ollama/runner/ollamarunner/runner.go

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Go
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package ollamarunner
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
import (
"bytes"
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
"context"
"encoding/json"
"errors"
"flag"
"fmt"
"image"
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
"log"
"log/slog"
"net"
"net/http"
"os"
"path/filepath"
"regexp"
"runtime"
"strconv"
"strings"
"sync"
"time"
"unicode/utf8"
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
"golang.org/x/sync/semaphore"
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
"github.com/ollama/ollama/api"
"github.com/ollama/ollama/ml"
"github.com/ollama/ollama/model"
"github.com/ollama/ollama/runner/common"
"github.com/ollama/ollama/sample"
_ "github.com/ollama/ollama/model/models"
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
)
// input is an element of the prompt to process, either a token or an image
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
type input struct {
token int32
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
image image.Image
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
}
type Sequence struct {
// batch index
iBatch int
// prompt inputs left to evaluate
inputs []input
// inputs that have been added to a batch but not yet submitted to Forward
pendingInputs []input
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
// tokens that have been generated but not returned yet (e.g. for stop sequences)
pendingResponses []string
// input cache being used by this sequence
cache *InputCacheSlot
// channel to send responses over
responses chan string
// channel to stop decoding (such as if the remote connection is closed)
quit chan bool
// number of tokens to predict
numPredict int
// sampler with transforms to run on generated logits
sampler sample.Sampler
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
// channel to send back the embedding if embedding only
embedding chan []float32
// stop sequences
stop []string
// number of inputs to keep at the beginning when shifting context window
numKeep int32
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
// true if an embedding are to be returned instead of text generation
embeddingOnly bool
doneReason string
// Metrics
startProcessingTime time.Time
startGenerationTime time.Time
numPredicted int
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
numPromptInputs int
}
type NewSequenceParams struct {
numPredict int
stop []string
numKeep int32
sampler sample.Sampler
embedding bool
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
}
func (s *Server) NewSequence(prompt string, images []ImageData, params NewSequenceParams) (*Sequence, error) {
s.ready.Wait()
startTime := time.Now()
inputs, err := s.inputs(prompt, images)
if err != nil {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("failed to process inputs: %w", err)
} else if len(inputs) == 0 {
return nil, errors.New("no input provided")
}
if params.numKeep < 0 {
params.numKeep = int32(len(inputs))
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
}
// Ensure that at least 1 input can be discarded during shift
params.numKeep = min(params.numKeep, s.cache.numCtx-1)
if int32(len(inputs)) > s.cache.numCtx {
discard := int32(len(inputs)) - s.cache.numCtx
newInputs := inputs[:params.numKeep]
newInputs = append(newInputs, inputs[params.numKeep+discard:]...)
slog.Warn("truncating input prompt", "limit", s.cache.numCtx, "prompt", len(inputs), "keep", params.numKeep, "new", len(newInputs))
inputs = newInputs
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
}
// TODO(jessegross): Ingest cached history for grammar
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
return &Sequence{
inputs: inputs,
numPromptInputs: len(inputs),
startProcessingTime: startTime,
numPredict: params.numPredict,
pendingResponses: make([]string, 0),
responses: make(chan string, 100),
quit: make(chan bool, 1),
embedding: make(chan []float32, 1),
sampler: params.sampler,
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
embeddingOnly: params.embedding,
stop: params.stop,
numKeep: params.numKeep,
}, nil
}
// inputs processes the prompt and images into a list of inputs
// by splitting the prompt on [img-<n>] tags, tokenizing text and
// decoding images
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
func (s *Server) inputs(prompt string, images []ImageData) ([]input, error) {
var inputs []input
var parts []string
var matches [][]string
// TODO(jessegross): This can sometimes trigger for matching text in the
// user's prompt. We previously tried to avoid it by only looking for images
// on image models. We don't have a clear indication now but it would be better
// to properly escape it in any case.
re := regexp.MustCompile(`\[img-(\d+)\]`)
parts = re.Split(prompt, -1)
matches = re.FindAllStringSubmatch(prompt, -1)
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
for i, part := range parts {
// text - tokenize
tokens, err := s.model.(model.TextProcessor).Encode(part)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
for _, t := range tokens {
inputs = append(inputs, input{token: t})
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
}
// image - decode and store
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
if i < len(matches) {
n, _ := strconv.Atoi(matches[i][1])
imageIndex := -1
for j := range images {
if images[j].ID == n {
imageIndex = j
break
}
}
if imageIndex < 0 {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("invalid image index: %d", n)
}
image, _, err := image.Decode(bytes.NewReader(images[imageIndex].Data))
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
inputs = append(inputs, input{image: image})
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
}
}
return inputs, nil
}
type Server struct {
// is the server ready to process requests?
// protects access to model and image
ready sync.WaitGroup
// loaded model
model model.Model
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
// status for external health reporting - loading, ready to serve, etc.
status ServerStatus
// current progress on loading the model
progress float32
// number of simultaneous requests to handle
parallel int
// maximum number of elements in a batch (per sequence)
// TODO (jmorganca): make this n_batch
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
batchSize int
// protects access to everything below this line
// this is context state needed for decoding
mu sync.Mutex
// indicates that data is ready for processing
cond *sync.Cond
// the list of simultaneous sequences being evaluated
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
seqs []*Sequence
// seqs can have a maximum of parallel entries, which
// is enfoced by seqSem
seqsSem *semaphore.Weighted
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
// KV cache
cache *InputCache
// next sequence for prompt processing to avoid starvation
nextSeq int
}
func (s *Server) allNil() bool {
for _, item := range s.seqs {
if item != nil {
return false
}
}
return true
}
func flushPending(seq *Sequence) bool {
joined := strings.Join(seq.pendingResponses, "")
seq.pendingResponses = []string{}
// Check if there are any partial UTF-8 characters remaining.
// We already check and queue as we are generating but some may
// still make it here:
// - Sequence is ending, e.g. generation limit has been hit
// - Invalid characters in the middle of a string
// This is a stricter check to ensure we never output invalid Unicode.
for !utf8.ValidString(joined) {
joined = joined[:len(joined)-1]
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
}
if len(joined) == 0 {
return true
}
select {
case seq.responses <- joined:
return true
case <-seq.quit:
return false
}
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
}
func (s *Server) removeSequence(seqIndex int, reason string) {
seq := s.seqs[seqIndex]
flushPending(seq)
seq.doneReason = reason
close(seq.responses)
close(seq.embedding)
seq.cache.InUse = false
s.seqs[seqIndex] = nil
s.seqsSem.Release(1)
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
}
func (s *Server) run(ctx context.Context) {
s.ready.Wait()
for {
select {
case <-ctx.Done():
return
default:
err := s.processBatch()
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
}
}
}
func (s *Server) processBatch() error {
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
s.mu.Lock()
for s.allNil() {
s.cond.Wait() // Wait until an item is added
}
defer s.mu.Unlock()
var options model.Options
imgSeq := -1
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
seqIdx := s.nextSeq - 1
for range s.seqs {
seqIdx = (seqIdx + 1) % len(s.seqs)
seq := s.seqs[seqIdx]
if seq == nil {
continue
}
// if past the num predict limit
if seq.numPredict > 0 && seq.numPredicted >= seq.numPredict {
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
s.removeSequence(seqIdx, "limit")
continue
}
if !s.cache.enabled {
seq.inputs = append(seq.cache.Inputs, seq.inputs...)
seq.cache.Inputs = []input{}
}
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
for i, input := range seq.inputs {
if int32(len(seq.cache.Inputs)+len(seq.pendingInputs)+1) > s.cache.numCtx {
if len(seq.pendingInputs) == 0 {
err := s.cache.ShiftCacheSlot(seq.cache, seq.numKeep)
if err != nil {
return err
}
} else {
break
}
}
if i >= s.batchSize {
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
break
}
// TODO(jessegross): Image inputs need to be rethought - it's
// it doesn't work well for different types of models or multiple sequences
if input.image != nil {
if len(seq.pendingInputs) != len(options.Images) {
break
}
if imgSeq != seqIdx && imgSeq != -1 {
s.nextSeq = seqIdx
break
}
imgSeq = seqIdx
options.Images = append(options.Images, input.image)
seq.pendingInputs = append(seq.pendingInputs, input)
continue
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
}
options.Inputs = append(options.Inputs, input.token)
options.Positions = append(options.Positions, int32(len(seq.cache.Inputs)+len(seq.pendingInputs)))
options.Sequences = append(options.Sequences, seq.cache.Id)
seq.iBatch = len(options.Outputs)
if i+1 == len(seq.inputs) {
options.Outputs = append(options.Outputs, int32(len(options.Inputs)-1))
}
seq.pendingInputs = append(seq.pendingInputs, input)
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
}
seq.inputs = seq.inputs[len(seq.pendingInputs):]
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
}
if len(options.Inputs) == 0 {
return nil
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
}
ctx := s.model.Backend().NewContext()
defer ctx.Close()
modelOutput, err := model.Forward(ctx, s.model, options)
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
if err != nil {
return fmt.Errorf("failed to decode batch: %w", err)
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
}
logits := modelOutput.Floats()
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
for i, seq := range s.seqs {
if seq == nil {
continue
}
// After calling Forward, pending inputs are now in the cache
if len(seq.pendingInputs) > 0 {
seq.cache.Inputs = append(seq.cache.Inputs, seq.pendingInputs...)
seq.pendingInputs = []input{}
}
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
// don't sample prompt processing
if len(seq.inputs) != 0 {
if !s.cache.enabled {
return errors.New("caching disabled but unable to fit entire input in a batch")
}
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
continue
}
seq.numPredicted++
if seq.numPredicted == 1 {
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
seq.startGenerationTime = time.Now()
}
// if done processing the prompt, generate an embedding and return
if seq.embeddingOnly {
// TODO(jessegross): Embedding support
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
s.removeSequence(i, "")
continue
}
// sample a token
vocabSize := len(logits) / len(options.Outputs)
token, err := seq.sampler.Sample(logits[seq.iBatch*vocabSize : (seq.iBatch+1)*vocabSize])
if err != nil {
return fmt.Errorf("failed to sample token: %w", err)
}
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
// if it's an end of sequence token, break
if s.model.(model.TextProcessor).Is(token, model.SpecialEOS) {
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
// TODO (jmorganca): we should send this back
// as it's important for the /api/generate context
// seq.responses <- piece
s.removeSequence(i, "stop")
continue
}
piece, err := s.model.(model.TextProcessor).Decode([]int32{token})
if err != nil {
return err
}
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
seq.inputs = []input{{token: token}}
seq.pendingResponses = append(seq.pendingResponses, piece)
sequence := strings.Join(seq.pendingResponses, "")
if ok, stop := common.FindStop(sequence, seq.stop); ok {
slog.Debug("hit stop token", "pending", seq.pendingResponses, "stop", stop)
var tokenTruncated bool
origLen := len(seq.pendingResponses)
seq.pendingResponses, tokenTruncated = common.TruncateStop(seq.pendingResponses, stop)
newLen := len(seq.pendingResponses)
// Update the cache based on the tokens that will be returned:
// - We have 1 token more than is currently in the cache because
// the last one generated wasn't submitted to Decode
// - Remove any stop sequences that we stripped out
// - If truncateStop removed a portion of a token, drop that
// - As defense-in-depth, if truncatedToken didn't find a stop token
// remove the extra one that we added to the cache len
tokenLen := len(seq.cache.Inputs) + 1
tokenLen -= origLen - newLen
if tokenTruncated || origLen == newLen {
tokenLen--
}
seq.cache.Inputs = seq.cache.Inputs[:tokenLen]
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
s.removeSequence(i, "stop")
continue
}
if common.ContainsStopSuffix(sequence, seq.stop) {
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
continue
}
if common.IncompleteUnicode(sequence) {
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
continue
}
if !flushPending(seq) {
s.removeSequence(i, "connection")
}
}
return nil
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
}
// TODO (jmorganca): use structs from the api package to avoid duplication
// this way the api acts as a proxy instead of using a different api for the
// runner
type Options struct {
api.Runner
NumKeep int `json:"n_keep"`
Seed int `json:"seed"`
NumPredict int `json:"n_predict"`
TopK int `json:"top_k"`
TopP float32 `json:"top_p"`
MinP float32 `json:"min_p"`
TypicalP float32 `json:"typical_p"`
RepeatLastN int `json:"repeat_last_n"`
Temperature float32 `json:"temperature"`
RepeatPenalty float32 `json:"repeat_penalty"`
PresencePenalty float32 `json:"presence_penalty"`
FrequencyPenalty float32 `json:"frequency_penalty"`
Mirostat int `json:"mirostat"`
MirostatTau float32 `json:"mirostat_tau"`
MirostatEta float32 `json:"mirostat_eta"`
Stop []string `json:"stop"`
}
type ImageData struct {
Data []byte `json:"data"`
ID int `json:"id"`
AspectRatioID int `json:"aspect_ratio_id"`
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
}
type CompletionRequest struct {
Prompt string `json:"prompt"`
Images []ImageData `json:"image_data"`
Grammar string `json:"grammar"`
CachePrompt bool `json:"cache_prompt"`
Options
}
type Timings struct {
PredictedN int `json:"predicted_n"`
PredictedMS float64 `json:"predicted_ms"`
PromptN int `json:"prompt_n"`
PromptMS float64 `json:"prompt_ms"`
}
type CompletionResponse struct {
Content string `json:"content"`
Stop bool `json:"stop"`
Model string `json:"model,omitempty"`
Prompt string `json:"prompt,omitempty"`
StoppedLimit bool `json:"stopped_limit,omitempty"`
PredictedN int `json:"predicted_n,omitempty"`
PredictedMS float64 `json:"predicted_ms,omitempty"`
PromptN int `json:"prompt_n,omitempty"`
PromptMS float64 `json:"prompt_ms,omitempty"`
Timings Timings `json:"timings"`
}
func (s *Server) completion(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
var req CompletionRequest
req.Options = Options(api.DefaultOptions())
if err := json.NewDecoder(r.Body).Decode(&req); err != nil {
http.Error(w, "Bad request", http.StatusBadRequest)
return
}
// Set the headers to indicate streaming
w.Header().Set("Content-Type", "application/json")
w.Header().Set("Transfer-Encoding", "chunked")
flusher, ok := w.(http.Flusher)
if !ok {
http.Error(w, "Streaming not supported", http.StatusInternalServerError)
return
}
sampler, err := sample.NewSampler(
req.Temperature,
req.TopK,
req.TopP,
req.MinP,
req.Seed,
)
if err != nil {
http.Error(w, fmt.Sprintf("Failed to create sampler: %v", err), http.StatusInternalServerError)
return
}
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
seq, err := s.NewSequence(req.Prompt, req.Images, NewSequenceParams{
numPredict: req.NumPredict,
stop: req.Stop,
numKeep: int32(req.NumKeep),
sampler: sampler,
embedding: false,
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
})
if err != nil {
http.Error(w, fmt.Sprintf("Failed to create new sequence: %v", err), http.StatusInternalServerError)
return
}
// Ensure there is a place to put the sequence, released when removed from s.seqs
if err := s.seqsSem.Acquire(r.Context(), 1); err != nil {
if errors.Is(err, context.Canceled) {
slog.Info("aborting completion request due to client closing the connection")
} else {
slog.Error("Failed to acquire semaphore", "error", err)
}
return
}
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
s.mu.Lock()
found := false
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
for i, sq := range s.seqs {
if sq == nil {
seq.cache, seq.inputs, err = s.cache.LoadCacheSlot(seq.inputs, req.CachePrompt)
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
if err != nil {
s.mu.Unlock()
http.Error(w, fmt.Sprintf("Failed to load cache: %v", err), http.StatusInternalServerError)
return
}
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
s.seqs[i] = seq
s.cond.Signal()
found = true
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
break
}
}
s.mu.Unlock()
if !found {
http.Error(w, "could not find an available sequence", http.StatusInternalServerError)
return
}
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
for {
select {
case <-r.Context().Done():
close(seq.quit)
return
case content, ok := <-seq.responses:
if ok {
if err := json.NewEncoder(w).Encode(&CompletionResponse{
Content: content,
}); err != nil {
http.Error(w, fmt.Sprintf("failed to encode response: %v", err), http.StatusInternalServerError)
close(seq.quit)
return
}
flusher.Flush()
} else {
// Send the final response
if err := json.NewEncoder(w).Encode(&CompletionResponse{
Stop: true,
StoppedLimit: seq.doneReason == "limit",
Timings: Timings{
PromptN: seq.numPromptInputs,
PromptMS: float64(seq.startGenerationTime.Sub(seq.startProcessingTime).Milliseconds()),
PredictedN: seq.numPredicted,
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
PredictedMS: float64(time.Since(seq.startGenerationTime).Milliseconds()),
},
}); err != nil {
http.Error(w, fmt.Sprintf("failed to encode final response: %v", err), http.StatusInternalServerError)
}
return
}
}
}
}
type EmbeddingRequest struct {
Content string `json:"content"`
CachePrompt bool `json:"cache_prompt"`
}
type EmbeddingResponse struct {
Embedding []float32 `json:"embedding"`
}
func (s *Server) embeddings(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
var req EmbeddingRequest
if err := json.NewDecoder(r.Body).Decode(&req); err != nil {
http.Error(w, fmt.Sprintf("bad request: %s", err), http.StatusBadRequest)
return
}
w.Header().Set("Content-Type", "application/json")
slog.Debug("embedding request", "content", req.Content)
seq, err := s.NewSequence(req.Content, nil, NewSequenceParams{embedding: true})
if err != nil {
http.Error(w, fmt.Sprintf("Failed to create new sequence: %v", err), http.StatusInternalServerError)
return
}
// Ensure there is a place to put the sequence, released when removed from s.seqs
if err := s.seqsSem.Acquire(r.Context(), 1); err != nil {
if errors.Is(err, context.Canceled) {
slog.Info("aborting embeddings request due to client closing the connection")
} else {
slog.Error("Failed to acquire semaphore", "error", err)
}
return
}
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
s.mu.Lock()
found := false
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
for i, sq := range s.seqs {
if sq == nil {
seq.cache, seq.inputs, err = s.cache.LoadCacheSlot(seq.inputs, req.CachePrompt)
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
if err != nil {
s.mu.Unlock()
http.Error(w, fmt.Sprintf("Failed to load cache: %v", err), http.StatusInternalServerError)
return
}
s.seqs[i] = seq
s.cond.Signal()
found = true
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
break
}
}
s.mu.Unlock()
if !found {
http.Error(w, "could not find an available sequence", http.StatusInternalServerError)
return
}
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
embedding := <-seq.embedding
if err := json.NewEncoder(w).Encode(&EmbeddingResponse{
Embedding: embedding,
}); err != nil {
http.Error(w, fmt.Sprintf("failed to encode response: %v", err), http.StatusInternalServerError)
}
}
type HealthResponse struct {
Status string `json:"status"`
Progress float32 `json:"progress"`
}
type ServerStatus int
const (
ServerStatusReady ServerStatus = iota
ServerStatusLoadingModel
ServerStatusError
)
func (s ServerStatus) ToString() string {
switch s {
case ServerStatusReady:
return "ok"
case ServerStatusLoadingModel:
return "loading model"
default:
return "server error"
}
}
func (s *Server) health(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
w.Header().Set("Content-Type", "application/json")
if err := json.NewEncoder(w).Encode(&HealthResponse{
Status: s.status.ToString(),
Progress: s.progress,
}); err != nil {
http.Error(w, fmt.Sprintf("failed to encode response: %v", err), http.StatusInternalServerError)
}
}
type multiLPath []string
func (m *multiLPath) Set(value string) error {
*m = append(*m, value)
return nil
}
func (m *multiLPath) String() string {
return strings.Join(*m, ", ")
}
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
func (s *Server) loadModel(
mpath string,
params ml.BackendParams,
lpath multiLPath,
parallel int,
kvCacheType string,
kvSize int,
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
multiUserCache bool,
) {
var err error
s.model, err = model.New(mpath, params)
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
slog.Info("system", "info", s.model.Backend().SystemInfo(), "threads", params.NumThreads)
// TODO(jessegross): LoRA loading
if lpath.String() != "" {
panic("loras are not yet implemented")
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
}
s.cache, err = NewInputCache(s.model, kvCacheType, int32(kvSize), parallel, multiUserCache)
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
if !s.cache.enabled && parallel > 1 {
parallel = 1
slog.Warn("model does not support caching, disabling parallel processing")
}
s.parallel = parallel
s.seqs = make([]*Sequence, s.parallel)
s.seqsSem = semaphore.NewWeighted(int64(s.parallel))
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
s.status = ServerStatusReady
s.ready.Done()
}
build: Make target improvements (#7499) * llama: wire up builtin runner This adds a new entrypoint into the ollama CLI to run the cgo built runner. On Mac arm64, this will have GPU support, but on all other platforms it will be the lowest common denominator CPU build. After we fully transition to the new Go runners more tech-debt can be removed and we can stop building the "default" runner via make and rely on the builtin always. * build: Make target improvements Add a few new targets and help for building locally. This also adjusts the runner lookup to favor local builds, then runners relative to the executable, and finally payloads. * Support customized CPU flags for runners This implements a simplified custom CPU flags pattern for the runners. When built without overrides, the runner name contains the vector flag we check for (AVX) to ensure we don't try to run on unsupported systems and crash. If the user builds a customized set, we omit the naming scheme and don't check for compatibility. This avoids checking requirements at runtime, so that logic has been removed as well. This can be used to build GPU runners with no vector flags, or CPU/GPU runners with additional flags (e.g. AVX512) enabled. * Use relative paths If the user checks out the repo in a path that contains spaces, make gets really confused so use relative paths for everything in-repo to avoid breakage. * Remove payloads from main binary * install: clean up prior libraries This removes support for v0.3.6 and older versions (before the tar bundle) and ensures we clean up prior libraries before extracting the bundle(s). Without this change, runners and dependent libraries could leak when we update and lead to subtle runtime errors.
2024-12-11 01:47:19 +08:00
func Execute(args []string) error {
fs := flag.NewFlagSet("runner", flag.ExitOnError)
mpath := fs.String("model", "", "Path to model binary file")
parallel := fs.Int("parallel", 1, "Number of sequences to handle simultaneously")
batchSize := fs.Int("batch-size", 512, "Batch size")
numGPULayers := fs.Int("n-gpu-layers", 0, "Number of layers to offload to GPU")
mainGPU := fs.Int("main-gpu", 0, "Main GPU")
_ = fs.Bool("flash-attn", false, "Enable flash attention")
build: Make target improvements (#7499) * llama: wire up builtin runner This adds a new entrypoint into the ollama CLI to run the cgo built runner. On Mac arm64, this will have GPU support, but on all other platforms it will be the lowest common denominator CPU build. After we fully transition to the new Go runners more tech-debt can be removed and we can stop building the "default" runner via make and rely on the builtin always. * build: Make target improvements Add a few new targets and help for building locally. This also adjusts the runner lookup to favor local builds, then runners relative to the executable, and finally payloads. * Support customized CPU flags for runners This implements a simplified custom CPU flags pattern for the runners. When built without overrides, the runner name contains the vector flag we check for (AVX) to ensure we don't try to run on unsupported systems and crash. If the user builds a customized set, we omit the naming scheme and don't check for compatibility. This avoids checking requirements at runtime, so that logic has been removed as well. This can be used to build GPU runners with no vector flags, or CPU/GPU runners with additional flags (e.g. AVX512) enabled. * Use relative paths If the user checks out the repo in a path that contains spaces, make gets really confused so use relative paths for everything in-repo to avoid breakage. * Remove payloads from main binary * install: clean up prior libraries This removes support for v0.3.6 and older versions (before the tar bundle) and ensures we clean up prior libraries before extracting the bundle(s). Without this change, runners and dependent libraries could leak when we update and lead to subtle runtime errors.
2024-12-11 01:47:19 +08:00
kvSize := fs.Int("ctx-size", 2048, "Context (or KV cache) size")
kvCacheType := fs.String("kv-cache-type", "", "quantization type for KV cache (default: f16)")
port := fs.Int("port", 8080, "Port to expose the server on")
threads := fs.Int("threads", runtime.NumCPU(), "Number of threads to use during generation")
build: Make target improvements (#7499) * llama: wire up builtin runner This adds a new entrypoint into the ollama CLI to run the cgo built runner. On Mac arm64, this will have GPU support, but on all other platforms it will be the lowest common denominator CPU build. After we fully transition to the new Go runners more tech-debt can be removed and we can stop building the "default" runner via make and rely on the builtin always. * build: Make target improvements Add a few new targets and help for building locally. This also adjusts the runner lookup to favor local builds, then runners relative to the executable, and finally payloads. * Support customized CPU flags for runners This implements a simplified custom CPU flags pattern for the runners. When built without overrides, the runner name contains the vector flag we check for (AVX) to ensure we don't try to run on unsupported systems and crash. If the user builds a customized set, we omit the naming scheme and don't check for compatibility. This avoids checking requirements at runtime, so that logic has been removed as well. This can be used to build GPU runners with no vector flags, or CPU/GPU runners with additional flags (e.g. AVX512) enabled. * Use relative paths If the user checks out the repo in a path that contains spaces, make gets really confused so use relative paths for everything in-repo to avoid breakage. * Remove payloads from main binary * install: clean up prior libraries This removes support for v0.3.6 and older versions (before the tar bundle) and ensures we clean up prior libraries before extracting the bundle(s). Without this change, runners and dependent libraries could leak when we update and lead to subtle runtime errors.
2024-12-11 01:47:19 +08:00
verbose := fs.Bool("verbose", false, "verbose output (default: disabled)")
_ = fs.Bool("no-mmap", false, "do not memory-map model (slower load but may reduce pageouts if not using mlock)")
_ = fs.Bool("mlock", false, "force system to keep model in RAM rather than swapping or compressing")
tensorSplit := fs.String("tensor-split", "", "fraction of the model to offload to each GPU, comma-separated list of proportions")
build: Make target improvements (#7499) * llama: wire up builtin runner This adds a new entrypoint into the ollama CLI to run the cgo built runner. On Mac arm64, this will have GPU support, but on all other platforms it will be the lowest common denominator CPU build. After we fully transition to the new Go runners more tech-debt can be removed and we can stop building the "default" runner via make and rely on the builtin always. * build: Make target improvements Add a few new targets and help for building locally. This also adjusts the runner lookup to favor local builds, then runners relative to the executable, and finally payloads. * Support customized CPU flags for runners This implements a simplified custom CPU flags pattern for the runners. When built without overrides, the runner name contains the vector flag we check for (AVX) to ensure we don't try to run on unsupported systems and crash. If the user builds a customized set, we omit the naming scheme and don't check for compatibility. This avoids checking requirements at runtime, so that logic has been removed as well. This can be used to build GPU runners with no vector flags, or CPU/GPU runners with additional flags (e.g. AVX512) enabled. * Use relative paths If the user checks out the repo in a path that contains spaces, make gets really confused so use relative paths for everything in-repo to avoid breakage. * Remove payloads from main binary * install: clean up prior libraries This removes support for v0.3.6 and older versions (before the tar bundle) and ensures we clean up prior libraries before extracting the bundle(s). Without this change, runners and dependent libraries could leak when we update and lead to subtle runtime errors.
2024-12-11 01:47:19 +08:00
multiUserCache := fs.Bool("multiuser-cache", false, "optimize input cache algorithm for multiple users")
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
var lpaths multiLPath
build: Make target improvements (#7499) * llama: wire up builtin runner This adds a new entrypoint into the ollama CLI to run the cgo built runner. On Mac arm64, this will have GPU support, but on all other platforms it will be the lowest common denominator CPU build. After we fully transition to the new Go runners more tech-debt can be removed and we can stop building the "default" runner via make and rely on the builtin always. * build: Make target improvements Add a few new targets and help for building locally. This also adjusts the runner lookup to favor local builds, then runners relative to the executable, and finally payloads. * Support customized CPU flags for runners This implements a simplified custom CPU flags pattern for the runners. When built without overrides, the runner name contains the vector flag we check for (AVX) to ensure we don't try to run on unsupported systems and crash. If the user builds a customized set, we omit the naming scheme and don't check for compatibility. This avoids checking requirements at runtime, so that logic has been removed as well. This can be used to build GPU runners with no vector flags, or CPU/GPU runners with additional flags (e.g. AVX512) enabled. * Use relative paths If the user checks out the repo in a path that contains spaces, make gets really confused so use relative paths for everything in-repo to avoid breakage. * Remove payloads from main binary * install: clean up prior libraries This removes support for v0.3.6 and older versions (before the tar bundle) and ensures we clean up prior libraries before extracting the bundle(s). Without this change, runners and dependent libraries could leak when we update and lead to subtle runtime errors.
2024-12-11 01:47:19 +08:00
fs.Var(&lpaths, "lora", "Path to lora layer file (can be specified multiple times)")
build: Make target improvements (#7499) * llama: wire up builtin runner This adds a new entrypoint into the ollama CLI to run the cgo built runner. On Mac arm64, this will have GPU support, but on all other platforms it will be the lowest common denominator CPU build. After we fully transition to the new Go runners more tech-debt can be removed and we can stop building the "default" runner via make and rely on the builtin always. * build: Make target improvements Add a few new targets and help for building locally. This also adjusts the runner lookup to favor local builds, then runners relative to the executable, and finally payloads. * Support customized CPU flags for runners This implements a simplified custom CPU flags pattern for the runners. When built without overrides, the runner name contains the vector flag we check for (AVX) to ensure we don't try to run on unsupported systems and crash. If the user builds a customized set, we omit the naming scheme and don't check for compatibility. This avoids checking requirements at runtime, so that logic has been removed as well. This can be used to build GPU runners with no vector flags, or CPU/GPU runners with additional flags (e.g. AVX512) enabled. * Use relative paths If the user checks out the repo in a path that contains spaces, make gets really confused so use relative paths for everything in-repo to avoid breakage. * Remove payloads from main binary * install: clean up prior libraries This removes support for v0.3.6 and older versions (before the tar bundle) and ensures we clean up prior libraries before extracting the bundle(s). Without this change, runners and dependent libraries could leak when we update and lead to subtle runtime errors.
2024-12-11 01:47:19 +08:00
fs.Usage = func() {
fmt.Fprintf(fs.Output(), "Runner usage\n")
fs.PrintDefaults()
}
if err := fs.Parse(args); err != nil {
return err
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
}
level := slog.LevelInfo
if *verbose {
level = slog.LevelDebug
}
handler := slog.NewTextHandler(os.Stderr, &slog.HandlerOptions{
Level: level,
AddSource: true,
ReplaceAttr: func(_ []string, attr slog.Attr) slog.Attr {
if attr.Key == slog.SourceKey {
source := attr.Value.Any().(*slog.Source)
source.File = filepath.Base(source.File)
}
return attr
},
})
slog.SetDefault(slog.New(handler))
slog.Info("starting ollama engine")
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
server := &Server{
batchSize: *batchSize,
status: ServerStatusLoadingModel,
}
// TODO(jessegross): Parameters that need to be implemented:
// flash-attn
// no-mmap
// mlock
var tensorSplitFloats []float32
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
if *tensorSplit != "" {
stringFloats := regexp.MustCompile(",").Split(*tensorSplit, -1)
tensorSplitFloats = make([]float32, 0, len(stringFloats))
for _, s := range stringFloats {
f, _ := strconv.ParseFloat(s, 32)
tensorSplitFloats = append(tensorSplitFloats, float32(f))
}
}
params := ml.BackendParams{
NumThreads: *threads,
NumGPULayers: *numGPULayers,
MainGPU: *mainGPU,
TensorSplit: tensorSplitFloats,
}
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
server.ready.Add(1)
go server.loadModel(*mpath, params, lpaths, *parallel, *kvCacheType, *kvSize, *multiUserCache)
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
server.cond = sync.NewCond(&server.mu)
ctx, cancel := context.WithCancel(context.Background())
go server.run(ctx)
addr := "127.0.0.1:" + strconv.Itoa(*port)
listener, err := net.Listen("tcp", addr)
if err != nil {
fmt.Println("Listen error:", err)
build: Make target improvements (#7499) * llama: wire up builtin runner This adds a new entrypoint into the ollama CLI to run the cgo built runner. On Mac arm64, this will have GPU support, but on all other platforms it will be the lowest common denominator CPU build. After we fully transition to the new Go runners more tech-debt can be removed and we can stop building the "default" runner via make and rely on the builtin always. * build: Make target improvements Add a few new targets and help for building locally. This also adjusts the runner lookup to favor local builds, then runners relative to the executable, and finally payloads. * Support customized CPU flags for runners This implements a simplified custom CPU flags pattern for the runners. When built without overrides, the runner name contains the vector flag we check for (AVX) to ensure we don't try to run on unsupported systems and crash. If the user builds a customized set, we omit the naming scheme and don't check for compatibility. This avoids checking requirements at runtime, so that logic has been removed as well. This can be used to build GPU runners with no vector flags, or CPU/GPU runners with additional flags (e.g. AVX512) enabled. * Use relative paths If the user checks out the repo in a path that contains spaces, make gets really confused so use relative paths for everything in-repo to avoid breakage. * Remove payloads from main binary * install: clean up prior libraries This removes support for v0.3.6 and older versions (before the tar bundle) and ensures we clean up prior libraries before extracting the bundle(s). Without this change, runners and dependent libraries could leak when we update and lead to subtle runtime errors.
2024-12-11 01:47:19 +08:00
cancel()
return err
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
}
defer listener.Close()
mux := http.NewServeMux()
mux.HandleFunc("/embedding", server.embeddings)
mux.HandleFunc("/completion", server.completion)
mux.HandleFunc("/health", server.health)
httpServer := http.Server{
Handler: mux,
}
log.Println("Server listening on", addr)
if err := httpServer.Serve(listener); err != nil {
log.Fatal("server error:", err)
build: Make target improvements (#7499) * llama: wire up builtin runner This adds a new entrypoint into the ollama CLI to run the cgo built runner. On Mac arm64, this will have GPU support, but on all other platforms it will be the lowest common denominator CPU build. After we fully transition to the new Go runners more tech-debt can be removed and we can stop building the "default" runner via make and rely on the builtin always. * build: Make target improvements Add a few new targets and help for building locally. This also adjusts the runner lookup to favor local builds, then runners relative to the executable, and finally payloads. * Support customized CPU flags for runners This implements a simplified custom CPU flags pattern for the runners. When built without overrides, the runner name contains the vector flag we check for (AVX) to ensure we don't try to run on unsupported systems and crash. If the user builds a customized set, we omit the naming scheme and don't check for compatibility. This avoids checking requirements at runtime, so that logic has been removed as well. This can be used to build GPU runners with no vector flags, or CPU/GPU runners with additional flags (e.g. AVX512) enabled. * Use relative paths If the user checks out the repo in a path that contains spaces, make gets really confused so use relative paths for everything in-repo to avoid breakage. * Remove payloads from main binary * install: clean up prior libraries This removes support for v0.3.6 and older versions (before the tar bundle) and ensures we clean up prior libraries before extracting the bundle(s). Without this change, runners and dependent libraries could leak when we update and lead to subtle runtime errors.
2024-12-11 01:47:19 +08:00
return err
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-08 23:53:54 +08:00
}
cancel()
build: Make target improvements (#7499) * llama: wire up builtin runner This adds a new entrypoint into the ollama CLI to run the cgo built runner. On Mac arm64, this will have GPU support, but on all other platforms it will be the lowest common denominator CPU build. After we fully transition to the new Go runners more tech-debt can be removed and we can stop building the "default" runner via make and rely on the builtin always. * build: Make target improvements Add a few new targets and help for building locally. This also adjusts the runner lookup to favor local builds, then runners relative to the executable, and finally payloads. * Support customized CPU flags for runners This implements a simplified custom CPU flags pattern for the runners. When built without overrides, the runner name contains the vector flag we check for (AVX) to ensure we don't try to run on unsupported systems and crash. If the user builds a customized set, we omit the naming scheme and don't check for compatibility. This avoids checking requirements at runtime, so that logic has been removed as well. This can be used to build GPU runners with no vector flags, or CPU/GPU runners with additional flags (e.g. AVX512) enabled. * Use relative paths If the user checks out the repo in a path that contains spaces, make gets really confused so use relative paths for everything in-repo to avoid breakage. * Remove payloads from main binary * install: clean up prior libraries This removes support for v0.3.6 and older versions (before the tar bundle) and ensures we clean up prior libraries before extracting the bundle(s). Without this change, runners and dependent libraries could leak when we update and lead to subtle runtime errors.
2024-12-11 01:47:19 +08:00
return nil
Re-introduce the `llama` package (#5034) * Re-introduce the llama package This PR brings back the llama package, making it possible to call llama.cpp and ggml APIs from Go directly via CGo. This has a few advantages: - C APIs can be called directly from Go without needing to use the previous "server" REST API - On macOS and for CPU builds on Linux and Windows, Ollama can be built without a go generate ./... step, making it easy to get up and running to hack on parts of Ollama that don't require fast inference - Faster build times for AVX,AVX2,CUDA and ROCM (a full build of all runners takes <5 min on a fast CPU) - No git submodule making it easier to clone and build from source This is a big PR, but much of it is vendor code except for: - llama.go CGo bindings - example/: a simple example of running inference - runner/: a subprocess server designed to replace the llm/ext_server package - Makefile an as minimal as possible Makefile to build the runner package for different targets (cpu, avx, avx2, cuda, rocm) Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> * cache: Clear old KV cache entries when evicting a slot When forking a cache entry, if no empty slots are available we evict the least recently used one and copy over the KV entries from the closest match. However, this copy does not overwrite existing values but only adds new ones. Therefore, we need to clear the old slot first. This change fixes two issues: - The KV cache fills up and runs out of space even though we think we are managing it correctly - Performance gets worse over time as we use new cache entries that are not hot in the processor caches * doc: explain golang objc linker warning (#6830) * llama: gather transitive dependencies for rocm for dist packaging (#6848) * Refine go server makefiles to be more DRY (#6924) This breaks up the monolithic Makefile for the Go based runners into a set of utility files as well as recursive Makefiles for the runners. Files starting with the name "Makefile" are buildable, while files that end with ".make" are utilities to include in other Makefiles. This reduces the amount of nearly identical targets and helps set a pattern for future community contributions for new GPU runner architectures. When we are ready to switch over to the Go runners, these files should move to the top of the repo, and we should add targets for the main CLI, as well as a helper "install" (put all the built binaries on the local system in a runnable state) and "dist" target (generate the various tar/zip files for distribution) for local developer use. * llama: don't create extraneous directories (#6988) * llama: Exercise the new build in CI (#6989) Wire up some basic sanity testing in CI for the Go runner. GPU runners are not covered yet. * llama: Refine developer docs for Go server (#6842) This enhances the documentation for development focusing on the new Go server. After we complete the transition further doc refinements can remove the "transition" discussion. * runner.go: Allocate batches for all sequences during init We should tell the model that we could have full batches for all sequences. We already do this when we allocate the batches but it was missed during initialization. * llama.go: Don't return nil from Tokenize on zero length input Potentially receiving nil in a non-error condition is surprising to most callers - it's better to return an empty slice. * runner.go: Remove stop tokens from cache If the last token is EOG then we don't return this and it isn't present in the cache (because it was never submitted to Decode). This works well for extending the cache entry with a new sequence. However, for multi-token stop sequences, we won't return any of the tokens but all but the last one will be in the cache. This means when the conversation continues the cache will contain tokens that don't overlap with the new prompt. This works (we will pick up the portion where there is overlap) but it causes unnecessary cache thrashing because we will fork the original cache entry as it is not a perfect match. By trimming the cache to the tokens that we actually return this issue can be avoided. * runner.go: Simplify flushing of pending tokens * runner.go: Update TODOs * runner.go: Don't panic when processing sequences If there is an error processing a sequence, we should return a clean HTTP error back to Ollama rather than panicing. This will make us more resilient to transient failures. Panics can still occur during startup as there is no way to serve requests if that fails. Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: More accurately capture timings Currently prompt processing time doesn't capture the that it takes to tokenize the input, only decoding time. We should capture the full process to more accurately reflect reality. This is especially true once we start processing images where the initial processing can take significant time. This is also more consistent with the existing C++ runner. * runner.go: Support for vision models In addition to bringing feature parity with the C++ runner, this also incorporates several improvements: - Cache prompting works with images, avoiding the need to re-decode embeddings for every message in a conversation - Parallelism is supported, avoiding the need to restrict to one sequence at a time. (Though for now Ollama will not schedule them while we might need to fall back to the old runner.) Co-authored-by: jmorganca <jmorganca@gmail.com> * runner.go: Move Unicode checking code and add tests * runner.go: Export external cache members Runner and cache are in the same package so the change doesn't affect anything but it is more internally consistent. * runner.go: Image embedding cache Generating embeddings from images can take significant time (on my machine between 100ms and 8s depending on the model). Although we already cache the result of decoding these images, the embeddings need to be regenerated every time. This is not necessary if we get the same image over and over again, for example, during a conversation. This currently uses a very small cache with a very simple algorithm but it is easy to improve as is warranted. * llama: catch up on patches Carry forward solar-pro and cli-unicode patches * runner.go: Don't re-allocate memory for every batch We can reuse memory allocated from batch to batch since batch size is fixed. This both saves the cost of reallocation as well keeps the cache lines hot. This results in a roughly 1% performance improvement for token generation with Nvidia GPUs on Linux. * runner.go: Default to classic input cache policy The input cache as part of the go runner implemented a cache policy that aims to maximize hit rate in both single and multi- user scenarios. When there is a cache hit, the response is very fast. However, performance is actually slower when there is an input cache miss due to worse GPU VRAM locality. This means that performance is generally better overall for multi-user scenarios (better input cache hit rate, locality was relatively poor already). But worse for single users (input cache hit rate is about the same, locality is now worse). This defaults the policy back to the old one to avoid a regression but keeps the new one available through an environment variable OLLAMA_MULTIUSER_CACHE. This is left undocumented as the goal is to improve this in the future to get the best of both worlds without user configuration. For inputs that result in cache misses, on Nvidia/Linux this change improves performance by 31% for prompt processing and 13% for token generation. * runner.go: Increase size of response channel Generally the CPU can easily keep up with handling reponses that are generated but there's no reason not to let generation continue and handle things in larger batches if needed. * llama: Add CI to verify all vendored changes have patches (#7066) Make sure we don't accidentally merge changes in the vendored code that aren't also reflected in the patches. * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 (#7065) * llama: adjust clip patch for mingw utf-16 * llama: ensure static linking of runtime libs Avoid runtime dependencies on non-standard libraries * runner.go: Enable llamafile (all platforms) and BLAS (Mac OS) These are two features that are shown on llama.cpp's system info that are currently different between the two runners. On my test systems the performance difference is very small to negligible but it is probably still good to equalize the features. * llm: Don't add BOS/EOS for tokenize requests This is consistent with what server.cpp currently does. It affects things like token processing counts for embedding requests. * runner.go: Don't cache prompts for embeddings Our integration with server.cpp implicitly disables prompt caching because it is not part of the JSON object being parsed, this makes the Go runner behavior similarly. Prompt caching has been seen to affect the results of text completions on certain hardware. The results are not wrong either way but they are non-deterministic. However, embeddings seem to be affected even on hardware that does not show this behavior for completions. For now, it is best to maintain consistency with the existing behavior. * runner.go: Adjust debug log levels Add system info printed at startup and quiet down noisier logging. * llama: fix compiler flag differences (#7082) Adjust the flags for the new Go server to more closely match the generate flow * llama: refine developer docs (#7121) * llama: doc and example clean up (#7122) * llama: doc and example clean up * llama: Move new dockerfile into llama dir Temporary home until we fully transition to the Go server * llama: runner doc cleanup * llama.go: Add description for Tokenize error case --------- Co-authored-by: Jesse Gross <jesse@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <daniel@ollama.com> Co-authored-by: Daniel Hiltgen <dhiltgen@users.noreply.github.com>
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}