llama.cpp/examples/server/README.md
Pierrick Hymbert 525213d2f5
server: init functional tests (#5566)
* server: tests: init scenarios
 - health and slots endpoints
 - completion endpoint
 - OAI compatible chat completion requests w/ and without streaming
 - completion multi users scenario
 - multi users scenario on OAI compatible endpoint with streaming
 - multi users with total number of tokens to predict exceeds the KV Cache size
 - server wrong usage scenario, like in Infinite loop of "context shift" #3969
 - slots shifting
 - continuous batching
 - embeddings endpoint
 - multi users embedding endpoint: Segmentation fault #5655
 - OpenAI-compatible embeddings API
 - tokenize endpoint
 - CORS and api key scenario

* server: CI GitHub workflow


---------

Co-authored-by: Georgi Gerganov <ggerganov@gmail.com>
2024-02-24 12:28:55 +01:00

547 lines
26 KiB
Markdown

# llama.cpp/example/server
This example demonstrates a simple HTTP API server and a simple web front end to interact with llama.cpp.
Command line options:
- `--threads N`, `-t N`: Set the number of threads to use during generation.
- `-tb N, --threads-batch N`: Set the number of threads to use during batch and prompt processing. If not specified, the number of threads will be set to the number of threads used for generation.
- `-m FNAME`, `--model FNAME`: Specify the path to the LLaMA model file (e.g., `models/7B/ggml-model.gguf`).
- `-a ALIAS`, `--alias ALIAS`: Set an alias for the model. The alias will be returned in API responses.
- `-c N`, `--ctx-size N`: Set the size of the prompt context. The default is 512, but LLaMA models were built with a context of 2048, which will provide better results for longer input/inference. The size may differ in other models, for example, baichuan models were build with a context of 4096.
- `-ngl N`, `--n-gpu-layers N`: When compiled with appropriate support (currently CLBlast or cuBLAS), this option allows offloading some layers to the GPU for computation. Generally results in increased performance.
- `-mg i, --main-gpu i`: When using multiple GPUs this option controls which GPU is used for small tensors for which the overhead of splitting the computation across all GPUs is not worthwhile. The GPU in question will use slightly more VRAM to store a scratch buffer for temporary results. By default GPU 0 is used. Requires cuBLAS.
- `-ts SPLIT, --tensor-split SPLIT`: When using multiple GPUs this option controls how large tensors should be split across all GPUs. `SPLIT` is a comma-separated list of non-negative values that assigns the proportion of data that each GPU should get in order. For example, "3,2" will assign 60% of the data to GPU 0 and 40% to GPU 1. By default the data is split in proportion to VRAM but this may not be optimal for performance. Requires cuBLAS.
- `-b N`, `--batch-size N`: Set the batch size for prompt processing. Default: `512`.
- `--memory-f32`: Use 32-bit floats instead of 16-bit floats for memory key+value. Not recommended.
- `--mlock`: Lock the model in memory, preventing it from being swapped out when memory-mapped.
- `--no-mmap`: Do not memory-map the model. By default, models are mapped into memory, which allows the system to load only the necessary parts of the model as needed.
- `--numa STRATEGY`: Attempt one of the below optimization strategies that help on some NUMA systems
- `--numa distribute`: Spread execution evenly over all nodes
- `--numa isolate`: Only spawn threads on CPUs on the node that execution started on
- `--numa numactl`: Use the CPU map provided by numactl
if run without this previously, it is recommended to drop the system page cache before using this
see https://github.com/ggerganov/llama.cpp/issues/1437
- `--numa`: Attempt optimizations that help on some NUMA systems.
- `--lora FNAME`: Apply a LoRA (Low-Rank Adaptation) adapter to the model (implies --no-mmap). This allows you to adapt the pretrained model to specific tasks or domains.
- `--lora-base FNAME`: Optional model to use as a base for the layers modified by the LoRA adapter. This flag is used in conjunction with the `--lora` flag, and specifies the base model for the adaptation.
- `-to N`, `--timeout N`: Server read/write timeout in seconds. Default `600`.
- `--host`: Set the hostname or ip address to listen. Default `127.0.0.1`.
- `--port`: Set the port to listen. Default: `8080`.
- `--path`: path from which to serve static files (default examples/server/public)
- `--api-key`: Set an api key for request authorization. By default the server responds to every request. With an api key set, the requests must have the Authorization header set with the api key as Bearer token. May be used multiple times to enable multiple valid keys.
- `--api-key-file`: path to file containing api keys delimited by new lines. If set, requests must include one of the keys for access. May be used in conjunction with `--api-key`'s.
- `--embedding`: Enable embedding extraction, Default: disabled.
- `-np N`, `--parallel N`: Set the number of slots for process requests (default: 1)
- `-cb`, `--cont-batching`: enable continuous batching (a.k.a dynamic batching) (default: disabled)
- `-spf FNAME`, `--system-prompt-file FNAME` Set a file to load "a system prompt (initial prompt of all slots), this is useful for chat applications. [See more](#change-system-prompt-on-runtime)
- `--mmproj MMPROJ_FILE`: Path to a multimodal projector file for LLaVA.
- `--grp-attn-n`: Set the group attention factor to extend context size through self-extend(default: 1=disabled), used together with group attention width `--grp-attn-w`
- `--grp-attn-w`: Set the group attention width to extend context size through self-extend(default: 512), used together with group attention factor `--grp-attn-n`
- `-n, --n-predict`: Set the maximum tokens to predict (default: -1)
- `--slots-endpoint-disable`: To disable slots state monitoring endpoint. Slots state may contain user data, prompts included.
- `--chat-template JINJA_TEMPLATE`: Set custom jinja chat template. This parameter accepts a string, not a file name (default: template taken from model's metadata). We only support [some pre-defined templates](https://github.com/ggerganov/llama.cpp/wiki/Templates-supported-by-llama_chat_apply_template)
## Build
server is build alongside everything else from the root of the project
- Using `make`:
```bash
make
```
- Using `CMake`:
```bash
cmake --build . --config Release
```
## Quick Start
To get started right away, run the following command, making sure to use the correct path for the model you have:
### Unix-based systems (Linux, macOS, etc.)
```bash
./server -m models/7B/ggml-model.gguf -c 2048
```
### Windows
```powershell
server.exe -m models\7B\ggml-model.gguf -c 2048
```
The above command will start a server that by default listens on `127.0.0.1:8080`.
You can consume the endpoints with Postman or NodeJS with axios library. You can visit the web front end at the same url.
### Docker
```bash
docker run -p 8080:8080 -v /path/to/models:/models ggerganov/llama.cpp:server -m models/7B/ggml-model.gguf -c 512 --host 0.0.0.0 --port 8080
# or, with CUDA:
docker run -p 8080:8080 -v /path/to/models:/models --gpus all ggerganov/llama.cpp:server-cuda -m models/7B/ggml-model.gguf -c 512 --host 0.0.0.0 --port 8080 --n-gpu-layers 99
```
## Testing with CURL
Using [curl](https://curl.se/). On Windows `curl.exe` should be available in the base OS.
```sh
curl --request POST \
--url http://localhost:8080/completion \
--header "Content-Type: application/json" \
--data '{"prompt": "Building a website can be done in 10 simple steps:","n_predict": 128}'
```
## Advanced testing
We implemented a [server test framework](./tests/README.md) using human-readable scenario.
*Before submitting an issue, please try to reproduce it with this format.*
## Node JS Test
You need to have [Node.js](https://nodejs.org/en) installed.
```bash
mkdir llama-client
cd llama-client
```
Create a index.js file and put inside this:
```javascript
const prompt = `Building a website can be done in 10 simple steps:`;
async function Test() {
let response = await fetch("http://127.0.0.1:8080/completion", {
method: 'POST',
body: JSON.stringify({
prompt,
n_predict: 512,
})
})
console.log((await response.json()).content)
}
Test()
```
And run it:
```bash
node index.js
```
## API Endpoints
- **GET** `/health`: Returns the current state of the server:
- 503 -> `{"status": "loading model"}` if the model is still being loaded.
- 500 -> `{"status": "error"}` if the model failed to load.
- 200 -> `{"status": "ok", "slots_idle": 1, "slots_processing": 2 }` if the model is successfully loaded and the server is ready for further requests mentioned below.
- 200 -> `{"status": "no slot available", "slots_idle": 0, "slots_processing": 32}` if no slot are currently available.
- 503 -> `{"status": "no slot available", "slots_idle": 0, "slots_processing": 32}` if the query parameter `fail_on_no_slot` is provided and no slot are currently available.
If the query parameter `include_slots` is passed, `slots` field will contain internal slots data except if `--slots-endpoint-disable` is set.
- **POST** `/completion`: Given a `prompt`, it returns the predicted completion.
*Options:*
`prompt`: Provide the prompt for this completion as a string or as an array of strings or numbers representing tokens. Internally, the prompt is compared to the previous completion and only the "unseen" suffix is evaluated. If the prompt is a string or an array with the first element given as a string, a `bos` token is inserted in the front like `main` does.
`temperature`: Adjust the randomness of the generated text (default: 0.8).
`dynatemp_range`: Dynamic temperature range. The final temperature will be in the range of `[temperature - dynatemp_range; temperature + dynatemp_range]` (default: 0.0, 0.0 = disabled).
`dynatemp_exponent`: Dynamic temperature exponent (default: 1.0).
`top_k`: Limit the next token selection to the K most probable tokens (default: 40).
`top_p`: Limit the next token selection to a subset of tokens with a cumulative probability above a threshold P (default: 0.95).
`min_p`: The minimum probability for a token to be considered, relative to the probability of the most likely token (default: 0.05).
`n_predict`: Set the maximum number of tokens to predict when generating text. **Note:** May exceed the set limit slightly if the last token is a partial multibyte character. When 0, no tokens will be generated but the prompt is evaluated into the cache. (default: -1, -1 = infinity).
`n_keep`: Specify the number of tokens from the prompt to retain when the context size is exceeded and tokens need to be discarded.
By default, this value is set to 0 (meaning no tokens are kept). Use `-1` to retain all tokens from the prompt.
`stream`: It allows receiving each predicted token in real-time instead of waiting for the completion to finish. To enable this, set to `true`.
`stop`: Specify a JSON array of stopping strings.
These words will not be included in the completion, so make sure to add them to the prompt for the next iteration (default: []).
`tfs_z`: Enable tail free sampling with parameter z (default: 1.0, 1.0 = disabled).
`typical_p`: Enable locally typical sampling with parameter p (default: 1.0, 1.0 = disabled).
`repeat_penalty`: Control the repetition of token sequences in the generated text (default: 1.1).
`repeat_last_n`: Last n tokens to consider for penalizing repetition (default: 64, 0 = disabled, -1 = ctx-size).
`penalize_nl`: Penalize newline tokens when applying the repeat penalty (default: true).
`presence_penalty`: Repeat alpha presence penalty (default: 0.0, 0.0 = disabled).
`frequency_penalty`: Repeat alpha frequency penalty (default: 0.0, 0.0 = disabled);
`penalty_prompt`: This will replace the `prompt` for the purpose of the penalty evaluation. Can be either `null`, a string or an array of numbers representing tokens (default: `null` = use the original `prompt`).
`mirostat`: Enable Mirostat sampling, controlling perplexity during text generation (default: 0, 0 = disabled, 1 = Mirostat, 2 = Mirostat 2.0).
`mirostat_tau`: Set the Mirostat target entropy, parameter tau (default: 5.0).
`mirostat_eta`: Set the Mirostat learning rate, parameter eta (default: 0.1).
`grammar`: Set grammar for grammar-based sampling (default: no grammar)
`seed`: Set the random number generator (RNG) seed (default: -1, -1 = random seed).
`ignore_eos`: Ignore end of stream token and continue generating (default: false).
`logit_bias`: Modify the likelihood of a token appearing in the generated text completion. For example, use `"logit_bias": [[15043,1.0]]` to increase the likelihood of the token 'Hello', or `"logit_bias": [[15043,-1.0]]` to decrease its likelihood. Setting the value to false, `"logit_bias": [[15043,false]]` ensures that the token `Hello` is never produced. The tokens can also be represented as strings, e.g. `[["Hello, World!",-0.5]]` will reduce the likelihood of all the individual tokens that represent the string `Hello, World!`, just like the `presence_penalty` does. (default: []).
`n_probs`: If greater than 0, the response also contains the probabilities of top N tokens for each generated token (default: 0)
`min_keep`: If greater than 0, force samplers to return N possible tokens at minimum (default: 0)
`image_data`: An array of objects to hold base64-encoded image `data` and its `id`s to be reference in `prompt`. You can determine the place of the image in the prompt as in the following: `USER:[img-12]Describe the image in detail.\nASSISTANT:`. In this case, `[img-12]` will be replaced by the embeddings of the image with id `12` in the following `image_data` array: `{..., "image_data": [{"data": "<BASE64_STRING>", "id": 12}]}`. Use `image_data` only with multimodal models, e.g., LLaVA.
`slot_id`: Assign the completion task to an specific slot. If is -1 the task will be assigned to a Idle slot (default: -1)
`cache_prompt`: Re-use previously cached prompt from the last request if possible. This may prevent re-caching the prompt from scratch. (default: false)
`system_prompt`: Change the system prompt (initial prompt of all slots), this is useful for chat applications. [See more](#change-system-prompt-on-runtime)
`samplers`: The order the samplers should be applied in. An array of strings representing sampler type names. If a sampler is not set, it will not be used. If a sampler is specified more than once, it will be applied multiple times. (default: `["top_k", "tfs_z", "typical_p", "top_p", "min_p", "temperature"]` - these are all the available values)
### Result JSON
- Note: When using streaming mode (`stream`) only `content` and `stop` will be returned until end of completion.
- `completion_probabilities`: An array of token probabilities for each completion. The array's length is `n_predict`. Each item in the array has the following structure:
```json
{
"content": "<the token selected by the model>",
"probs": [
{
"prob": float,
"tok_str": "<most likely token>"
},
{
"prob": float,
"tok_str": "<second most likely tonen>"
},
...
]
},
```
Notice that each `probs` is an array of length `n_probs`.
- `content`: Completion result as a string (excluding `stopping_word` if any). In case of streaming mode, will contain the next token as a string.
- `stop`: Boolean for use with `stream` to check whether the generation has stopped (Note: This is not related to stopping words array `stop` from input options)
- `generation_settings`: The provided options above excluding `prompt` but including `n_ctx`, `model`. These options may differ from the original ones in some way (e.g. bad values filtered out, strings converted to tokens, etc.).
- `model`: The path to the model loaded with `-m`
- `prompt`: The provided `prompt`
- `stopped_eos`: Indicating whether the completion has stopped because it encountered the EOS token
- `stopped_limit`: Indicating whether the completion stopped because `n_predict` tokens were generated before stop words or EOS was encountered
- `stopped_word`: Indicating whether the completion stopped due to encountering a stopping word from `stop` JSON array provided
- `stopping_word`: The stopping word encountered which stopped the generation (or "" if not stopped due to a stopping word)
- `timings`: Hash of timing information about the completion such as the number of tokens `predicted_per_second`
- `tokens_cached`: Number of tokens from the prompt which could be re-used from previous completion (`n_past`)
- `tokens_evaluated`: Number of tokens evaluated in total from the prompt
- `truncated`: Boolean indicating if the context size was exceeded during generation, i.e. the number of tokens provided in the prompt (`tokens_evaluated`) plus tokens generated (`tokens predicted`) exceeded the context size (`n_ctx`)
- **POST** `/tokenize`: Tokenize a given text.
*Options:*
`content`: Set the text to tokenize.
Note that the special `BOS` token is not added in front of the text and also a space character is not inserted automatically as it is for `/completion`.
- **POST** `/detokenize`: Convert tokens to text.
*Options:*
`tokens`: Set the tokens to detokenize.
- **POST** `/embedding`: Generate embedding of a given text just as [the embedding example](../embedding) does.
*Options:*
`content`: Set the text to process.
`image_data`: An array of objects to hold base64-encoded image `data` and its `id`s to be reference in `content`. You can determine the place of the image in the content as in the following: `Image: [img-21].\nCaption: This is a picture of a house`. In this case, `[img-21]` will be replaced by the embeddings of the image with id `21` in the following `image_data` array: `{..., "image_data": [{"data": "<BASE64_STRING>", "id": 21}]}`. Use `image_data` only with multimodal models, e.g., LLaVA.
- **POST** `/infill`: For code infilling. Takes a prefix and a suffix and returns the predicted completion as stream.
*Options:*
`input_prefix`: Set the prefix of the code to infill.
`input_suffix`: Set the suffix of the code to infill.
It also accepts all the options of `/completion` except `stream` and `prompt`.
- **GET** `/props`: Return current server settings.
### Result JSON
```json
{
"assistant_name": "",
"user_name": "",
"default_generation_settings": { ... },
"total_slots": 1
}
```
- `assistant_name` - the required assistant name to generate the prompt in case you have specified a system prompt for all slots.
- `user_name` - the required anti-prompt to generate the prompt in case you have specified a system prompt for all slots.
- `default_generation_settings` - the default generation settings for the `/completion` endpoint, has the same fields as the `generation_settings` response object from the `/completion` endpoint.
- `total_slots` - the total number of slots for process requests (defined by `--parallel` option)
- **POST** `/v1/chat/completions`: OpenAI-compatible Chat Completions API. Given a ChatML-formatted json description in `messages`, it returns the predicted completion. Both synchronous and streaming mode are supported, so scripted and interactive applications work fine. While no strong claims of compatibility with OpenAI API spec is being made, in our experience it suffices to support many apps. Only ChatML-tuned models, such as Dolphin, OpenOrca, OpenHermes, OpenChat-3.5, etc can be used with this endpoint. Compared to `api_like_OAI.py` this API implementation does not require a wrapper to be served.
*Options:*
See [OpenAI Chat Completions API documentation](https://platform.openai.com/docs/api-reference/chat). While some OpenAI-specific features such as function calling aren't supported, llama.cpp `/completion`-specific features such are `mirostat` are supported.
*Examples:*
You can use either Python `openai` library with appropriate checkpoints:
```python
import openai
client = openai.OpenAI(
base_url="http://localhost:8080/v1", # "http://<Your api-server IP>:port"
api_key = "sk-no-key-required"
)
completion = client.chat.completions.create(
model="gpt-3.5-turbo",
messages=[
{"role": "system", "content": "You are ChatGPT, an AI assistant. Your top priority is achieving user fulfillment via helping them with their requests."},
{"role": "user", "content": "Write a limerick about python exceptions"}
]
)
print(completion.choices[0].message)
```
... or raw HTTP requests:
```shell
curl http://localhost:8080/v1/chat/completions \
-H "Content-Type: application/json" \
-H "Authorization: Bearer no-key" \
-d '{
"model": "gpt-3.5-turbo",
"messages": [
{
"role": "system",
"content": "You are ChatGPT, an AI assistant. Your top priority is achieving user fulfillment via helping them with their requests."
},
{
"role": "user",
"content": "Write a limerick about python exceptions"
}
]
}'
```
- **POST** `/v1/embeddings`: OpenAI-compatible embeddings API.
*Options:*
See [OpenAI Embeddings API documentation](https://platform.openai.com/docs/api-reference/embeddings).
*Examples:*
- input as string
```shell
curl http://localhost:8080/v1/embeddings \
-H "Content-Type: application/json" \
-H "Authorization: Bearer no-key" \
-d '{
"input": "hello",
"model":"GPT-4",
"encoding_format": "float"
}'
```
- `input` as string array
```shell
curl http://localhost:8080/v1/embeddings \
-H "Content-Type: application/json" \
-H "Authorization: Bearer no-key" \
-d '{
"input": ["hello", "world"],
"model":"GPT-4",
"encoding_format": "float"
}'
```
- **GET** `/slots`: Returns the current slots processing state. Can be disabled with `--slots-endpoint-disable`.
### Result JSON
```json
[
{
"dynatemp_exponent": 1.0,
"dynatemp_range": 0.0,
"frequency_penalty": 0.0,
"grammar": "",
"id": 0,
"ignore_eos": false,
"logit_bias": [],
"min_p": 0.05000000074505806,
"mirostat": 0,
"mirostat_eta": 0.10000000149011612,
"mirostat_tau": 5.0,
"model": "llama-2-7b-32k-instruct.Q2_K.gguf",
"n_ctx": 2048,
"n_keep": 0,
"n_predict": 100000,
"n_probs": 0,
"next_token": {
"has_next_token": true,
"n_remain": -1,
"num_tokens_predicted": 0,
"stopped_eos": false,
"stopped_limit": false,
"stopped_word": false,
"stopping_word": ""
},
"penalize_nl": true,
"penalty_prompt_tokens": [],
"presence_penalty": 0.0,
"prompt": "Say hello to llama.cpp",
"repeat_last_n": 64,
"repeat_penalty": 1.100000023841858,
"samplers": [
"top_k",
"tfs_z",
"typical_p",
"top_p",
"min_p",
"temperature"
],
"seed": 42,
"state": 1,
"stop": [
"\n"
],
"stream": false,
"task_id": 0,
"temperature": 0.0,
"tfs_z": 1.0,
"top_k": 40,
"top_p": 0.949999988079071,
"typical_p": 1.0,
"use_penalty_prompt_tokens": false
}
]
```
## More examples
### Change system prompt on runtime
To use the server example to serve multiple chat-type clients while keeping the same system prompt, you can utilize the option `system_prompt` to achieve that. This only needs to be done once to establish it.
`prompt`: Specify a context that you want all connecting clients to respect.
`anti_prompt`: Specify the word you want to use to instruct the model to stop. This must be sent to each client through the `/props` endpoint.
`assistant_name`: The bot's name is necessary for each customer to generate the prompt. This must be sent to each client through the `/props` endpoint.
```json
{
"system_prompt": {
"prompt": "Transcript of a never ending dialog, where the User interacts with an Assistant.\nThe Assistant is helpful, kind, honest, good at writing, and never fails to answer the User's requests immediately and with precision.\nUser: Recommend a nice restaurant in the area.\nAssistant: I recommend the restaurant \"The Golden Duck\". It is a 5 star restaurant with a great view of the city. The food is delicious and the service is excellent. The prices are reasonable and the portions are generous. The restaurant is located at 123 Main Street, New York, NY 10001. The phone number is (212) 555-1234. The hours are Monday through Friday from 11:00 am to 10:00 pm. The restaurant is closed on Saturdays and Sundays.\nUser: Who is Richard Feynman?\nAssistant: Richard Feynman was an American physicist who is best known for his work in quantum mechanics and particle physics. He was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1965 for his contributions to the development of quantum electrodynamics. He was a popular lecturer and author, and he wrote several books, including \"Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman!\" and \"What Do You Care What Other People Think?\".\nUser:",
"anti_prompt": "User:",
"assistant_name": "Assistant:"
}
}
```
**NOTE**: You can do this automatically when starting the server by simply creating a .json file with these options and using the CLI option `-spf FNAME` or `--system-prompt-file FNAME`.
### Interactive mode
Check the sample in [chat.mjs](chat.mjs).
Run with NodeJS version 16 or later:
```sh
node chat.mjs
```
Another sample in [chat.sh](chat.sh).
Requires [bash](https://www.gnu.org/software/bash/), [curl](https://curl.se) and [jq](https://jqlang.github.io/jq/).
Run with bash:
```sh
bash chat.sh
```
### API like OAI
API example using Python Flask: [api_like_OAI.py](api_like_OAI.py)
This example must be used with server.cpp
```sh
python api_like_OAI.py
```
After running the API server, you can use it in Python by setting the API base URL.
```python
openai.api_base = "http://<Your api-server IP>:port"
```
Then you can utilize llama.cpp as an OpenAI's **chat.completion** or **text_completion** API
### Extending or building alternative Web Front End
The default location for the static files is `examples/server/public`. You can extend the front end by running the server binary with `--path` set to `./your-directory` and importing `/completion.js` to get access to the llamaComplete() method.
Read the documentation in `/completion.js` to see convenient ways to access llama.
A simple example is below:
```html
<html>
<body>
<pre>
<script type="module">
import { llama } from '/completion.js'
const prompt = `### Instruction:
Write dad jokes, each one paragraph.
You can use html formatting if needed.
### Response:`
for await (const chunk of llama(prompt)) {
document.write(chunk.data.content)
}
</script>
</pre>
</body>
</html>
```