A tool for running on-premises large language models on non-public data
Project description
OnPrem.LLM
A tool for running large language models on-premises using non-public data
OnPrem.LLM is a simple Python package that makes it easier to run large language models (LLMs) on non-public or sensitive data and on machines with no internet connectivity (e.g., behind corporate firewalls). Inspired by the privateGPT GitHub repo and Simon Willison’s LLM command-line utility, OnPrem.LLM is intended to help integrate local LLMs into practical applications.
The full documentation is here. A Google Colab notebook demo of OnPrem.LLM is here.
Install
Once installing PyTorch, you can install OnPrem.LLM with:
pip install onprem
For fast GPU-accelerated inference, see additional instructions below.
How to use
Setup
from onprem import LLM
llm = LLM()
By default, a 7B-parameter model is used. If use_larger=True
, a
13B-parameter is used. You can also supply the URL to an LLM of your
choosing to LLM
(see
code generation section below for an example). Currently, only models in
GGML format are supported. Future versions of OnPrem.LLM will
transition to the newer GGUF format.
Send Prompts to the LLM to Solve Problems
This is an example of few-shot prompting, where we provide an example of what we want the LLM to do.
prompt = """Extract the names of people in the supplied sentences. Here is an example:
Sentence: James Gandolfini and Paul Newman were great actors.
People:
James Gandolfini, Paul Newman
Sentence:
I like Cillian Murphy's acting. Florence Pugh is great, too.
People:"""
saved_output = llm.prompt(prompt)
Cillian Murphy, Florence Pugh
Additional prompt examples are shown here.
Talk to Your Documents
Answers are generated from the content of your documents.
Step 1: Ingest the Documents into a Vector Database
llm.ingest('./sample_data')
2023-09-03 16:30:54.459509: I tensorflow/core/platform/cpu_feature_guard.cc:193] This TensorFlow binary is optimized with oneAPI Deep Neural Network Library (oneDNN) to use the following CPU instructions in performance-critical operations: SSE4.1 SSE4.2 AVX AVX2 FMA
To enable them in other operations, rebuild TensorFlow with the appropriate compiler flags.
Loading new documents: 100%|██████████████████████| 2/2 [00:00<00:00, 17.16it/s]
Creating new vectorstore
Loading documents from ./sample_data
Loaded 11 new documents from ./sample_data
Split into 62 chunks of text (max. 500 tokens each)
Creating embeddings. May take some minutes...
Ingestion complete! You can now query your documents using the LLM.ask method
Step 2: Answer Questions About the Documents
question = """What is ktrain?"""
answer, docs = llm.ask(question)
print('\n\nReferences:\n\n')
for i, document in enumerate(docs):
print(f"\n{i+1}.> " + document.metadata["source"] + ":")
print(document.page_content)
Ktrain is a low-code machine learning library designed to augment human
engineers in the machine learning workow by automating or semi-automating various
aspects of model training, tuning, and application. Through its use, domain experts can
leverage their expertise while still benefiting from the power of machine learning techniques.
References:
1.> ./sample_data/ktrain_paper.pdf:
lection (He et al., 2019). By contrast, ktrain places less emphasis on this aspect of au-
tomation and instead focuses on either partially or fully automating other aspects of the
machine learning (ML) workflow. For these reasons, ktrain is less of a traditional Au-
2
2.> ./sample_data/ktrain_paper.pdf:
possible, ktrain automates (either algorithmically or through setting well-performing de-
faults), but also allows users to make choices that best fit their unique application require-
ments. In this way, ktrain uses automation to augment and complement human engineers
rather than attempting to entirely replace them. In doing so, the strengths of both are
better exploited. Following inspiration from a blog post1 by Rachel Thomas of fast.ai
3.> ./sample_data/ktrain_paper.pdf:
with custom models and data formats, as well.
Inspired by other low-code (and no-
code) open-source ML libraries such as fastai (Howard and Gugger, 2020) and ludwig
(Molino et al., 2019), ktrain is intended to help further democratize machine learning by
enabling beginners and domain experts with minimal programming or data science experi-
4. http://archive.ics.uci.edu/ml/datasets/Twenty+Newsgroups
6
4.> ./sample_data/ktrain_paper.pdf:
ktrain: A Low-Code Library for Augmented Machine Learning
toML platform and more of what might be called a “low-code” ML platform. Through
automation or semi-automation, ktrain facilitates the full machine learning workflow from
curating and preprocessing inputs (i.e., ground-truth-labeled training data) to training,
tuning, troubleshooting, and applying models. In this way, ktrain is well-suited for domain
experts who may have less experience with machine learning and software coding. Where
Text to Code Generation
We’ll use the CodeUp LLM by supplying the URL and employ the particular prompt format this model expects.
from onprem import LLM
url = 'https://huggingface.co/TheBloke/CodeUp-Llama-2-13B-Chat-HF-GGML/resolve/main/codeup-llama-2-13b-chat-hf.ggmlv3.q4_1.bin'
llm = LLM(url, n_gpu_layers=43) # see below for GPU information
Setup the prompt based on what this model expects (this is important):
template = """
Below is an instruction that describes a task. Write a response that appropriately completes the request.
### Instruction:
{prompt}
### Response:"""
answer = llm.prompt('Write Python code to validate an email address.', prompt_template=template)
Here is an example of Python code that can be used to validate an email address:
```
import re
def validate_email(email):
# Use a regular expression to check if the email address is in the correct format
pattern = r'^[a-zA-Z0-9._%+-]+@[a-zA-Z0-9.-]+\.[a-zA-Z]{2,}$'
if re.match(pattern, email):
return True
else:
return False
# Test the validate_email function with different inputs
print("Email address is valid:", validate_email("example@example.com")) # Should print "True"
print("Email address is invalid:", validate_email("example@")) # Should print "False"
print("Email address is invalid:", validate_email("example.com")) # Should print "False"
```
The code defines a function `validate_email` that takes an email address as input and uses a regular expression to check if the email address is in the correct format. The regular expression checks for an email address that consists of one or more letters, numbers, periods, hyphens, or underscores followed by the `@` symbol, followed by one or more letters, periods, hyphens, or underscores followed by a `.` and two to three letters.
The function returns `True` if the email address is valid, and `False` otherwise. The code also includes some test examples to demonstrate how to use the function.
Let’s try out the code generated above.
import re
def validate_email(email):
# Use a regular expression to check if the email address is in the correct format
pattern = r'^[a-zA-Z0-9._%+-]+@[a-zA-Z0-9.-]+\.[a-zA-Z]{2,}$'
if re.match(pattern, email):
return True
else:
return False
print(validate_email('sam@@openai.com')) # bad email address
print(validate_email('sam@openai')) # bad email address
print(validate_email('sam@openai.com')) # good email address
False
False
True
The generated code may sometimes need editing, but this one worked out-of-the-box.
Speeding Up Inference Using a GPU
The above example employed the use of a CPU.
If you have a GPU (even an older one with less VRAM), you can speed up
responses.
Step 1: Install llama-cpp-python
with CUBLAS support
CMAKE_ARGS="-DLLAMA_CUBLAS=on" FORCE_CMAKE=1 pip install --upgrade --force-reinstall llama-cpp-python==0.1.69 --no-cache-dir
It is important to use the specific version shown above due to library incompatibilities.
Step 2: Use the n_gpu_layers
argument with LLM
llm = LLM(model_name=os.path.basename(url), n_gpu_layers=128)
With the steps above, calls to methods like llm.prompt
will offload
computation to your GPU and speed up responses from the LLM.
FAQ
-
How do I use other models with OnPrem.LLM?
You can supply the URL to other models to the
LLM
constructor, as we did above in the code generation example.We currently support models in GGML format. However, the GGML format has now been superseded by GGUF. As of August 21st 2023, llama.cpp no longer supports GGML models, which is why we are pinning to an older version of all dependencies.
Future versions of OnPrem.LLM will use the newer GGUF format.
-
I’m behind a corporate firewall and receiving an SSL error when trying to download the model?
Try this:
from onprem import LLM LLM.download_model(url, ssl_verify=False)
-
How do I use this on a machine with no internet access?
Use the
LLM.download_model
method to download the model files to<your_home_directory>/onprem_data
and transfer them to the same location on the air-gapped machine.For the
ingest
andask
methods, you will need to also download and transfer the embedding model files:from sentence_transformers import SentenceTransformer model = SentenceTransformer('sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2') model.save('/some/folder')
Copy the
some/folder
folder to the air-gapped machine and supply the path toLLM
via theembedding_model
parameter.
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