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Free, local, open-source LLM cost analyzer CLI

Project description

Frugon

Your LLM bill is leaking — see exactly where, on your machine.

Free, local, open-source LLM cost analyzer. Point Frugon at your LLM call logs and see — on your machine — how much you'd save by switching or routing models.

PyPI License: MIT CI Python Platforms

Your data never leaves your machine. Your keys go straight to your own providers. Nothing reaches us.

Frugon analyzing a log file and recommending a routing split

Install & run

# one-shot (no install)
uvx frugon analyze ./logs.jsonl

# permanent install
pipx install frugon
frugon analyze ./logs.jsonl

# for --measure (optional): samples real prompts through your own provider keys
pip install 'frugon[measure]'
frugon analyze ./logs.jsonl --measure

No logs yet? See Getting your logs below, or run frugon analyze --demo to see it work on a bundled sample.

Getting your logs

frugon reads JSONL files in the OpenAI request/response format. There are two ways to produce them.

Option A — frugon capture (proxy shim)

frugon capture is a local HTTP proxy that sits between your app and your provider. Every call is forwarded unchanged to your real provider and saved as one JSONL line.

# Start the shim (default port 8787, output file capture.jsonl)
frugon capture --out ./logs.jsonl

# Then point your app's base URL at the shim instead of api.openai.com:
OPENAI_BASE_URL=http://127.0.0.1:8787 your-app           # bash / zsh
$env:OPENAI_BASE_URL="http://127.0.0.1:8787"; your-app   # PowerShell (Windows)
# or in code: client = OpenAI(base_url="http://127.0.0.1:8787/v1")

Options: --port, --out, --upstream (override the forwarding target), --verbose (print one line per captured call to verify it's recording), --proxy (opt in to route upstream calls through a proxy — by default frugon ignores any ambient HTTP_PROXY / HTTPS_PROXY, so your API key never passes through a third-party proxy). The shim adds no latency overhead on localhost and makes no calls to any frugon endpoint.

Option B — write JSONL directly

If you already capture logs (e.g. via middleware or a provider SDK callback), write one JSON object per line with this shape:

{
  "model": "gpt-4-turbo",
  "request": {
    "messages": [
      {"role": "system", "content": "You are a helpful assistant."},
      {"role": "user",   "content": "Summarise this document: ..."}
    ]
  },
  "response": {
    "choices": [{"message": {"content": "Here is the summary: ..."}}]
  },
  "usage": {
    "prompt_tokens": 312,
    "completion_tokens": 84
  },
  "timestamp": "2024-11-01T14:22:01Z"
}

usage.prompt_tokens / usage.completion_tokens — preferred when present; frugon falls back to its own tokenizer when absent. timestamp is optional but enables frugon to project costs over a real observed span. model is required; everything else degrades gracefully.

5-minute path from install to first analysis

pip install frugon              # or: pipx install frugon / uvx frugon
frugon capture --out ./logs.jsonl &   # start the proxy in the background
# ... run your app, make some LLM calls ...
frugon analyze ./logs.jsonl     # see the cost breakdown and routing recommendation

What it does

  • Cost analysis — fully local, no LLM calls, no network. Tokenizers + pricing + arithmetic on your machine.
  • Quality visibility (--measure, optional) — samples your traffic through candidate models using your own API keys, sent directly to your own providers. Never to us. --measure needs pip install 'frugon[measure]' and a provider API key (OPENAI_API_KEY, etc.); calls go to your own provider, never to us.
  • Routing recommendation — "move these X% of calls to a cheaper model and save ~$Y/mo; keep the hard Z% where they are." Comes with an explicit quality caveat so you know what you're trading. Run frugon models to see the model names available for --candidates (optionally frugon models gpt-4o to filter by substring).
  • Share the result — add --report savings.html (or .md) to write a clean, shareable report you can drop into a PR, a Slack thread, or a budget review.
  • Fast on real logs — everything runs locally and is comfortable well past 100k records. The bundled ~56,100-call demo (frugon analyze --demo) prices in a few seconds. Very large logs (>200k records) may take a little longer; Frugon shows a live progress bar and a one-line heads-up so you can see it working. There's no hard limit.

Example output

$ frugon analyze --demo
┌─ frugon · cost analysis ────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│                                                                             │
│   Analyzed      56,100 calls  ·  baseline chatgpt-4o-latest (your current   │
│   model)                                                                    │
│   Current spend $389.88 / mo                                                │
│                                                                             │
│     Route  36,100 easy calls (64.4%)  →  gpt-4o-mini   within tolerance     │
│     Keep   10,000 hard calls (17.8%)  →  chatgpt-4o-latest                  │
│     Keep   10,000 already on gpt-4o-mini (17.8%)   already optimal — no     │
│   action                                                                    │
│                                                                             │
│   New spend     $254.10 / mo                                                │
│                                                                             │
│   SAVING        $135.78 / mo    ·    34.8% lower                            │
│                                                                             │
└─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘

  Accounting   36,100 routed + 10,000 kept (chatgpt-4o-latest) + 10,000 already
               on cheaper gpt-4o-mini  =  56,100 analyzed
  Upper bound  a full swap to gpt-4o-mini saves ~96.3% — run with --verbose for
               detail
  Quality tier chatgpt-4o-latest: Strong  →  gpt-4o-mini: Capable   (LMArena)
  Prices       synced 2026-06-18
  Quality      synced 2026-06-24

⚠ Quality is not verified — 'within tolerance' is an offline estimate;
  run --measure to confirm it on your real outputs before you switch.

  Your data never leaves your machine. Your keys go to your own providers.
→ Route every call automatically and hold the saving:  https://frugon.rodiun.io

Your numbers depend on your logs and your locally synced pricing/quality data. Run frugon analyze --demo to see the same output on your machine.

How it's different

A provider's billing dashboard tells you what you already spent, and a raw token counter prices a single call — Frugon prices your real logs against every model, locally, and tells you which calls to move and which to keep.

Realistic savings

Based on RouteLLM's published research (LMSYS):

Traffic mix Typical saving
General mixed workload 30 – 50%
Easy / repetitive (high MT-Bench similarity) up to ~85%
Hard reasoning / MMLU-heavy ~30%

Your actual number comes from your logs. Frugon never inflates — it shows what the math says for your data.

Is this you?

  • Agent builders — your GPT-4o agents are expensive; most easy hops don't need them.
  • AI dev teams — monthly LLM bill is real; routing pays for itself in days.
  • RAG & support — retrieval + rerank is cheap; the final answer call doesn't have to be Opus.
  • Data-ETL pipelines — batch extraction is 100% repeatable; mini models handle it fine.
  • Indie hackers — every dollar saved is a dollar of runway.

Keep the savings

This is a one-time snapshot. Want it to keep routing automatically and hold the savings? → frugon.rodiun.io

Star the repo if this saved you money.

Contributing

Bug reports and pull requests are welcome — see CONTRIBUTING.md. Frugon is deliberately small: five commands (analyze, capture, models, pricing, quality), three capabilities (cost analysis, quality visibility, routing recommendation). Gateways, live routing proxies, web UIs, and multi-tenant accounts are out of scope by design.


Built by Rodiun. MIT licensed.

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