* feat: Add python-side constants and conversion for adapter.lora.invocation_string Branch: gabe-l-hart/alora-support Signed-off-by: Gabe Goodhart <ghart@us.ibm.com> * feat: Add c++ side constants for adapter.lora.invocation_string Branch: gabe-l-hart/alora-support Signed-off-by: Gabe Goodhart <ghart@us.ibm.com> * feat: Parse invocation string for adapters from GGUF Branch: gabe-l-hart/alora-support Signed-off-by: Gabe Goodhart <ghart@us.ibm.com> * fix(python): Update conversion to alora_invocation_tokens This is the preferred method in PEFT which is the source of ground truth https://github.com/huggingface/peft/pull/2609/files#diff-13380145401d203d5935c5189dd09879f990b81aa63e8e3aaff8ce9110333f0e Branch: gabe-l-hart/alora-support Signed-off-by: Gabe Goodhart <ghart@us.ibm.com> * fix(cpp): Update to alora_invocation_tokens on c++ side Branch: gabe-l-hart/alora-support Signed-off-by: Gabe Goodhart <ghart@us.ibm.com> * feat: Add C APIs to get alora invocation token array from lora Branch: gabe-l-hart/alora-support Signed-off-by: Gabe Goodhart <ghart@us.ibm.com> * feat: Initial implementation of alora cache logic in server This does not yet do the part to identify the invocation tokens and only apply the lora adapter afterwards, but it does seem to produce correct results if the invocation tokens are the beginning of the uncached input. Branch: gabe-l-hart/alora-support Signed-off-by: Gabe Goodhart <ghart@us.ibm.com> * feat: Identify alora invocation sequences This currently limits to a single enabled alora per slot. Multiple aloras with different invocation sequences would be possible, but it would require a more complex integration of the adapter toggling and is not really a well studied case for alora since it's unclear if one alora can reuse cache from previous prefill computed with a different alora. Branch: gabe-l-hart/alora-support Signed-off-by: Gabe Goodhart <ghart@us.ibm.com> * feat: Only reuse cache for tokens before the alora invocation start This is a bit of an edge case, but theoretically a user could try the same query with the alora disabled (just using the base model), then retry with the alora. The cached tokens from the first pass should be invalid. Branch: gabe-l-hart/alora-support Signed-off-by: Gabe Goodhart <ghart@us.ibm.com> * feat: Handle un-cached tokens that come before the alora activation The solution is to only fill up to the token before the invocation start in the batch if there are any tokens to be prefilled between those pulled from cache and the invocation start. When this is detected, the alora is temporarily disabled with a scale of 0.0, then immediately re-enabled after it has been initialized for the internal graph. Since the batch does not complete the prompt tokens, the remaining prompt tokens are handled in the next task, pulling all of the non-alora tokens from cache and proceeding with prefill for the alora tokens. Branch: gabe-l-hart/alora-support Signed-off-by: Gabe Goodhart <ghart@us.ibm.com> * fix: Use || instead of 'or' Too much python 🤦 Branch: gabe-l-hart/alora-support Signed-off-by: Gabe Goodhart <ghart@us.ibm.com> * fix: Fix off-by-one for limiting cached tokens to before alora start This was the cause of the inconsistent results from the dummy test script with and without the turn that runs the prompt without the adapter before running it with the adapter. Branch: gabe-l-hart/alora-support Signed-off-by: Gabe Goodhart <ghart@us.ibm.com> * fix: Support backwards-compatibility for "invocation_string" in adapter_config.json While this has been replaced in the PEFT PR in favor of alora_invocation_tokens, the existing adapters in the ibm-granite org on HF use "invocation_string," so this will enable backwards compatibility and enable testing now (before PEFT PR changes have percolated everywhere). Branch: gabe-l-hart/alora-support Signed-off-by: Gabe Goodhart <ghart@us.ibm.com> * fix: Remove duplicate logging Signed-off-by: Gabe Goodhart <ghart@us.ibm.com> Co-authored-by: Sigbjørn Skjæret <sigbjorn.skjaeret@scala.com> * feat: Report alora_invocation_string and alora_invocation_tokens from /lora-adapters Branch: gabe-l-hart/alora-support Signed-off-by: Gabe Goodhart <ghart@us.ibm.com> --------- Signed-off-by: Gabe Goodhart <ghart@us.ibm.com> Co-authored-by: Sigbjørn Skjæret <sigbjorn.skjaeret@scala.com>
gguf
This is a Python package for writing binary files in the GGUF (GGML Universal File) format.
See convert_hf_to_gguf.py as an example for its usage.
Installation
pip install gguf
Optionally, you can install gguf with the extra 'gui' to enable the visual GGUF editor.
pip install gguf[gui]
API Examples/Simple Tools
examples/writer.py — Generates example.gguf in the current directory to demonstrate generating a GGUF file. Note that this file cannot be used as a model.
examples/reader.py — Extracts and displays key-value pairs and tensor details from a GGUF file in a readable format.
gguf/scripts/gguf_dump.py — Dumps a GGUF file's metadata to the console.
gguf/scripts/gguf_set_metadata.py — Allows changing simple metadata values in a GGUF file by key.
gguf/scripts/gguf_convert_endian.py — Allows converting the endianness of GGUF files.
gguf/scripts/gguf_new_metadata.py — Copies a GGUF file with added/modified/removed metadata values.
gguf/scripts/gguf_editor_gui.py — Allows for viewing, editing, adding, or removing metadata values within a GGUF file as well as viewing its tensors with a Qt interface.
Development
Maintainers who participate in development of this package are advised to install it in editable mode:
cd /path/to/llama.cpp/gguf-py
pip install --editable .
Note: This may require to upgrade your Pip installation, with a message saying that editable installation currently requires setup.py.
In this case, upgrade Pip to the latest:
pip install --upgrade pip
Automatic publishing with CI
There's a GitHub workflow to make a release automatically upon creation of tags in a specified format.
- Bump the version in
pyproject.toml. - Create a tag named
gguf-vx.x.xwherex.x.xis the semantic version number.
git tag -a gguf-v1.0.0 -m "Version 1.0 release"
- Push the tags.
git push origin --tags
Manual publishing
If you want to publish the package manually for any reason, you need to have twine and build installed:
pip install build twine
Then, follow these steps to release a new version:
- Bump the version in
pyproject.toml. - Build the package:
python -m build
- Upload the generated distribution archives:
python -m twine upload dist/*
Run Unit Tests
From root of this repository you can run this command to run all the unit tests
python -m unittest discover ./gguf-py -v
TODO
- Include conversion scripts as command line entry points in this package.