* Read hyper-parameters from HuggingFace-transformer config.json, if they exist, and fall back to guessing, like before otherwise.
This allows converting open_llama 3B and other non-standard model designs.
Small, non-functional changes were made to non-compliant files.
These include breaking up long lines, whitespace sanitation and
unused import removal.
Maximum line length in python files was set to a generous 125 chars,
in order to minimize number of changes needed in scripts and general
annoyance. The "txt" prompts directory is excluded from the checks
as it may contain oddly formatted files and strings for a good reason.
Signed-off-by: Jiri Podivin <jpodivin@gmail.com>
* when loading a safetensors file, ignore the metadata header
* check for safetensors files first, and only use PyTorch versions when safetensors aren't available
* Line 698 has one #staticmethod and should not
otherwise throw error at unpickle.load() as not callable
* Update convert.py
---------
Co-authored-by: Ivan Stepanov <ivanstepanovftw@gmail.com>
Calling `mmap.mmap` on Windows apparently resets the file offset of the
raw file object (and makes the BufferedReader return a *negative* file
offset). For safetensors, avoid using the file offset after calling
mmap. For GGML format, explicitly save and restore the offset.
Fixes#966.
Current status: Working, except for the latest GPTQ-for-LLaMa format
that includes `g_idx`. This turns out to require changes to GGML, so
for now it only works if you use the `--outtype` option to dequantize it
back to f16 (which is pointless except for debugging).
I also included some cleanup for the C++ code.
This script is meant to replace all the existing conversion scripts
(including the ones that convert from older GGML formats), while also
adding support for some new formats. Specifically, I've tested with:
- [x] `LLaMA` (original)
- [x] `llama-65b-4bit`
- [x] `alpaca-native`
- [x] `alpaca-native-4bit`
- [x] LLaMA converted to 'transformers' format using
`convert_llama_weights_to_hf.py`
- [x] `alpaca-native` quantized with `--true-sequential --act-order
--groupsize 128` (dequantized only)
- [x] same as above plus `--save_safetensors`
- [x] GPT4All
- [x] stock unversioned ggml
- [x] ggmh
There's enough overlap in the logic needed to handle these different
cases that it seemed best to move to a single script.
I haven't tried this with Alpaca-LoRA because I don't know where to find
it.
Useful features:
- Uses multiple threads for a speedup in some cases (though the Python
GIL limits the gain, and sometimes it's disk-bound anyway).
- Combines split models into a single file (both the intra-tensor split
of the original and the inter-tensor split of 'transformers' format
files). Single files are more convenient to work with and more
friendly to future changes to use memory mapping on the C++ side. To
accomplish this without increasing memory requirements, it has some
custom loading code which avoids loading whole input files into memory
at once.
- Because of the custom loading code, it no longer depends in PyTorch,
which might make installing dependencies slightly easier or faster...
although it still depends on NumPy and sentencepiece, so I don't know
if there's any meaningful difference. In any case, I also added a
requirements.txt file to lock the dependency versions in case of any
future breaking changes.
- Type annotations checked with mypy.
- Some attempts to be extra user-friendly:
- The script tries to be forgiving with arguments, e.g. you can
specify either the model file itself or the directory containing
it.
- The script doesn't depend on config.json / params.json, just in
case the user downloaded files individually and doesn't have those
handy. But you still need tokenizer.model and, for Alpaca,
added_tokens.json.
- The script tries to give a helpful error message if
added_tokens.json is missing.