stanford_alpaca
llama.cpp
stanford_alpaca | llama.cpp | |
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108 | 782 | |
28,929 | 58,425 | |
1.1% | - | |
2.0 | 10.0 | |
2 months ago | 5 days ago | |
Python | C++ | |
Apache License 2.0 | MIT License |
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stanford_alpaca
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How Open is Generative AI? Part 2
Alpaca is an instruction-oriented LLM derived from LLaMA, enhanced by Stanford researchers with a dataset of 52,000 examples of following instructions, sourced from OpenAI’s InstructGPT through the self-instruct method. The extensive self-instruct dataset, details of data generation, and the model refinement code were publicly disclosed. This model complies with the licensing requirements of its base model. Due to the utilization of InstructGPT for data generation, it also adheres to OpenAI’s usage terms, which prohibit the creation of models competing with OpenAI. This illustrates how dataset restrictions can indirectly affect the resulting fine-tuned model.
- Ask HN: AI/ML papers to catch up with current state of AI?
- OpenAI board in discussions with Sam Altman to return as CEO
- Are there any AI like ChatGPT without content restrictions?
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Fine-tuning LLMs with LoRA: A Gentle Introduction
In this article, we're going to experiment with LoRA and fine-tune Llama Alpaca using commercial hardware.
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Creating a new Finetuned model
Most papers I did read showed at least a thousand, even 10000 at several cases, so I assumed that to be the trend in the case of Low rank adapter(PEFT) training.(source: [2305.14314] QLoRA: Efficient Finetuning of Quantized LLMs (arxiv.org) , Stanford CRFM (Alpaca) and the minimum being openchat/openchat · Hugging Face ; There are a lot more examples)
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Shock tick up for wage growth to 7.3% in blow for Bank of England
I'm not talking about OpenAI ChatGPT I'm talking about things ALPACA, and where did they train these models? Off the existing models for a fraction of a fraction of a fraction of the cost: https://crfm.stanford.edu/2023/03/13/alpaca.html
- Bye bye Bing
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The idea maze for AI startups (2015)
I think there's a new approach for “How do you get the data?” that wasn't available when this article was written in 2015. The new text and image generative models can now be used to synthesize training datasets.
I was working on an typing autocorrect project and needed a corpus of "text messages". Most of the traditional NLP corpuses like those available through NLTK [0] aren't suitable. But it was easy to script ChatGPT to generate thousands of believable text messages by throwing random topics at it.
Similarly, you can synthesize a training dataset by giving GPT the outputs/labels and asking it to generate a variety of inputs. For sentiment analysis... "Give me 1000 negative movie reviews" and "Now give me 1000 positive movie reviews".
The Alpaca folks used GPT-3 to generate high-quality instruction-following datasets [1] based on a small set of human samples.
Etc.
[0] https://www.nltk.org/nltk_data/
[1] https://crfm.stanford.edu/2023/03/13/alpaca.html
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Repos and tutorials for a full finetune (not LoRA)
AFAIK, the original alpaca repo was a full finetune. https://github.com/tatsu-lab/stanford_alpaca
llama.cpp
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IBM Granite: A Family of Open Foundation Models for Code Intelligence
if you can compile stuff, then looking at llama.cpp (what ollama uses) is also interesting: https://github.com/ggerganov/llama.cpp
the server is here: https://github.com/ggerganov/llama.cpp/tree/master/examples/...
And you can search for any GGUF on huggingface
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Ask HN: Affordable hardware for running local large language models?
Yes, Metal seems to allow a maximum of 1/2 of the RAM for one process, and 3/4 of the RAM allocated to the GPU overall. There’s a kernel hack to fix it, but that comes with the usual system integrity caveats. https://github.com/ggerganov/llama.cpp/discussions/2182
- Xmake: A modern C/C++ build tool
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Better and Faster Large Language Models via Multi-Token Prediction
For anyone interested in exploring this, llama.cpp has an example implementation here:
https://github.com/ggerganov/llama.cpp/tree/master/examples/...
- Llama.cpp Bfloat16 Support
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Fine-tune your first large language model (LLM) with LoRA, llama.cpp, and KitOps in 5 easy steps
Getting started with LLMs can be intimidating. In this tutorial we will show you how to fine-tune a large language model using LoRA, facilitated by tools like llama.cpp and KitOps.
- GGML Flash Attention support merged into llama.cpp
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Phi-3 Weights Released
well https://github.com/ggerganov/llama.cpp/issues/6849
- Lossless Acceleration of LLM via Adaptive N-Gram Parallel Decoding
- Llama.cpp Working on Support for Llama3
What are some alternatives?
alpaca-lora - Instruct-tune LLaMA on consumer hardware
ollama - Get up and running with Llama 3, Mistral, Gemma, and other large language models.
ChatGLM-6B - ChatGLM-6B: An Open Bilingual Dialogue Language Model | 开源双语对话语言模型
gpt4all - gpt4all: run open-source LLMs anywhere
Open-Assistant - OpenAssistant is a chat-based assistant that understands tasks, can interact with third-party systems, and retrieve information dynamically to do so.
text-generation-webui - A Gradio web UI for Large Language Models. Supports transformers, GPTQ, AWQ, EXL2, llama.cpp (GGUF), Llama models.
GPTQ-for-LLaMa - 4 bits quantization of LLaMA using GPTQ
Alpaca-Turbo - Web UI to run alpaca model locally
ggml - Tensor library for machine learning
alpaca.cpp - Locally run an Instruction-Tuned Chat-Style LLM