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* ggml : use 8-bit precision for Q4_1 intermediate results (ARM)
* ggml : optimize ggml_vec_dot_q4_1_q8_0() via vmalq_n_f32
56 ms/token with Q4_1 !
* ggml : AVX2 implementation of ggml_vec_dot_q4_1_q8_0 (#1051)
* gitignore : ignore ppl-*.txt files
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Co-authored-by: slaren <2141330+slaren@users.noreply.github.com>
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Command that calculates some statistics over the errors introduced by
quantization, like mean square error, max error and some percentile errors for layer
weights. Should be useful for testing quantization improvements.
Exposes some internal state from ggml and llama for testing
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Co-authored-by: Locria Cyber <74560659+locriacyber@users.noreply.github.com>
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This is a breaking change that's going to give you three benefits:
1. Your inference commands should load 100x faster
2. You may be able to safely load models 2x larger
3. You can run many concurrent inference processes
This was accomplished by changing the file format so we can mmap()
weights directly into memory without having to read() or copy them
thereby ensuring the kernel can make its file cache pages directly
accessible to our inference processes; and secondly, that the file
cache pages are much less likely to get evicted (which would force
loads to hit disk) because they're no longer competing with memory
pages that were needlessly created by gigabytes of standard i/o.
The new file format supports single-file models like LLaMA 7b, and
it also supports multi-file models like LLaMA 13B. Our Python tool
now merges the foo.1, foo.2, etc. files back into a single file so
that the C++ code which maps it doesn't need to reshape data every
time. That's made llama.cpp so much simpler. Much of its load code
has now been deleted.
Furthermore, this change ensures that tensors are aligned properly
on a 32-byte boundary. That opens the door to seeing if we can get
additional performance gains on some microprocessors, by using ops
that require memory alignment.
Lastly note that both POSIX and the Windows platform are supported
Fixes #91
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* Add a Package.swift for SwiftPM support
* Swap from exclusions to allowlist
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- main -> examples
- utils -> examples (renamed to "common")
- quantize -> examples
- separate tools for "perplexity" and "embedding"
Hope I didn't break something !
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* Nix flake
* Nix: only add Accelerate framework on macOS
* Nix: development shel, direnv and compatibility
* Nix: use python packages supplied by withPackages
* Nix: remove channel compatibility
* Nix: fix ARM neon dotproduct on macOS
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Co-authored-by: Pavol Rusnak <pavol@rusnak.io>
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