This change upstreams llamafile's vectorized expf() functions. This lets
us compute softmax and silu more accurately than the short[65536] lookup
table that GGML previously used to make this operation go faster. We can
support aarch64 and sse2+ with the worst case rounding error of 2ulp. It
makes make -j8 tests && ./tests/test-backend-ops -o SOFT_MAX -b CPU perf
go 1.5x faster for SSE2+FMA, 1.9x faster for AVX2+FMA and 2.1x on AVX512
* Just reordering some structs.
* Adding in the calls to mm_pause
* Passing around the state
* Renaming and moving a bunch of variables around.
* Extracting the logic to it's own function.
* Moving some variable definitions into the chunk function.
* Moving some variables around
* moving src1_cont inside
* Moving row_size
* adding the current_chunk
* Reorg the code.
* Formatting to match the orig patch
* starting to setup the chunking variables
* Starting the buildup of the loop
* The yield shouldn't be necessary.
* adding the looping structure based on the chunk configuration.
* Add in the re-chunking code.
* Making it much more likely to rechunk.
* disable resizing if numa is enabled.
* Updating comments with what we've learned.
* Fix formatting
* Couple more formatting fixes.
* More style fixes.
* Fix Warnings
* Going with unused because there's conditional logic that needs it.
* Update ggml.c
* Update ggml.c
---------
* initial commit with CPU implementation of upscale to shape and test, cuda implementation next
* experimental commit to see if dst shape is correct
* test version
* test
* removed unnecessary params
* refactor
* fixed tests
* ggml : metal impl + cleanup + sycl dev warnings
* patched ggml_upscale cuda op to handle non-contiguous tensors, added test for non-contiguous behavior
* metal : fix upsacle op to support nb00 + style
---------
Co-authored-by: Georgi Gerganov <ggerganov@gmail.com>
* Introduce bfloat16 support
Many models on Hugging Face (e.g. Mistral, TinyLLaMA) use bfloat16 as
their canonical floating point format.
┌sign
│
│ ┌exponent
│ │
│ │ ┌mantissa
│ │ │
│┌──┴───┐┌─┴───┐
0b0000000000000000 brain16
This encoding has the same number of exponent bits as float32. That
makes conversion relatively straightforward, even in the absence of
hardware support. For example, converting brain16 to binary32 means
simply shifting 16 bits to the left.
┌sign
│
│ ┌exponent
│ │
│ │ ┌mantissa
│ │ │
│┌──┴───┐┌─┴───────────────────┐
0b00000000000000000000000000000000 IEEE binary32
The issue is that converting bf16 to fp16 can result in information
loss. Only 13% of bf16 numbers can be precisely represented in fp16
which in practice ends up being 99.71% of Mistral 7b v0.2's weights
however there is currently no way other than fp32 to get the others
┌sign
│
│ ┌exponent
│ │
│ │ ┌mantissa
│ │ │
│┌─┴─┐┌─┴──────┐
0b0000000000000000 IEEE binary16
This change fixes that, by adding a bf16 data type to GGML. Support
for CPU inference has been implemented along with optimizations for
the AVX2, AVX512, and AVX512BF16 ISAs. Perplexity on Mistral 7b 0.2
improves somewhere around -0.0024 to -0.0046 compared to using fp16
* Remove GGML code that's not needed
* Minimize the GGML API surface area for BF16
* Remove bf16 luts
* Make the GGML header look nicer
* Fix documentation
* Apply ggerganov's fixes for test-backend-ops
* Add BF16 code for new ggml_validate_row_data() function
* ggml : add ggml_flash_attn_ext API
* ggml : fix GQA support in ggml_flash_attn_ext
* ggml : online attention (CPU)
* metal : initial implementation
* metal : f16 precision
* metal : reduce branches
* metal : specialize for head size
* wip : 8 rows per simd group
* wip : 4 rows per simd group
* wip : template for rows per warp
* metal : parallelize across KV size
* metal : parallel reduce across heads
* metal : efficient flash_attn_f16 implementation
* metal : avoid redundant loads of the attention
* metal : scale and mask in matrix form
* metal : fix comment
* llama : avoid ggml_cast, use F32 query
* metal : add parallel reduce version (disabled)
* metal : move output into local memory + optimize
- the result from each simdgroup now stays in the registers
- significantly reduced SRAM usage
- more efficient skipping of -INF blocks
- avoid simdgroup barrier in hot loop
- add comments
* metal : add tests, fix scaling, support C > 32
* metal : improve precision
* ggml : fix f16 mad
* metal : minor
* metal : support Q > 8
* tests : add ATTN tests
* metal : disable buffer allocation logs
* tests : more
* metal : faster inner loop for C == 32
* metal : fix array initialization
* tests : ifdef
* ggml : switch to padded F16 mask for ggml_soft_max, ggml_flash_attn_ext
* ggml : fix ggml_soft_max mask requirement
* cuda : fix soft_max to use correct mask size
* cuda : add flash_attn kernel (wip)
* metal : optimize softmax for C > 32
* metal : optimize softmax
* tests : minor fix
* cuda : avoid zeroing fragments
* tests : update dims
* cuda : fix __hisinf() result check
* cuda : avoid warp_reduce for smax
* cuda : use int instead of int64_t
Noticeably improves performance (thanks to Johannes)
* cuda : make loops use the same loop values
Thanks Johannes again for the tip
* cuda : unroll some of the loops
* cuda : avoid __hisinf branches
* cuda : use half2 in softmax
* cuda : switch to 1 warp for bs > 16
* cuda : speed-up reduce part of the kernel
* cuda : unroll Q*K^T loop
* cuda : fix -INF block check
* cuda : simplify softmax
* cuda : fix matrix names
* cuda : minor
* llama : adapt to F16 KQ_pos
* llama : adapt new models to F16 KQ_mask
* ggml : fix F16 store (ARM NEON)
* llama : fix type of KQ_mask and KQ_pos
* ggml : fix CPU soft_max
* tests : add hs=256
* cuda : fix build
* metal : improve perf via smaller int registers
* cuda : adapt soft_max to F16 mask and pos
* CUDA: faster FlashAttention, kernel for bs == 1
* 16 cols for Phi-2
* no vec for hs, no hs==256 ncols==32 for Volta
* adjust kernel selection logic
* 4 warps, 256 stride for all D
* no ncols == 64
* Multiple parallel blocks for batch size 1
* fix compile warnings
* fix excessive KQ_b loads
* fix cmake build
* fix KV cache padding, NaN from INFINITY (#6438)
* llama : flash_attn cparam + fix defrag
* server: support flash_attn param
* server: bench: enable flash_attn param
* CUDA: refactor host code, dyn. par. blocks
* fix flash_attn_vec_f16 race condition
* flush softmax exp below threshold to 0
* store temp KQ in registers
* Calculate KQ as FP32 if KQV has GGML_PREC_F32
* Add __hgt2_mask implementation for CUDA 11
* fix KQ FP32 precision fpr parallel_blocks > 1
* llama-bench : add -fa,--flash-attn arg
* metal : add BS=1 kernel for flash attention (#6508)
* metal : add BS=1 kernel for flash attention (wip)
* metal : support more than 1 warps
* metal : opts
* metal : opt
* metal : switch to parallel reduce
* metal : reduce registers
* metal : simplify
* metal : initial FA vec kernel
* metal : use F32 attention accumulators
* batched-bench : add fattn arg
* llama : simplify llama_build_kv_store
ggml-ci
* llama : adapt build_olmo to changes
* ggml : fix arm fp16 store on windows
* metal : clean-up
* metal : clean-up kernel code
* metal : minor
* tests : remove benchmarks
ggml-ci
* ggml : fix avx512 const correctness
ggml-ci
* ggml : fix soft_max with bias on CPU
ggml-ci
* common : print --flash-attn in help
* ggml : fix num dimensions in ggml_flash_attn_ext
* llama : force disable flash attention for incompatible models
* ggml : ggml_soft_max support F16/F32 mask/pos
ggml-ci
* cuda : uint -> uint32_t
* cuda : "constexpr dim3" -> "const dim3"
ggml-ci
* cuda : try to fix __hgt2_mask
ggml-ci
* ggml : add TODO's for F16/F32 mask/pos support in other backends
* llama : replace bool need_kq_pos with use_alibi
* llama : prep ALiBi support for BERT models
ggml-ci
* llama : fix n_batch requirements
ggml-ci
* cont
* server : add help for --flash-attn arg
* llama : disable FA for AMD
* tests : remove TMP_ATTN_BENCH
ggml-ci
* llama : support save/load state with FA enabled
ggml-ci
* ci : add CUDA save-load-state tests
ggml-ci
* llama : llama_kv_cache_clear zeroes data + fix save-load seq
ggml-ci
* llama : fix copy-paste errors, add TODO
* llama : disallow incompatible states
* llama : update llama_state_get_size after v_trans field
* metal : remove tmp log
* llama : add static reminder for llama_state_get_size
* metal : fix max nsg
ggml-ci
* ci : fix arg order
ggml-ci
---------
Co-authored-by: Johannes Gäßler <johannesg@5d6.de>
Co-authored-by: Pierrick HYMBERT <pierrick.hymbert@gmail.com>
* always use calloc
clamp n_kv on failure to read a kv
* ggml : alternative ctx->header.n_kv update
---------
Co-authored-by: slaren <slarengh@gmail.com>
* llamafile : improve sgemm.cpp
- Re-enable by default
- Fix issue described in #6716
- Make code more abstract, elegant, and maintainable
- Faster handling of weirdly shaped `m` an `n` edge cases
* Address review comments
* Help clang produce fma instructions
* Address review comments
* ggml : group all experts in a single ggml_mul_mat_id
cuda : improve mmid row copy
* cuda : fix bin bcast with non-cont src0
* test-backend-ops : only run all mul mat tests for base types
* llama : disable moe offloading with SYCL
---------
Co-authored-by: Georgi Gerganov <ggerganov@gmail.com>
This change upstreams llamafile's cpu matrix multiplication kernels
which improve image and prompt evaluation speed. For starters, Q4_0
and Q8_0 weights should go ~40% faster on CPU. The biggest benefits
are with data types like f16 / f32, which process prompts 2x faster
thus making them faster than quantized data types for prompt evals.
This change also introduces bona fide AVX512 support since tinyBLAS
is able to exploit the larger register file. For example, on my CPU
llama.cpp llava-cli processes an image prompt at 305 tokens/second,
using the Q4_K and Q4_0 types, which has always been faster than if
we used f16 LLaVA weights, which at HEAD go 188 tokens/second. With
this change, f16 LLaVA performance leap frogs to 464 tokens/second.
On Intel Core i9-14900K this change improves F16 prompt perf by 5x.
For example, using llama.cpp at HEAD with Mistral 7b f16 to process
a 215 token prompt will go 13 tok/sec. This change has fixes making
it go 52 tok/sec. It's mostly thanks to my vectorized outer product
kernels but also because I added support for correctly counting the
number of cores on Alderlake, so the default thread count discounts
Intel's new efficiency cores. Only Linux right now can count cores.
This work was sponsored by Mozilla who's given permission to change
the license of this code from Apache 2.0 to MIT. To read more about
what's improved, and how it works, see: https://justine.lol/matmul/
* Remove split metadata when quantize model shards
* Find metadata key by enum
* Correct loop range for gguf_remove_key and code format
* Free kv memory
---------
Co-authored-by: z5269887 <z5269887@unsw.edu.au>
* Add Command R Plus GGUF
* Add Command R Plus GGUF
* Loading works up to LayerNorm2D
* Export new tensors in 1D so they are not quantized.
* Fix embedding layer based on Noeda's example
* Whitespace
* Add line
* Fix unexpected tokens on MPS. Re-add F16 fix. ((Noeda)
* dranger003: Fix block index overflow in CUDA dequantizing.
* Reverted blocked multiplication code as it still has issues and could affect other Llama arches
* export norms as f32
* fix overflow issues during quant and other cleanup
* Type convention
Co-authored-by: Georgi Gerganov <ggerganov@gmail.com>
* dranger003: Fix more int overflow during quant.
---------
Co-authored-by: S <seast@Ss-Mac-Studio.local>
Co-authored-by: S <s@example.com>
Co-authored-by: slaren <slarengh@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Georgi Gerganov <ggerganov@gmail.com>
* ggml : update mul_mat_id to use the same tensor for all the experts
* update cuda
* minor
* update metal
* update test-backend-ops
* fix cuda
* Update ggml-metal.m
Co-authored-by: Georgi Gerganov <ggerganov@gmail.com>
* update convert.py
* update convert-hf-to-gguf.py
* update convert.py for mixtral hf models
* Update convert-hf-to-gguf.py
Co-authored-by: Georgi Gerganov <ggerganov@gmail.com>
* cuda : support non-pow-2 number of experts
* allow quantize to work for split and merged experts models in the same way
* cleanup + disable mmap automatically with split tensors models
* update imatrix
* test-backend-ops : test qwen argsort
* update grok model loading
* llama : add merged experts tensors to the grok tensor map
* minor
* gguf : bump version
* fix quantizing of merged experts
* convert-hf-to-gguf.py : update grok (untested)
* make linter happy
* cuda/argsort : use shared memory instead of pool memory
* convert : fix grok tensor names
* metal : add support for non-pow-2 argsort
* llama : more loader cleanup, better error checking
* cuda : fix warning
* llama : still use mmap for loading old models, but copy the data to a host buffer
* add review note
* llama : remove ffn tensor counting + add sanity check
ggml-ci
* convert : fix handling of n_experts == None
ggml-ci
* imatrix : fix ncall counters
* llama : produce error if imatrix size does not match
* quantize : terminate on errors + trace logs
ggml-ci
* metal : pad shared memory to 16 bytes
---------
Co-authored-by: Georgi Gerganov <ggerganov@gmail.com>
* Fix Vulkan no kv offload incoherence
* Add k-quant mul mat mat shaders
* Rework working buffer allocation, reduces vram use noticeably
Clean up cpu assist code, replaced with ggml-backend offload function
* Default to all dedicated GPUs
* Add fallback for integrated GPUs if no dedicated GPUs are found
* Add debug info which device is allocating memory
* Fix Intel dequant issue
Fix validation issue
* Fix Vulkan GGML_OP_GET_ROWS implementation
* Clean up merge artifacts
* Remove Vulkan warning
* llama : greatly reduce logits memory usage
* llama : more compact state saving and reloading
* llama : fix lctx.n_outputs not being set before building graph
* perplexity : adapt to the logits API changes
* perplexity : fix Winogrande, use correct logits for second choice start
The first logits used to evaluate the second choice were not from
the end of the common prefix; instead, they were the logits from the end
of the first choice. This has been corrected.
The previous implementation sometimes had outliers in the scores of
choices for some tasks, and the logic to skip choices words
in the log-likelihood evaluation probably was an attempt to reduce those,
but it was complex and didn't quite seem to be the right thing.
This is simpler now, and the outlier scores aren't there anymore.
* perplexity : normalize spaces and punctuation in Winogrande sentences
* llama : fix embedding conditions
* llama : fix llama_get_embeddings_ith when the resulting id is 0
* llama : fix wrong n_outputs in llama_set_inputs
A mismatch happened when using a smaller n_ubatch than n_batch and then using
llama_batch_get_one(). The decision of what n_outputs should be now almost
fully depends on how lctx.n_outputs is set in llama_decode_internal.
The conditions are simpler this way.
* llama : when saving the state, recalculate n_outputs
This ensures the correct number of outputs for the entire previous batch
is stored in the session file, even when n_ubatch is smaller than n_batch.
* llama : fix not-skipping outputs of non-causal models
* llama : fix running a batch with n_outputs == 0
It previously worked because lctx.inp_out_ids was not initialized,
so it pointed to some garbage address which was somehow still valid when I
ran my tests.
* llama : keep same graph topology even when n_outputs == 0
* ggml : saner ggml_can_repeat with empty tensors
* ggml : future-proof ggml_is_empty by using GGML_MAX_DIMS - 1
* ggml : do not multi-thread ops returning empty tensors
* ggml : make ggml_is_empty public and work with views
* llama : use a vector for ctx->output_ids
* llama : rework reallocation logic for llama_output_reserve
Now comparing the actual size with the new total size of the output buffer
to allow more efficient enabling and disabling of the embeddings
and/or logits output in the future.
* ggml : skip empty tensors in all backends
* llama : fix llama_output_reserve nullptr deref when new_size is 0
* perplexity : make Winogrande work as it does on master
The problems with the Winogrande implementation will
need to be fixed in a separate PR to ease review.
* llama : clearer error messages for invalid logits or embeddings ids
* llama : assert all models that can have inp_out_ids
Since the graph topology is now constant, this presence check
can be done even when there are no outputs.
* llama : assert logits and embd buffers exist before writing to them
* llama : handle errors from llama_output_reserve at call sites
* perplexity : make hellaswag and multiple-choice outputs identical to master
Due to how the KV cache is updated, the logprobs for tokens in a batch
are very slightly affected by the other tokens present in the batch,
so to make hellaswag and multiple-choice return exactly the same results
as on master, the last token of each sequence needs to be evaluated
even though its output is not used at all.
This will probably be changed back in the future to make these benchmarks
a tiny bit faster.
* perplexity : fix division by zero when using less than 100 multiple-choice tasks
* llama : allow loading state saved with a different ctx size
When loading a session file, the context size is now only required to be
at least enough to load the KV cells contained in that session file,
instead of requiring to use exactly the same context size as when saving.
Doing this enables the use-case of extending or shrinking the context size
of a saved session.
This breaks existing session files because the meaning of kv_buf_size
is slightly changed (previously it was the size of the whole KV cache,
now it's only the size of the saved part of it). This allows for
finer-grained sanity checks when loading in an effort to keep kv_buf_size
useful even when the kv_size is changed.
* llama : minor
ggml-ci
* readme : update recent API changes, and warn about Vulkan
---------
Co-authored-by: Georgi Gerganov <ggerganov@gmail.com>
* iq1_m: basics
* iq1_m: basics-2
* iq1_m: CUDA dequantize works
Very 1st shot I get PPL = 9.76 for LLaMA-v2-7B.
* iq1_m: separate shifts for each group of 8 in a block
We get
PPL(LLaMA-v2-7B ) = 9.2810
PPL(LLaMA-v2-13B) = 6.8105
Not bad, but slightly higher than
sqrt(PPL(IQ1_S) * PPL(IQ2_XXS))
which is the expected outcome given that IQ1_M is
halfway between IQ1_S and IQ2_XXS in terms of bpw.
From this, we would expect
PPL = 9.14 for LLaMA-v2-7B
PPL = 6.63 for LLaMA-v2-13B
* iq1_m: go to 3-bit scales
There is slight increase in PPL, but the 0.0625 bpw reduction
in size is totally worth it.
We now have
PPL(LLaMA-v2-7B ) = 9.4469 at 1.96 bpw
PPL(LLaMA-v2-13B) = 6.8717 at 1.93 bpw
PPL(LLaMA-v2-70B) = 4.8568 at 1.85 bpw
* iq1_m: scalar dot product
* iq1_m: AVX2 dot product
* iq1_m: very slightly faster AVX2 dot product
* iq1_m: ARM_NEON dot product
Works, but very slow (10.5 t/s)
* iq1_m: Metal - dequantize works, dot product does not
* iq1_m: Metal now works
About the same performance as iq1_s.
* iq1_m: minor
* iq1_m: checking pure iq1_m quantization
It is pretty bad: PPL(LLaMA-v2-7B) = 34 if we quantize output.weight
with Q4_K.
* iiq1_m: slightly faster ARM_NEON dot product
10.5 t/s -> 11.65 t/s
* iq1_m: faster ARM_NEON dot product
11.65 t/s -> 14.9 t/s
* iq1_m: another minor ARM_NEON dot product improvement
14.9 -> 15.0 t/s
* iq1_m: small PPL improvement via super-block scale adjustment
After quantizing block scales redo the super-block scale fit.
PPL(LLaMA-v2-7B ) = 9.3346
PPL(LLaMA-v2-13B) = 6.8419
PPL(LLaMA-v2-70B) = 4.8294
PPL(Mistral-7B ) = 8.1624
* iq1_m: adapt to CUDA refactoring
* iq1_m: remove unused variable
We have progressed to warnings being errors.
* iq1_m: add to backend-ops tests
* iq1_m: fix Windows ARM
* iq1_m: use common definition of iq1m_scale_t
* cuda: assert -> NO_DEVICE_CODE
* iq1_M: PR comments
---------
Co-authored-by: Iwan Kawrakow <iwan.kawrakow@gmail.com>
* would throw error on VS2022 on GGML_FREE(wmode)
* wchar_t is usually 2 bytes, but malloc wants bytes
* therefore `*wmode_p++ = (wchar_t)*mode;` could write off the end of the allocation
* Fixes error possibly introduced by https://github.com/ggerganov/llama.cpp/pull/6248
* backend : offload large batches to GPU
* fix hip
* code cleanup
* fix CUDA split buffers
* Update ggml-backend-impl.h
Co-authored-by: Johannes Gäßler <johannesg@5d6.de>
* cuda : fix memset without set_device
* imatrix : remove sched affix from weight names
* sched : add a new split if the current one has too many inputs
reduce max inputs per split
more cleanup
* update backends
ggml-ci
---------
Co-authored-by: Johannes Gäßler <johannesg@5d6.de>
* gguf : add support for I64 and F64 arrays
GGML currently does not support I64 or F64 arrays and they are not often
used in machine learning, however if in the future the need arises, it
would be nice to add them now, so that the types are next to the other
types I8, I16, I32 in the enums, and it also reserves their type number.
Furthermore, with this addition the GGUF format becomes very usable for
most computational applications of NumPy (being compatible with the most
common NumPy dtypes: i8, i16, i32, i64, f32, f64), providing a faster,
and more versatile alternative to the `npz` format, and a simpler
alternative to the `hdf5` format.
The change in this PR seems small, not significantly increasing the
maintenance burden. I tested this from Python using GGUFWriter/Reader
and `gguf-dump`, as well as from C, everything seems to work.
* Fix compiler warnings
* llama : add pipeline parallelism support for batch processing with multiple CUDA GPUs
ggml-ci
* server : add -ub, --ubatch-size parameter
* fix server embedding test
* llama : fix Mamba inference for pipeline parallelism
Tested to work correctly with both `main` and `parallel` examples.
* llama : limit max batch size to n_batch
* add LLAMA_SCHED_MAX_COPIES to configure the number of input copies for pipeline parallelism
default increase to 4 (from 2)
changing this value may improve performance for some systems, but increases memory usage
* fix hip build
* fix sycl build (disable cpy_tensor_async)
* fix hip build
* llama : limit n_batch and n_ubatch to n_ctx during context creation
* llama : fix norm backend
* batched-bench : sync after decode
* swiftui : sync after decode
* ggml : allow ggml_get_rows to use multiple threads if they are available
* check n_ubatch >= n_tokens with non-casual attention
* llama : do not limit n_batch to n_ctx with non-casual attn
* server : construct batch with size of llama_n_batch
* ggml_backend_cpu_graph_compute : fix return value when alloc fails
* llama : better n_batch and n_ubatch comment
* fix merge
* small fix
* reduce default n_batch to 2048
---------
Co-authored-by: Francis Couture-Harpin <git@compilade.net>
Co-authored-by: Georgi Gerganov <ggerganov@gmail.com>
* windows arm ci
* fix `error C2078: too many initializers` with ggml_vld1q_u32 macro for MSVC ARM64
* fix `warning C4146: unary minus operator applied to unsigned type, result still unsigned`
* fix `error C2065: '__fp16': undeclared identifier`
* mamba : begin working on support for Mamba SSM
* mamba : begin figuring out how to (ab)use the kv cache for Mamba
* mamba : recurrent inference almost works, but incoherent
* mamba : recurrent inference WORKS!!!
* convert : optionally use d_conv and d_state from config.json for Mamba
* mamba : refactor recurrent conv, resulting in 20% perf increase
It's still slower than I'd like, but I did not really optimize `ggml_exp` yet.
I also refactored `ggml_exp` to work with tensors with more than 2 dimensions.
* ggml : parallelize ggml_exp
This results in 8% faster token generation for Mamba-130M.
* mamba : simplify the conv step with a self-overlapping view
Turns out the conv_state can be made smaller by one column.
Note that this breaks existing GGUFs of Mamba,
because the key_value_length field is tied to the conv_state size.
Convolution with a self-overlapping view is cool!
And it's much simpler than what I initially thought would be necessary
to make the convolution step work with more than 1 token at a time.
Next step is to make the SSM step work on batches of tokens too,
and thus I need to figure out a way to make a parallel selective scan
which will keep the ssm_state small and won't make it bigger
by a factor of (n_layer * batch_size).
* llama : fix Mamba KV self size wrongly displaying as f16 instead of f32
Relatedly, I also tried to see if other types than f32 worked for the states,
but they don't, because of the operators used.
It's probably better anyway to keep lots of precision there,
since the states are small anyway.
* mamba : fix self-overlapping view depth stride
* mamba : handle batches of more than 1 token
This means running Mamba no longer crashes when using the default settings!
And probably also slightly faster prompt processing.
Both batched and non-batched processing yield the same output.
Previously, the state was not cleared when starting a sequence.
Next step is to make the KV cache API work as expected for Mamba models.
* ggml: add ggml_ssm_scan to help with parallel selective scan
If the selective scan was implemented without a custom operator,
there would be waaay too many nodes in the graph. For example,
for Mamba-130M, with a batch size of 512 (the default),
a naive selective scan could add at least 24*512=12288 nodes,
which is more than LLAMA_MAX_NODES (8192),
and that's only for the smallest Mamba model.
So it's much cleaner with a custom operator.
Not sure about the name, though.
* ggml : in ggml_ssm_scan, merge multiple rows in the same vec operation
This will help with performance on CPU if ggml_vec_mul_f32
and ggml_vec_add_f32 are ever optimized with SIMD.
* mamba : very basic quantization support
Mostly works, but there is currently no difference
between the variants of a k-quant (e.g. Q4_K_S and Q4_K_M are the same).
Most of the SSM-specific weights can be kept in f32 without affecting
the size that much, since they are relatively small.
(the linear projection weights are responsible for most of Mamba's size)
Too much quantization seems to make the state degrade quite fast, and
the model begins to output gibberish.
It seems to affect bigger models to a lesser extent than small models,
but I'm not sure by how much.
Experimentation will be needed to figure out which weights are more important
for the _M (and _L?) variants of k-quants for Mamba.
* convert : fix wrong name for layer norm weight of offical Mamba models
I was using Q-bert/Mamba-* models before, which have a slighlty different
naming scheme for the weights.
(they start with "model.layers" instead of "backbone.layers")
* mamba : fuse more steps of the SSM scan in the ggml_ssm_scan operator
This increases performance on CPU by around 30% for prompt processing,
and by around 20% for text generation.
However, it also makes the ggml_exp and ggml_soft_plus operators unused.
Whether or not they should be kept will be decided later.
* convert : for Mamba, also consider the "MambaLMHeadModel" arch name
It's the name of the class of the official implementation,
though they don't use it (yet) in the "architectures" field of config.json
* mamba : fix vocab size problems with official models
The perplexity was waaaay to high for models with a non-round vocab size.
Not sure why, but it needed to be fixed in the metadata.
Note that this breaks existing GGUF-converted Mamba models,
but **only if** the vocab size was not already rounded.
* ggml : remove ggml_exp and ggml_soft_plus
They did not exist anyway outside of this branch,
and since ggml_ssm_scan fused operations together, they are unused.
It's always possible to bring them back if needed.
* mamba : remove some useless comments
No code change.
* convert : fix flake8 linter errors
* mamba : apply suggestions from code review
* mamba : remove unecessary branch for row-wise ssm_state and C multiplication
It was previously done to avoid permuting when only one token is processed
at a time (like when generating text), but permuting is cheap,
and dynamically changing the compute graph is not future-proof.
* ggml : in ggml_ssm_scan, use more appropriate asserts
* ggml : rename the destination pointer in ggml_compute_forward_ssm_scan_f32
* mamba : multiple sequences, but one at a time
This is a step towards making this Mamba implementation usable
with the server example (the way the system prompt is kept when clearing
the client slots will need to be changed before this can work, though).
The KV cache size for this kind of model is tied to the maximum number
of sequences kept at any single time.
For now, this number is obtained from n_parallel (plus one,
to have an extra sequence to dedicate to the system prompt),
but there might be a better way to do this which won't also
make the main example use 2 cells even if only 1 is really used.
(for this specific case, --parallel 0 helps)
Simultaneous sequence processing will probably require changes to
ggml_ssm_scan, and possibly a new operator for the conv step.
* mamba : support llama_kv_cache_seq_cp
This (mis)uses the logic around K shifts, because tokens in a state
can't be shifted anyway, and because inp_K_shift has the right shape and type.
Using ggml_get_rows is a nice way to do copies, but copy chains can't work.
Fortunately, copy chains don't really seem to be used in the examples.
Each KV cell is dedicated to the sequence ID corresponding to its own index.
* mamba : use a state mask
It's cleaner than the previous heuristic of
checking for the pos of the first token in the batch.
inp_KQ_mask could not be re-used for this, because it has the wrong shape
and because it seems more suited to the next step of
simultaneous sequence processing (helping with the problem of
remembering which token belongs to which sequence(s)/state(s)).
* llama : replace the usage of n_ctx with kv_self.size in many places
* mamba : use n_tokens directly instead of n_tok
* mamba : in comments, properly refer to KV cells instead of slots
* mamba : reduce memory usage of ggml_ssm_scan
From 290.37 MiB to 140.68 MiB of CPU compute buffer size
with Mamba 3B with a batch size of 512.
The result tensor of ggml_ssm_scan was previously a big part
of the CPU compute buffer size. To make it smaller,
it does not contain the intermediate ssm states anymore.
Both y and the last ssm state are combined in the result tensor,
because it seems only a single tensor can be returned by an operator
with the way the graph is built.
* mamba : simultaneous sequence processing
A batch can now contain tokens from multiple sequences.
This is necessary for at least the parallel example, the server example,
and the HellaSwag test in the perplexity example.
However, for this to be useful, uses of llama_kv_cache_seq_rm/cp
will need to be changed to work on whole sequences.
* ggml : add ggml_ssm_conv as a new operator for the conv step of Mamba
This operator makes it possible to use and update the correct states
for each token of the batch in the same way as ggml_ssm_scan.
Other solutions which use existing operators would need loops which would
add too many nodes to the graph (at least the ones I thought of).
Using this operator further reduces the size of the CPU compute buffer
from 140.68 MiB to 103.20 MiB with Mamba 3B with a batch size of 512.
And (at least on CPU), it's a bit faster than before.
Note that "ggml_ssm_conv" is probably not the most appropriate name,
and it could be changed if a better one is found.
* llama : add inp_s_seq as a new input tensor
The most convenient implementation to select the correct state (for Mamba)
for each token is to directly get the correct index from a tensor.
This is why inp_s_seq is storing int32_t and not floats.
The other, less convenient way to select the correct state would be
to have inp_KQ_mask contain 1.0f for each state used by a token
and 0.0f otherwise. This complicates quickly fetching the first used
state of a token, and is also less efficient because a whole row
of the mask would always need to be read for each token.
Using indexes makes it easy to stop searching when there are
no more sequences for a token, and the first sequence assigned
is always very quickly available (it's the first element of each row).
* mamba : support llama_kv_cache_seq_cp copy chains
* mamba : support shifting and dividing the kv cache pos
* mamba : make the server and parallel examples work with whole sequences
A seq_id is dedicated to the system prompt in both cases.
* llama : make llama_kv_cache_seq_rm return whether it succeeded or not
* mamba : dedicate an input tensor for state copy indices
This is cleaner and makes it easier to adapt when/if token positions
(and by extension, inp_K_shift) are no longer integers.
* mamba : adapt perplexity, batched, and batched-bench examples
* perplexity : limit the max number of sequences
This adapts to what the loaded model can provide.
* llama : add llama_n_max_seq to get the upper limit for seq_ids
Used by the perplexity example.
* batched : pass n_parallel to the model's context params
This should have been there already, but it wasn't.
* batched-bench : reserve sequences to support Mamba
* batched-bench : fix tokens being put in wrong sequences
Generation quality isn't what's measured in there anyway,
but at least using the correct sequences avoids using non-consecutive
token positions.
* mamba : stop abusing attention metadata
This breaks existing converted-to-GGUF Mamba models,
but will allow supporting mixed architectures like MambaFormer
without needing to break Mamba models.
This will also allow changing the size of Mamba's states
without having to reconvert models in the future.
(e.g. using something else than d_conv - 1 columns for the conv_states
will not require breaking existing converted Mamba models again)
* gguf-py : add new KV metadata key-value pairs for Mamba
* llama : add new metadata key-value pairs for Mamba
* llama : guard against divisions by zero when n_head is 0
* mamba : rename "unlimited" KV cache property to "recurrent"
* mamba : more correctly update the "used" field of the KV cache
* ggml : in ggml_ssm_scan, use a threshold for soft_plus
This is how the official Mamba implementation does it,
and it's also what torch.nn.Softplus does.
* convert : for Mamba, fallback to internal NeoX tokenizer
The resulting models are exactly the same
as if the tokenizer.json and tokenizer_config.json of GPT-NeoX were there.
* mamba : support state saving and restoring
* ggml : implicitly pass src tensors through dst for Mamba-related ops
* mamba : clarify some comments
* server : fix cache_tokens not getting correctly resized
Otherwise, when the "we have to evaluate at least 1 token" special case
was triggered, an extra token was kept in cache_tokens even if it was
removed from the KV cache.
For Mamba, this caused useless prompt reprocessing when the previous
request triggered the above case.
* convert-hf : support new metadata keys for Mamba
For the models available at
https://huggingface.co/collections/state-spaces/transformers-compatible-mamba-65e7b40ab87e5297e45ae406
* mamba : rename metadata to be more similar to transformers library
This breaks existing converted-to-GGUF models,
but the metadata names are more "standard".
* mamba : support mamba-*-hf models
These models share their token_embd.weight with their output.weight
* mamba : add missing spaces
This is purely a formatting change.
* convert-hf : omit output.weight when identical with token_embd.weight
Only for Mamba for now, but it might be relevant for other models eventually.
Most Mamba models actually share these two tensors, albeit implicitly.
* readme : add Mamba to supported models, and add recent API changes
* mamba : move state_seq and state_mask views outside layer loop
A few tensors were also missing `struct` in front of `ggml_tensor`.
* using enum as an exit code instead of macros
* update return type from enum to unsigned int
* indentation fix
* compound update
ggml_compute_exit_code -> ggml_status
changed ggml_status from a bit-field type to simple codes
ggml_status to string cast
* ggml_status to string cast
* GGML_CALL was removed
Co-authored-by: slaren <slarengh@gmail.com>
---------
Co-authored-by: slaren <slarengh@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Georgi Gerganov <ggerganov@gmail.com>
* add magika inference example
* ggml : fix unaligned accesses in custom ops
* ggml : fix FP32 GELU for values that exceed the FP16 range
* use ggml_pool_1d
* add README
* Update README.md
* pad inputs if the files are too small
* cleanup
ggml-ci
* Introduce backend GUIDs
Initial proposed implementation of backend GUIDs
(Discussed in https://github.com/ggerganov/ggml/pull/741)
Hardcoded CPU backend GUID (for now)
Change ggml_backend_is_cpu logic to use GUID
* Remove redundant functions
Remove redundant functions `ggml_backend_i::get_name` and `ggml_backend_guid` which are not desired for future expansion
* Add spaces to match style
Co-authored-by: slaren <slarengh@gmail.com>
* Fix brace style to match
Co-authored-by: slaren <slarengh@gmail.com>
* Add void to () in function signature
Co-authored-by: slaren <slarengh@gmail.com>
* Add back ggml_backend_guid and make CPU_GUID a local static in ggml_backend_cpu_guid
* add guids to all backends
ggml-ci
---------
Co-authored-by: slaren <slarengh@gmail.com>
* WIP: make i-quants work for QK_K = 64
* iq2_xs: attempt to fix AVX dot product for QK_K = 64
Tests pass, but I get gibberish.
* QK_K = 64 tests pass on ARM_NEON and Metal
Sadly, that does not mean it actually works.
* Make CUDA compile with QK_K = 64
Tests don't pass, plus we get misaligned access
* Q2_K: fixed bug in imatrix quantization for QK_K = 64
* iq1_s: turn off SIMD implementation for QK_K = 64 (it does not work)
---------
Co-authored-by: Iwan Kawrakow <iwan.kawrakow@gmail.com>
* Try IQ4_NL with blocks of 64 - does not look good
* iq4_xs: go to super-blocks of 256 and 6-bit scales for blocks of 32
* iq4_xs: CUDA works - 133.2 t/s
* iq4_xs: AVX2 dot product
* iq4_xs: ARM_NEON dot product
* iq4_nl: Metal implementation
As usual, Metal / Apple Silicon don't like my quants.
* iq3_xs: minor fix
* iq4_xs: shrink by using IQ3_S for attn_k and attn_q
* iq4_xs: revert using IQ3_S for attn_k and attn_v
PPL vs size is good, but CPU performance suffers: on M2 Max
TG-128 drops to 21.7 t/s from 28.8, and on a Ryzen-7950X
to 14.5 t/s from 15.8 t/s. On CUDA we have 135 t/s when
using IQ3_S vs 133 t/s with pure IQ4_XS.
* Fix CI
* iq4_xs: Added forgotten check for 256 divisibility
---------
Co-authored-by: Iwan Kawrakow <iwan.kawrakow@gmail.com>
* Adding IQ2_S and IQ2_M as a single cumulative commit
* Update examples/quantize/quantize.cpp
Co-authored-by: Georgi Gerganov <ggerganov@gmail.com>
---------
Co-authored-by: Iwan Kawrakow <iwan.kawrakow@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Georgi Gerganov <ggerganov@gmail.com>
* iq4_nl: squash commits for easier rebase
* Basics (quantize, dequantize)
* CUDA dequantize and dot product
* Slightly faster CUDA dot product (120 t/s)
* Switch to 6-bit scales
* Scalar dot product
* AVX2 dot product
* ARM_NEON dot product
* Works on metal, but still slow
* Slightly better Metal dot product
* Another small Metal improvement
* Metal dot product is getting there
* Faster CUDA dot product
* Add 1/8 ffn_down layers as Q5_K when no imatrix has been provided
* Report the actual bpw
* Add _xs mix that is 4.05 bpw for non-MoE models
* Remove IQ4_XS for now, slightly adjust kvalues_iq4nl
* AVX2 dot product uses Q8_0 instead of Q8_K
* Add to test-backend-ops
* Minor fix
* Also use use Q5_K for attn_output in MoE models
* Fixes after merging latest master
* Switching to blocks of 32
* AVX2 for blocks of 32
* Scaler dot product for blocks of 32
* ARM_NEON dot product for blocks of 32
* Metal kernels for blocks of 32
* Slightly faster Metal kernels
* Resurrecting iq3_xs
After all the experimentation, nothing was better than this.
* Minor PPL improvement via a block scale fudge factor
* Minor improvement via 3 neighbours
* iq3_xs: working scalar and AVX2 dot products
* iq3_xs: ARM_NEON dot product - works but extremely slow (10 t/s)
* iq3_xs: working Metal implementation
* Adding IQ3_M - IQ3_XS mix with mostly Q4_K
* iiq3_xs: a 3.4375 bpw variant
* iq3_xs: make CUDA work for new version
* iq3_xs: make scalar and AVX2 work for new version
* iq3_s: make ARM_NEON work with new version
* iq3_xs: make new version work on metal
Performance is very similar to Q3_K_S
* iq3_xs: tiny Metal speed improvement
* iq3_xs: tiny Metal speed improvement
* Fix stupid warning
* Q3_K_XS now uses a mix of IQ3_XS and IQ3_XXS
* iq3_xs: rename to iq3_s
* iq3_s: make tests pass
* Move Q3_K_XS mix to 3.25 bpw
* Attempt to fix failing tests
* Another attempt to fix the Windows builds
* Attempt to fix ROCm
* ROCm again
* iq3_s: partial fix for QK_K = 64
* iq3_s: make it work on metal for QK_K = 64
Pleasent surprise: the coding was super-block size independent,
so all it took was to delete some QK_K == 256 guards.
* Will this fix ROCm?
---------
Co-authored-by: Iwan Kawrakow <iwan.kawrakow@gmail.com>