WIP super-blocks with 64 weights
Q6_K working on ARM_NEON
* k_quants: WIP super-blocks with 64 weights
Q4_K working on ARM_NEON, but quite a bit slower than 256 weights
* k_quants: WIP super-blocks with 64 weights
Q2_K working on ARM_NEON, but quite a bit slower than 256 weights
* k_quants: WIP super-blocks with 64 weights
Q3_K working on ARM_NEON, but quite a bit slower than 256 weights.
* k_quants: WIP super-blocks with 64 weights
Q5_K working on ARM_NEON, but quite a bit slower than 256 weights.
With that, we have full support for ARM_NEON, although
performance is not quite there.
* k_quants: WIP super-blocks with 64 weights
Slightly more efficient Q3_K and Q5_K
* k_quants: WIP super-blocks with 64 weights
Another small improvement for Q3_K and Q5_K on ARM_NEON
* k_quants: WIP super-blocks with 64 weights
Yet another speedup for Q5_K on ARM_NEON.
We are now within 10% of the QK_K = 256 version.
* k_quants: WIP super-blocks with 64 weights
* We are able to pass preprocessor macros to the Metal
compiler
* Q6_K works and is actually slightly more efficient than
the QK_K = 256 version (25.2 ms vs 25.8 ms)
* k_quants: WIP super-blocks with 64 weights
Q4_K works on Metal and is actually slightly faster
than QK_K = 256 (21.95 ms vs 24.0 ms).
* k_quants: WIP super-blocks with 64 weights
Q2_K works on Metal and is very slightly faster
than QK_K = 256 (23.8 ms vs 24.2 ms).
* k_quants: WIP super-blocks with 64 weights
Q3_K works on Metal and is slightly faster
than QK_K = 256 (26.6 ms vs 28.3 ms).
* k_quants: WIP super-blocks with 64 weights
Q5_K works on Metal and is slightly faster
than QK_K = 256 (23.7 ms vs 26.3 ms).
* k_quants: call them _K, not _k, also on Metal
* k_quants: correctly define QK_K in llama.cpp
* Fixed bug in q4_K quantization added with the 64-block addition
* Simplify via lambda
* k_quants: swicth Q3_K to 4-bit scales when QK_K = 64
Otherwise there isn't much benefit from this
quantization type. There is some very slight loss
in accuracy, but we reduce size by ~7%.
E.g., for OpenLLaMA-3B, Q3_K_S perplexity is
8.6131 with 8-bit scales and 8.6352 with 4-bit,
while file size decreases from 1.53G to 1.44G.
* k_quants: switch Q4_K to 4-bit scales when QK_K = 64
Here the loss in accuracy is greater than for Q3_K,
but the Q4_K points still move further to the left on
the perplexity vs size curve.
* k_quants: forgot to add the Metal changes in last commit
* k_quants: change Q5_K to be type 0 when QK_K = 64
Still needs AVX2 implementation
* k_quants: AVX2 implementation for new 64-weight Q5_K
* k_quants: 10% faster ARM_NEON Q5_K dot product
* k_quants: fixed issue caused by merging with master
---------
Co-authored-by: Iwan Kawrakow <iwan.kawrakow@gmail.com>
* Convert vector to f16 for dmmv
* compile option
* Added compilation option description to README
* Changed cmake CUDA_ARCHITECTURES from "OFF" to "native"
* cuda : faster k-quant dot kernels
* Imrove Q2_K dot kernel on older GPUs
We now have a K_QUANTS_PER_ITERATION macro, which should be
set to 1 on older and to 2 on newer GPUs.
With this, we preserve the performance of the original
PR on RTX-4080, and are faster compared to master on
GTX-1660.
* Imrove Q6_K dot kernel on older GPUs
Using the same K_QUANTS_PER_ITERATION macro as last commit,
we preserve performance on RTX-4080 and speed up
Q6_K on a GTX-1660.
* Add LLAMA_CUDA_KQUANTS_ITER to CMakeLists.txt and Makefile
Allowed values are 1 or 2. 2 gives the best performance on
modern GPUs and is set as default. On older GPUs 1 may work
better.
* PR comments
---------
Co-authored-by: Iwan Kawrakow <iwan.kawrakow@gmail.com>
* Starting to add k-quantization to ggml
I think it is better to have quantization separate from
ggml. For now just adding the k-quants there, but it would be
better to also factor out the existing ggml quantizations.
* Adding Q3_K and Q8_K (de)-quantization
* Q3_K now working on CUDA and AVX2/scalar
CUDA is not ideal - ~50% slower than Q4_0 for
single token prediction, about the same in batch
mode (perplexity). CPU single token is ~55 ms
(on Ryzen 7950X).
* Some improvement for Q3_K on CUDA
It is now ~22.5 ms/token on my GPU, so ~30% slower than Q4_0.
* Some more CUDA optimizations for Q3_K
Single token is now 20.5 ms/token (~20% slower than Q4_0).
Perplexity is on par with Q4_0.
* Adding Q4_K - scalar, AVX2, CUDA
Performance is the same or perhaps very slightly better than Q4_0 on the CPU.
On the GPU, single token prediction is ~10% better than Q4_0,
batch mode (perplexity is about the same).
* Adding Q6_K - scalar, AVX2, CUDA
Performance is ~40% lower compared to Q4_K on the CPU.
This is to be expected, considering that we are memory bound
on the CPU and the 6-bit model is ~44% larger than the 4-bit.
On the GPU, single token prediction is ~6% lower than Q4_0,
batch mode (perplexity) is even closer (but still slower).
* Adding Q5_K - scalar, AVX2, CUDA
Performance is ~20% lower compared to Q4_K on the CPU.
This is to be expected, considering that we are memory bound
on the CPU and the 5-bit model is ~22% larger than the 4-bit.
On the GPU, single token prediction is about the same as Q4_0
for both, single token and batch prediction.
* Per convention, all QX_K quantizations use Q5_K for output.weight
* Adding quantization mixes
* Quantization mixes: didn't quite get what I wanted in the last commit
* Q4_K dot product for ARM_NEON
* Q6_K dot product for ARM_NEON
* Q5_K dot product for ARM_NEON
* Adding Q3_K dot for ARM_NEON
It is 22% slower than Q4_K, despite the smaller model size.
On x86_64, where we are memory bound, the Q3_K model is
quite a bit faster than Q4_K.
* A very slightly faster ARM_NEON Q3_K dot
* Adding Q2_K - just CUDA for now
Token prediction is pretty good - about 15.5 ms on a RTX 4080.
Perplexity is about the same as Q4_K.
* Adding scalar and AVX2 Q2_K dot
* Adding ARM_NEON Q2_K dot
About the same performance as Q4_K.
* A slightly faster ARM_NEON Q2_K dot
Single token prediction is now ~36 ms on M2 Max.
The code is much simpler too.
* Fixed bug in Q2_K CUDA dot product kernel
Stranegly enough, for the few prompts I tried with the 7B model
the responses looked perfectly reasonable. Only realized something
is not quite right when I tried the larger models and started getting
nonse back.
In any case, Q2_K single token evaluation time on an RTX 4080 in a Ryzen7950X
box iusing CUDA and model fully loaded on the GPU are
~15.5 ms for 7B, ~25.4 ms for 13B, and ~55.8 ms for 30B.
The max number of layers that fit in VRAM for The 65B is 32.
With that, we get ~330 ms per token, which is not that much faster
than just running on the CPU (~470 ms per token).
* Don't print zeros/NaNs when no count histogram has been collected
* A 10% faster CUDA vector dot kernel for Q3_K
Q3_K is now running at ~18.5 ms / token on CUDA,
so the gap to Q4_0 is only 10%.
It seems memory acccess pattern is more important for
performance than the amount of computation the kernel
does.
* A slightly daster Q4_K AVX2 dot product
For perplexity, where we are less memory bound, time per
pass drops by ~5%. Barely measurable difference for single
token prediction.
* A slightly faster ARM_NEON A4_K dot product
* Minor
* Fix quantization error test
We cannot possibly be expecting rmse < 0.002 for 2- and 3-bit
quantization variants.
* Fix docker build
I have been sloppy with vector reinterpret casts on ARM_NEON.
It seems clang is very forgiving in that regard.
* Added forgotten ggml.o dependence on k_quants.h to the Makefile
* Had unintentionally committed the Makefile with -Ofast enabled
* ggml : rename k_quants -> ggml-quants-k, use lowercase in code
---------
Co-authored-by: Iwan Kawrakow <iwan.kawrakow@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Georgi Gerganov <ggerganov@gmail.com>
* mtl : export the LLaMA computation graph
* ci : disable temporary
* mtl : adapt the MNIST example as starter
* mtl : no need for mtl-export tool, add cli arg for main instead
* mtl : export just a small part of the graph for now to make it easier
* mtl : move MSL code into separate file for easy editing
* mtl : initial get_rows_q4_0 kernel
* mtl : confirmed get_rows_q4_0 is working correctly
* mtl : add rms_norm kernel + confirm working
* mtl : add mul kernel + confirm working
* mtl : initial mul_mat Q4 kernel (wrong results)
* mtl : mul_mat fixes (still wrong)
* mtl : another mul_mat Q4 (still does not work)
* mtl : working mul_mat q4
* ggml : fix handling of "view" ops in ggml_graph_import()
* mtl : add rope kernel
* mtl : add reshape and transpose handling
* ggml : store offset as opt arg for ggml_view_xd() operators
* mtl : add cpy kernel + handle view ops
* mtl : confirm f16 x f32 attention mul mat
* mtl : add scale kernel
* mtl : add diag_mask_inf kernel
* mtl : fix soft_max kernel
* ggml : update ggml_nbytes() to handle non-contiguous tensors
* mtl : verify V tensor contents
* mtl : add f32 -> f32 cpy kernel
* mtl : add silu kernel
* mtl : add non-broadcast mul kernel
* mtl : full GPU inference of the computation graph
* mtl : optimize rms_norm and soft_max kernels
* mtl : add f16 mat x f32 vec multiplication kernel
* mtl : fix bug in f16 x f32 mul mat + speed-up computation
* mtl : faster mul_mat_q4_0_f32 kernel
* mtl : fix kernel signature + roll inner loop
* mtl : more threads for rms_norm + better timing
* mtl : remove printfs from inner loop
* mtl : simplify implementation
* mtl : add save/load vocab to ggml file
* mtl : plug Metal inference into llama.cpp (very quick-n-dirty)
* mtl : make it work with main example
Lots of hacks but at least now it generates text
* mtl : preparing for merge
* mtl : clean-up ggml mtl interface + suport scratch / inplace
* mtl : remove temp / debug code
* metal : final refactoring and simplification
* Revert "ci : disable temporary"
This reverts commit 98c267fc77.
* metal : add comments
* metal : clean-up stuff, fix typos
* readme : add Metal instructions
* readme : add example for main
* xor hack
* block y dim
* loop unrolling
* Fixed cmake LLAMA_CUDA_BY option
* Removed hipblas compatibility code
* Define GGML_CUDA_DMMV_BLOCK_Y if not defined
* Fewer iters, more ops per iter
* Renamed DMMV X/Y compilation options
* Move back to C++ for OpenCL
* Refactor OpenCL code to work more like the CUDA code, add missing functions
* Deduplicate dequant kernels
* Add OpenCL compile options
* Use compile args for preprocessing constants
* Restore default platform + device selection by id behavior
---------
Co-authored-by: Johannes Gäßler <johannesg@5d6.de>
Co-authored-by: Henri Vasserman <henv@hot.ee>
* Added httplib support
* Added readme for server example
* fixed some bugs
* Fix the build error on Macbook
* changed json11 to nlohmann-json
* removed some whitespaces
* remove trailing whitespace
* added support custom prompts and more functions
* some corrections and added as cmake option
* feature: add blis support
* feature: allow all BLA_VENDOR to be assigned in cmake arguments. align with whisper.cpp pr 927
* fix: version detection for BLA_SIZEOF_INTEGER, recover min version of cmake
* Fix typo in INTEGER
Co-authored-by: Georgi Gerganov <ggerganov@gmail.com>
* Fix: blas changes on ci
---------
Co-authored-by: Georgi Gerganov <ggerganov@gmail.com>
* feature: add blis support
* feature: allow all BLA_VENDOR to be assigned in cmake arguments. align with whisper.cpp pr 927
* fix: version detection for BLA_SIZEOF_INTEGER, recover min version of cmake
* Fix typo in INTEGER
Co-authored-by: Georgi Gerganov <ggerganov@gmail.com>
---------
Co-authored-by: Georgi Gerganov <ggerganov@gmail.com>
* Add git-based build information for better issue tracking
* macOS fix
* "build (hash)" and "CMAKE_SOURCE_DIR" changes
* Redo "CMAKE_CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR" and clearer build messages
* Fix conditional dependency on missing target
* Broke out build-info.cmake, added find_package fallback, and added build into to all examples, added dependencies to Makefile
* 4 space indenting for cmake, attempt to clean up my mess in Makefile
* Short hash, less fancy Makefile, and don't modify build-info.h if it wouldn't change it
* Allow use of OpenCL GPU-based BLAS using ClBlast instead of OpenBLAS for context processing
* Improve ClBlast implementation, avoid recreating buffers, remove redundant transfers
* Finish merge of ClBlast support
* Move CLBlast implementation to separate file
Add buffer reuse code (adapted from slaren's cuda implementation)
* Add q4_2 and q4_3 CLBlast support, improve code
* Double CLBlast speed by disabling OpenBLAS thread workaround
Co-authored-by: Concedo <39025047+LostRuins@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: slaren <2141330+slaren@users.noreply.github.com>
* Fix device selection env variable names
* Fix cast in opencl kernels
* Add CLBlast to CMakeLists.txt
* Replace buffer pool with static buffers a, b, qb, c
Fix compile warnings
* Fix typos, use GGML_TYPE defines, improve code
* Improve btype dequant kernel selection code, add error if type is unsupported
* Improve code quality
* Move internal stuff out of header
* Use internal enums instead of CLBlast enums
* Remove leftover C++ includes and defines
* Make event use easier to read
Co-authored-by: Henri Vasserman <henv@hot.ee>
* Use c compiler for opencl files
* Simplify code, fix include
* First check error, then release event
* Make globals static, fix indentation
* Rename dequant kernels file to conform with other file names
* Fix import cl file name
---------
Co-authored-by: Concedo <39025047+LostRuins@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: slaren <2141330+slaren@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Henri Vasserman <henv@hot.ee>
Co-authored-by: Georgi Gerganov <ggerganov@gmail.com>
On my Mac, the direct Q4_1 product is marginally slower
(~69 vs ~55 us for Q4_0). The SIMD-ified ggml version
is now almost 2X slower (~121 us).
On a Ryzen 7950X CPU, the direct product for Q4_1 quantization
is faster than the AVX2 implementation (~60 vs ~62 us).
---------
Co-authored-by: Iwan Kawrakow <iwan.kawrakow@gmail.com>
- Support all three formats (ggml, ggmf, ggjt). (However, I didn't
include the hack needed to support GPT4All files without conversion.
Those can still be used after converting them with convert.py from my
other PR.)
- Support both mmap and read (mmap is used by default, but can be
disabled with `--no-mmap`, and is automatically disabled for pre-ggjt
files or on platforms where mmap is not supported).
- Support multi-file models like before, but automatically determine the
number of parts rather than requiring `--n_parts`.
- Improve validation and error checking.
- Stop using the per-file type field (f16) entirely in favor of just
relying on the per-tensor type/size fields. This has no immediate
benefit, but makes it easier to experiment with different formats, and
should make it easier to support the new GPTQ-for-LLaMa models in the
future (I have some work in progress on that front).
- Support VirtualLock on Windows (using the same `--mlock` option as on
Unix).
- Indicate loading progress when using mmap + mlock. (Which led me
to the interesting observation that on my Linux machine, with a
warm file cache, mlock actually takes some time, whereas mmap
without mlock starts almost instantly...)
- To help implement this, move mlock support from ggml to the
loading code.
- madvise/PrefetchVirtualMemory support (based on #740)
- Switch from ifstream to the `fopen` family of functions to avoid
unnecessary copying and, when mmap is enabled, allow reusing the same
file descriptor for both metadata reads and mmap (whereas the existing
implementation opens the file a second time to mmap).
- Quantization now produces a single-file output even with multi-file
inputs (not really a feature as much as 'it was easier this way').
Implementation notes:
I tried to factor the code into more discrete pieces than before.
Regarding code style: I tried to follow the code style, but I'm naughty
and used a few advanced C++ features repeatedly:
- Destructors to make it easier to ensure everything gets cleaned up.
- Exceptions. I don't even usually use exceptions when writing C++, and
I can remove them if desired... but here they make the loading code
much more succinct while still properly handling a variety of errors,
ranging from API calls failing to integer overflow and allocation
failure. The exceptions are converted to error codes at the
API boundary.)
Co-authored-by: Pavol Rusnak <pavol@rusnak.io> (for the bit I copied from #740)
* Be more strict about converting float to double
* Test equivalence of round, SILU implementations
Test module is commented out in CMakeLists.txt because the tests may
take a long time, depending on how much the compiler optimizes.
* Fix softmax in perplexity.cpp
* all : prefer float over double where appropriate
* perplexity : add <cmath>
---------
Co-authored-by: Georgi Gerganov <ggerganov@gmail.com>
* CMake: Add AVX512 option
* CI: Add AVX/AVX512 builds (Windows)
(AVX512 tests can only be run when the worker happens to support it, building works anyway)
* CMake: Fix sanitizer linkage ( merged #468 )
* CI: Add sanitizer builds (Ubuntu)
* CI: Fix release tagging
(change @zendesk/action-create-release to @anzz1/action-create-release until upstream PR Added commitish as input zendesk/action-create-release#32 is merged)
- main -> examples
- utils -> examples (renamed to "common")
- quantize -> examples
- separate tools for "perplexity" and "embedding"
Hope I didn't break something !
* Major refactoring - introduce C-style API
* Clean up
* Add <cassert>
* Add <iterator>
* Add <algorithm> ....
* Fix timing reporting and accumulation
* Measure eval time only for single-token calls
* Change llama_tokenize return meaning
* Add test-tokenizer-0 to do a few tokenizations - feel free to expand
* Added option to convert-pth-to-ggml.py script to dump just the vocabulary
* Added ./models/ggml-vocab.bin containing just LLaMA vocab data (used for tests)
* Added utility to load vocabulary file from previous point (temporary implementation)
* Avoid using std::string_view and drop back to C++11 (hope I didn't break something)
* Rename gpt_vocab -> llama_vocab
* All CMake binaries go into ./bin/ now
* Functionality addition CMakeLists.txt
Refactoring:
1. Simplify more options that are negation of negation.
LLAMA_NO_ACCELERATE -> LLAMA_ACCELERATE
2. Changed to an optional expression instead of forcing to enable AVX2 in MSVC.
3. Make CMAKE_CXX_STANDARD, which is different from Makefile, the same.
4. Use add_compile_options instead of adding options to CMAKE_C_FLAGS.
5. Make utils use target_link_libraries instead of directly referencing code.
Added features:
1. Added some options.
LLAMA_STATIC_LINK,LLAMA_NATIVE,LLAMA_LTO,LLAMA_GPROF,LLAMA_OPENBLAS
* Fix Accelerate link in CMake
* Windows build Fix
* C++11 to C++17
* Reflects C/C++ standard individually
* Change the version to 3.12
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Co-authored-by: Georgi Gerganov <ggerganov@gmail.com>
* add ptread link to fix cmake build under linux
* add cmake to linux and macos platform
* separate make and cmake workflow
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Co-authored-by: Sebastián A <sebastian.aedo29@gmail.com>