main : allow a response-file as the sole parameter (whisper/2019)
* The "main" example now allows a response-file as the sole parameter.
A response-file is a text file with command-line parameters, one per line.
Prefix the name of the response-file with "@" to identify it as such.
It's used under MS Windows to work around command-line length limits.
It may be useful under other platforms to simplify character-escaping.
* 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
Kawrakow [Tue, 26 Mar 2024 14:21:27 +0000 (15:21 +0100)]
IQ1_M: 1.75 bpw quantization (llama/6302)
* 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.
Rick G [Sun, 24 Mar 2024 21:45:56 +0000 (14:45 -0700)]
Fix heap corruption from wmode out-of-bound writes on windows (llama/6272)
* 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
Ondřej Čertík [Fri, 15 Mar 2024 08:46:51 +0000 (02:46 -0600)]
gguf : add support for I64 and F64 arrays (llama/6062)
* 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.
Kawrakow [Mon, 11 Mar 2024 06:51:49 +0000 (07:51 +0100)]
Better 1.5 bit quantization (llama/5971)
* Trying blocvks of 16 for IQ1_S - seems slightly better
* iq1s_blocks16: Adjust scale fudge factor to 1.125
* iq1s_blocks16: going to blocks of 32
with 2048 lattice points, so same bpw.
This is even better than blocks of 16.
Should I try blocks of 64? But to keep the same
bpw, when I go to 4096 lattice points, I need to
remove blocks alltogether and just have superblocks of
256 weights.
* iq1s_blocks16: Use 2*<x^2> as sigma2 in weight adjustment
* iq1s_blocks16: scalar and AVX2 dot products
* iq1s_blocks16: CUDA dot product
* iq1s_blocks16: Metal works, Neon does not
Metal works but TG is dog slow (35 t/s). PP is OKish (493 t/s).
Not seeing the bug in the Neon implementation for now.
* iq1s_blocks16: fixed Neon
* iq1s_blocks16: very slightly faster TG on Metal
Still pathetic at 37 t/s
* iq1s_blocks16: speedup Metal by packing codebook into uint32_t's
* Formatting
* iq1s_blocks16: uint32_t codebook is also better in CUDA
TG-128 is now 204 t/s up from 194 t/s.
PP-512 is 5890 t/s, so significantly better than other quants