* hexagon: introduce op request batching and rewrite buffer managment The host now prepares batches of requests and dispatches them via a single dspqueue message. Buffers are mapped explicitly by NPU while processing batches. * hex-dma: disable l2 bypass since to work around new issue due to no flushes between Ops * hex-utils: add explicit l2flush and l2clear helpers * hex-opreq: use fine-grain per tensor l2 management * hex-opreq: avoid redundant invalidates for tensors we already flushed * hex-opreq: update debug messages * htp-opreq: reuse ops_context * hex-opreq: do not flush or invalidate cache lines beyond buffer boundry * hex-opreq: fix errors in log message * Revert "hex-opreq: do not flush or invalidate cache lines beyond buffer boundry" This reverts commit 8b7f0a55a750a6430ce4eb1874c7feb3d720056d. * hexagon: limit l2 flushes to 1MB which covers l2 cache * hex-opreq: limit cache flush to 4MB Looks like 4MB cont. vitual space should cover the 1MB cache. * hexagon: drop cache flush size to 2MB * hex-opreq: start reworking opreq packing * hex-opreq: introduce new way of packing opbatch where tensors are stored separately * hex-opreq: add a simple fastrpc call to force unmap all buffers * hex-l2flush: somehow 2MB does not seem robust, also cleanup step size to use line-size * hex-opreq: bump opreq batch size to 256 * hex-mm: place src1 spad at the top of vtcm for easy reuse * hex-ops: introduce internal types and disable src1 reuse for now Nothing new just formalizing the repack / qyn.quant types we've been using. * htp-opreq: use tensor pointers instead of copies * hex-opreq: introduce more robust way for tracking vtcm/spad reuse This removes the SKIP_QUANTIZE flag that became fragile with the addition of HMX and other ops. * hex-cumsum: fix error post opreq merge * hex-opreq: move request batch handling into the session Prepping everything for using dspqueue buffers and doing that inside the session is much cleaner. * hex-mm: yet another fix for src1 reuse when we're mixing hmx/hvx * hex-bufs: introduce pinned mmapings and use non-pinned ones for model buffers * hex-buf: add support for allocating shared/pinned buffer for opreqs * hex-opbatch: make opbatches configurable * hex-naming: better name for ggml_hexagon_shared_buffer * hex-naming: add session->c_name() helper * hex-opbatch: start using shm but still copy for now * hex-opbatch: use shared buffer for packing opbatch * hex-opbatch: beter naming for opbatch related classes and code * hex-opbatch: reuse batched tensors with same data/dims/strides * hex-opbatch: update logging * hex-opbatch: add support for vmem limit for op batching * hex-opbatch: update htp side to properly support dynamic mmap/unmap * hex-opbatch: add OB and OQ params for run-completion script and fix the asserts in batch processing * hex-opbatch: fixed src1 handling in act ops * hex-act: fix empty src1 handling in swiglu and friends Simplify preamble macro while at it * hex-mm: minor fix vtcm and dma handling in matmul cleaning up some left-overs from merges * hex-opbatch: allocate extra 1KB for dspqueue overhead * hexagon: fix softmax for non-aligned tensors and cleanup vtcm alloc * hex-mm: properly handle hmx_disabled flag * hex-ops: update comments * hex-ops: add debug output for get/set-rows * hex-mmap: optimize un/mapping of buffers * hex-opreq: global cache flush and invalidate beyond 128KB threshold * hex-ops: add super simple opfilter regex for debugging If an Op matches the regex hex backend will reject it. * hex-opbatch: wireup newer ops missed in merge and update main switch to detect this in future * hexagon: improved vtcm acquision to remove inter-op overhead Fully compatible with QNN-HTP coex * hex-mm: fixed hvx fallback path * hex-mm: lower the vmem threshold a bit further to ~3GB * hexagon: update debug & error logs This also fixes an issue with newer llvm merging repack and non-repack functions. We use those pointer to distinguish between buffer types. * hexagon: move ops context into main context Just a cleanup. We don't need separate contexts at this point. * hex-opbatch: cleanup naming and headers for opbatch and related descriptors * hex-fa: it's now better to enable FA during TG to reduce graph splits * hexagon: remove GGML_HEXAGON_EXPERIMENTAL env var It's no longer useful. Please use more flexible GGML_HEXAGON_OPFILTER to disable Ops if needed for debugging or validation. * hexagon: fixed editorconfig check * Update ggml/src/ggml-hexagon/ggml-hexagon.cpp Co-authored-by: Sigbjørn Skjæret <sigbjorn.skjaeret@scala.com> --------- Co-authored-by: Trivikram Reddy <tamarnat@qti.qualcomm.com> Co-authored-by: Sigbjørn Skjæret <sigbjorn.skjaeret@scala.com> |
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|---|---|---|
| .devops | ||
| .gemini | ||
| .github | ||
| benches | ||
| ci | ||
| cmake | ||
| common | ||
| docs | ||
| examples | ||
| ggml | ||
| gguf-py | ||
| grammars | ||
| include | ||
| licenses | ||
| media | ||
| models | ||
| pocs | ||
| requirements | ||
| scripts | ||
| src | ||
| tests | ||
| tools | ||
| vendor | ||
| .clang-format | ||
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| .dockerignore | ||
| .ecrc | ||
| .editorconfig | ||
| .flake8 | ||
| .gitattributes | ||
| .gitignore | ||
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| .pre-commit-config.yaml | ||
| AGENTS.md | ||
| AUTHORS | ||
| CLAUDE.md | ||
| CMakeLists.txt | ||
| CMakePresets.json | ||
| CODEOWNERS | ||
| CONTRIBUTING.md | ||
| LICENSE | ||
| Makefile | ||
| README.md | ||
| SECURITY.md | ||
| build-xcframework.sh | ||
| convert_hf_to_gguf.py | ||
| convert_hf_to_gguf_update.py | ||
| convert_llama_ggml_to_gguf.py | ||
| convert_lora_to_gguf.py | ||
| flake.lock | ||
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README.md
llama.cpp
LLM inference in C/C++
Recent API changes
Hot topics
- Hugging Face cache migration: models downloaded with
-hfare now stored in the standard Hugging Face cache directory, enabling sharing with other HF tools. - guide : using the new WebUI of llama.cpp
- guide : running gpt-oss with llama.cpp
- [FEEDBACK] Better packaging for llama.cpp to support downstream consumers 🤗
- Support for the
gpt-ossmodel with native MXFP4 format has been added | PR | Collaboration with NVIDIA | Comment - Multimodal support arrived in
llama-server: #12898 | documentation - VS Code extension for FIM completions: https://github.com/ggml-org/llama.vscode
- Vim/Neovim plugin for FIM completions: https://github.com/ggml-org/llama.vim
- Hugging Face Inference Endpoints now support GGUF out of the box! https://github.com/ggml-org/llama.cpp/discussions/9669
- Hugging Face GGUF editor: discussion | tool
Quick start
Getting started with llama.cpp is straightforward. Here are several ways to install it on your machine:
- Install
llama.cppusing brew, nix or winget - Run with Docker - see our Docker documentation
- Download pre-built binaries from the releases page
- Build from source by cloning this repository - check out our build guide
Once installed, you'll need a model to work with. Head to the Obtaining and quantizing models section to learn more.
Example command:
# Use a local model file
llama-cli -m my_model.gguf
# Or download and run a model directly from Hugging Face
llama-cli -hf ggml-org/gemma-3-1b-it-GGUF
# Launch OpenAI-compatible API server
llama-server -hf ggml-org/gemma-3-1b-it-GGUF
Description
The main goal of llama.cpp is to enable LLM inference with minimal setup and state-of-the-art performance on a wide
range of hardware - locally and in the cloud.
- Plain C/C++ implementation without any dependencies
- Apple silicon is a first-class citizen - optimized via ARM NEON, Accelerate and Metal frameworks
- AVX, AVX2, AVX512 and AMX support for x86 architectures
- RVV, ZVFH, ZFH, ZICBOP and ZIHINTPAUSE support for RISC-V architectures
- 1.5-bit, 2-bit, 3-bit, 4-bit, 5-bit, 6-bit, and 8-bit integer quantization for faster inference and reduced memory use
- Custom CUDA kernels for running LLMs on NVIDIA GPUs (support for AMD GPUs via HIP and Moore Threads GPUs via MUSA)
- Vulkan and SYCL backend support
- CPU+GPU hybrid inference to partially accelerate models larger than the total VRAM capacity
The llama.cpp project is the main playground for developing new features for the ggml library.
Models
Typically finetunes of the base models below are supported as well.
Instructions for adding support for new models: HOWTO-add-model.md
Text-only
- LLaMA 🦙
- LLaMA 2 🦙🦙
- LLaMA 3 🦙🦙🦙
- Mistral 7B
- Mixtral MoE
- DBRX
- Jamba
- Falcon
- Chinese LLaMA / Alpaca and Chinese LLaMA-2 / Alpaca-2
- Vigogne (French)
- BERT
- Koala
- Baichuan 1 & 2 + derivations
- Aquila 1 & 2
- Starcoder models
- Refact
- MPT
- Bloom
- Yi models
- StableLM models
- Deepseek models
- Qwen models
- PLaMo-13B
- Phi models
- PhiMoE
- GPT-2
- Orion 14B
- InternLM2
- CodeShell
- Gemma
- Mamba
- Grok-1
- Xverse
- Command-R models
- SEA-LION
- GritLM-7B + GritLM-8x7B
- OLMo
- OLMo 2
- OLMoE
- Granite models
- GPT-NeoX + Pythia
- Snowflake-Arctic MoE
- Smaug
- Poro 34B
- Bitnet b1.58 models
- Flan T5
- Open Elm models
- ChatGLM3-6b + ChatGLM4-9b + GLMEdge-1.5b + GLMEdge-4b
- GLM-4-0414
- SmolLM
- EXAONE-3.0-7.8B-Instruct
- FalconMamba Models
- Jais
- Bielik-11B-v2.3
- RWKV-7
- RWKV-6
- QRWKV-6
- GigaChat-20B-A3B
- Trillion-7B-preview
- Ling models
- LFM2 models
- Hunyuan models
- BailingMoeV2 (Ring/Ling 2.0) models
Multimodal
Bindings
- Python: ddh0/easy-llama
- Python: abetlen/llama-cpp-python
- Go: go-skynet/go-llama.cpp
- Node.js: withcatai/node-llama-cpp
- JS/TS (llama.cpp server client): lgrammel/modelfusion
- JS/TS (Programmable Prompt Engine CLI): offline-ai/cli
- JavaScript/Wasm (works in browser): tangledgroup/llama-cpp-wasm
- Typescript/Wasm (nicer API, available on npm): ngxson/wllama
- Ruby: yoshoku/llama_cpp.rb
- Rust (more features): edgenai/llama_cpp-rs
- Rust (nicer API): mdrokz/rust-llama.cpp
- Rust (more direct bindings): utilityai/llama-cpp-rs
- Rust (automated build from crates.io): ShelbyJenkins/llm_client
- C#/.NET: SciSharp/LLamaSharp
- C#/VB.NET (more features - community license): LM-Kit.NET
- Scala 3: donderom/llm4s
- Clojure: phronmophobic/llama.clj
- React Native: mybigday/llama.rn
- Java: kherud/java-llama.cpp
- Java: QuasarByte/llama-cpp-jna
- Zig: deins/llama.cpp.zig
- Flutter/Dart: netdur/llama_cpp_dart
- Flutter: xuegao-tzx/Fllama
- PHP (API bindings and features built on top of llama.cpp): distantmagic/resonance (more info)
- Guile Scheme: guile_llama_cpp
- Swift srgtuszy/llama-cpp-swift
- Swift ShenghaiWang/SwiftLlama
- Delphi Embarcadero/llama-cpp-delphi
- Go (no CGo needed): hybridgroup/yzma
- Android: llama.android
UIs
(to have a project listed here, it should clearly state that it depends on llama.cpp)
- AI Sublime Text plugin (MIT)
- BonzAI App (proprietary)
- cztomsik/ava (MIT)
- Dot (GPL)
- eva (MIT)
- iohub/collama (Apache-2.0)
- janhq/jan (AGPL)
- johnbean393/Sidekick (MIT)
- KanTV (Apache-2.0)
- KodiBot (GPL)
- llama.vim (MIT)
- LARS (AGPL)
- Llama Assistant (GPL)
- LlamaLib (Apache-2.0)
- LLMFarm (MIT)
- LLMUnity (MIT)
- LMStudio (proprietary)
- LocalAI (MIT)
- LostRuins/koboldcpp (AGPL)
- MindMac (proprietary)
- MindWorkAI/AI-Studio (FSL-1.1-MIT)
- Mobile-Artificial-Intelligence/maid (MIT)
- Mozilla-Ocho/llamafile (Apache-2.0)
- nat/openplayground (MIT)
- nomic-ai/gpt4all (MIT)
- ollama/ollama (MIT)
- oobabooga/text-generation-webui (AGPL)
- PocketPal AI (MIT)
- psugihara/FreeChat (MIT)
- ptsochantaris/emeltal (MIT)
- pythops/tenere (AGPL)
- ramalama (MIT)
- semperai/amica (MIT)
- withcatai/catai (MIT)
- Autopen (GPL)
Tools
- akx/ggify – download PyTorch models from Hugging Face Hub and convert them to GGML
- akx/ollama-dl – download models from the Ollama library to be used directly with llama.cpp
- crashr/gppm – launch llama.cpp instances utilizing NVIDIA Tesla P40 or P100 GPUs with reduced idle power consumption
- gpustack/gguf-parser - review/check the GGUF file and estimate the memory usage
- Styled Lines (proprietary licensed, async wrapper of inference part for game development in Unity3d with pre-built Mobile and Web platform wrappers and a model example)
- unslothai/unsloth – 🦥 exports/saves fine-tuned and trained models to GGUF (Apache-2.0)
Infrastructure
- Paddler - Open-source LLMOps platform for hosting and scaling AI in your own infrastructure
- GPUStack - Manage GPU clusters for running LLMs
- llama_cpp_canister - llama.cpp as a smart contract on the Internet Computer, using WebAssembly
- llama-swap - transparent proxy that adds automatic model switching with llama-server
- Kalavai - Crowdsource end to end LLM deployment at any scale
- llmaz - ☸️ Easy, advanced inference platform for large language models on Kubernetes.
- LLMKube - Kubernetes operator for llama.cpp with multi-GPU and Apple Silicon Metal support"
Games
- Lucy's Labyrinth - A simple maze game where agents controlled by an AI model will try to trick you.
Supported backends
| Backend | Target devices |
|---|---|
| Metal | Apple Silicon |
| BLAS | All |
| BLIS | All |
| SYCL | Intel and Nvidia GPU |
| OpenVINO [In Progress] | Intel CPUs, GPUs, and NPUs |
| MUSA | Moore Threads GPU |
| CUDA | Nvidia GPU |
| HIP | AMD GPU |
| ZenDNN | AMD CPU |
| Vulkan | GPU |
| CANN | Ascend NPU |
| OpenCL | Adreno GPU |
| IBM zDNN | IBM Z & LinuxONE |
| WebGPU [In Progress] | All |
| RPC | All |
| Hexagon [In Progress] | Snapdragon |
| VirtGPU | VirtGPU APIR |
Obtaining and quantizing models
The Hugging Face platform hosts a number of LLMs compatible with llama.cpp:
You can either manually download the GGUF file or directly use any llama.cpp-compatible models from Hugging Face or other model hosting sites, by using this CLI argument: -hf <user>/<model>[:quant]. For example:
llama-cli -hf ggml-org/gemma-3-1b-it-GGUF
By default, the CLI would download from Hugging Face, you can switch to other options with the environment variable MODEL_ENDPOINT. The MODEL_ENDPOINT must point to a Hugging Face compatible API endpoint.
After downloading a model, use the CLI tools to run it locally - see below.
llama.cpp requires the model to be stored in the GGUF file format. Models in other data formats can be converted to GGUF using the convert_*.py Python scripts in this repo.
The Hugging Face platform provides a variety of online tools for converting, quantizing and hosting models with llama.cpp:
- Use the GGUF-my-repo space to convert to GGUF format and quantize model weights to smaller sizes
- Use the GGUF-my-LoRA space to convert LoRA adapters to GGUF format (more info: https://github.com/ggml-org/llama.cpp/discussions/10123)
- Use the GGUF-editor space to edit GGUF meta data in the browser (more info: https://github.com/ggml-org/llama.cpp/discussions/9268)
- Use the Inference Endpoints to directly host
llama.cppin the cloud (more info: https://github.com/ggml-org/llama.cpp/discussions/9669)
To learn more about model quantization, read this documentation
llama-cli
A CLI tool for accessing and experimenting with most of llama.cpp's functionality.
-
Run in conversation mode
Models with a built-in chat template will automatically activate conversation mode. If this doesn't occur, you can manually enable it by adding
-cnvand specifying a suitable chat template with--chat-template NAMEllama-cli -m model.gguf # > hi, who are you? # Hi there! I'm your helpful assistant! I'm an AI-powered chatbot designed to assist and provide information to users like you. I'm here to help answer your questions, provide guidance, and offer support on a wide range of topics. I'm a friendly and knowledgeable AI, and I'm always happy to help with anything you need. What's on your mind, and how can I assist you today? # # > what is 1+1? # Easy peasy! The answer to 1+1 is... 2! -
Run in conversation mode with custom chat template
# use the "chatml" template (use -h to see the list of supported templates) llama-cli -m model.gguf -cnv --chat-template chatml # use a custom template llama-cli -m model.gguf -cnv --in-prefix 'User: ' --reverse-prompt 'User:' -
Constrain the output with a custom grammar
llama-cli -m model.gguf -n 256 --grammar-file grammars/json.gbnf -p 'Request: schedule a call at 8pm; Command:' # {"appointmentTime": "8pm", "appointmentDetails": "schedule a a call"}The grammars/ folder contains a handful of sample grammars. To write your own, check out the GBNF Guide.
For authoring more complex JSON grammars, check out https://grammar.intrinsiclabs.ai/
llama-server
A lightweight, OpenAI API compatible, HTTP server for serving LLMs.
-
Start a local HTTP server with default configuration on port 8080
llama-server -m model.gguf --port 8080 # Basic web UI can be accessed via browser: http://localhost:8080 # Chat completion endpoint: http://localhost:8080/v1/chat/completions -
Support multiple-users and parallel decoding
# up to 4 concurrent requests, each with 4096 max context llama-server -m model.gguf -c 16384 -np 4 -
Enable speculative decoding
# the draft.gguf model should be a small variant of the target model.gguf llama-server -m model.gguf -md draft.gguf -
Serve an embedding model
# use the /embedding endpoint llama-server -m model.gguf --embedding --pooling cls -ub 8192 -
Serve a reranking model
# use the /reranking endpoint llama-server -m model.gguf --reranking -
Constrain all outputs with a grammar
# custom grammar llama-server -m model.gguf --grammar-file grammar.gbnf # JSON llama-server -m model.gguf --grammar-file grammars/json.gbnf
llama-perplexity
A tool for measuring the perplexity 1 (and other quality metrics) of a model over a given text.
-
Measure the perplexity over a text file
llama-perplexity -m model.gguf -f file.txt # [1]15.2701,[2]5.4007,[3]5.3073,[4]6.2965,[5]5.8940,[6]5.6096,[7]5.7942,[8]4.9297, ... # Final estimate: PPL = 5.4007 +/- 0.67339 -
Measure KL divergence
# TODO
llama-bench
Benchmark the performance of the inference for various parameters.
-
Run default benchmark
llama-bench -m model.gguf # Output: # | model | size | params | backend | threads | test | t/s | # | ------------------- | ---------: | ---------: | ---------- | ------: | ------------: | -------------------: | # | qwen2 1.5B Q4_0 | 885.97 MiB | 1.54 B | Metal,BLAS | 16 | pp512 | 5765.41 ± 20.55 | # | qwen2 1.5B Q4_0 | 885.97 MiB | 1.54 B | Metal,BLAS | 16 | tg128 | 197.71 ± 0.81 | # # build: 3e0ba0e60 (4229)
llama-simple
A minimal example for implementing apps with llama.cpp. Useful for developers.
-
Basic text completion
llama-simple -m model.gguf # Hello my name is Kaitlyn and I am a 16 year old girl. I am a junior in high school and I am currently taking a class called "The Art of
Contributing
- Contributors can open PRs
- Collaborators will be invited based on contributions
- Maintainers can push to branches in the
llama.cpprepo and merge PRs into themasterbranch - Any help with managing issues, PRs and projects is very appreciated!
- See good first issues for tasks suitable for first contributions
- Read the CONTRIBUTING.md for more information
- Make sure to read this: Inference at the edge
- A bit of backstory for those who are interested: Changelog podcast
Other documentation
Development documentation
Seminal papers and background on the models
If your issue is with model generation quality, then please at least scan the following links and papers to understand the limitations of LLaMA models. This is especially important when choosing an appropriate model size and appreciating both the significant and subtle differences between LLaMA models and ChatGPT:
- LLaMA:
- GPT-3
- GPT-3.5 / InstructGPT / ChatGPT:
XCFramework
The XCFramework is a precompiled version of the library for iOS, visionOS, tvOS, and macOS. It can be used in Swift projects without the need to compile the library from source. For example:
// swift-tools-version: 5.10
// The swift-tools-version declares the minimum version of Swift required to build this package.
import PackageDescription
let package = Package(
name: "MyLlamaPackage",
targets: [
.executableTarget(
name: "MyLlamaPackage",
dependencies: [
"LlamaFramework"
]),
.binaryTarget(
name: "LlamaFramework",
url: "https://github.com/ggml-org/llama.cpp/releases/download/b5046/llama-b5046-xcframework.zip",
checksum: "c19be78b5f00d8d29a25da41042cb7afa094cbf6280a225abe614b03b20029ab"
)
]
)
The above example is using an intermediate build b5046 of the library. This can be modified
to use a different version by changing the URL and checksum.
Completions
Command-line completion is available for some environments.
Bash Completion
$ build/bin/llama-cli --completion-bash > ~/.llama-completion.bash
$ source ~/.llama-completion.bash
Optionally this can be added to your .bashrc or .bash_profile to load it
automatically. For example:
$ echo "source ~/.llama-completion.bash" >> ~/.bashrc
Dependencies
- yhirose/cpp-httplib - Single-header HTTP server, used by
llama-server- MIT license - stb-image - Single-header image format decoder, used by multimodal subsystem - Public domain
- nlohmann/json - Single-header JSON library, used by various tools/examples - MIT License
- miniaudio.h - Single-header audio format decoder, used by multimodal subsystem - Public domain
- subprocess.h - Single-header process launching solution for C and C++ - Public domain
