license: other
inference: false
StableVicuna-13B-GPTQ
This repo contains 4bit GPTQ format quantised models of CarterAI's StableVicuna 13B.
It is the result of first merging the deltas from the above repository with the original Llama 13B weights, then quantising to 4bit using GPTQ-for-LLaMa.
Repositories available
- 4bit GPTQ models for GPU inference.
- 4bit and 5bit GGML models for CPU inference.
- Unquantised 16bit model in HF format.
PROMPT TEMPLATE
This model works best with the following prompt template:
### Human: your prompt here
### Assistant:
How to easily download and use this model in text-generation-webui
Load text-generation-webui as you normally do.
- Click the Model tab.
- Under Download custom model or LoRA, enter the repo name to download:
TheBloke/stable-vicuna-13B-GPTQ
. - Click Download.
- Wait until it says it's finished downloading.
- As this is a GPTQ model, fill in the
GPTQ parameters
on the right:Bits = 4
,Groupsize = 128
,model_type = Llama
- Now click the Refresh icon next to Model in the top left.
- In the Model drop-down: choose the model you just downloaded, eg
stable-vicuna-13B-GPTQ
. - Click Reload the Model in the top right.
- Once it says it's loaded, click the Text Generation tab and enter a prompt!
GIBBERISH OUTPUT IN text-generation-webui
?
If you're installing manually, olease read the Provided Files section below. You should use stable-vicuna-13B-GPTQ-4bit.compat.no-act-order.safetensors
unless you are able to use the latest GPTQ-for-LLaMa code.
If you're using a text-generation-webui one click installer, you MUST use stable-vicuna-13B-GPTQ-4bit.compat.no-act-order.safetensors
.
Provided files
Two files are provided. The 'latest' file will not work unless you use a recent version of GPTQ-for-LLaMa
If you do an automatic download with text-generation-webui
as described above it will pick the 'compat' file which should work for everyone.
The 'latest' file uses --act-order
for maximum quantisation quality and will not work with oobabooga's fork of GPTQ-for-LLaMa. Therefore at this time it will also not work with text-generation-webui
one-click installers.
Unless you are able to use the latest GPTQ-for-LLaMa code, please use stable-vicuna-13B-GPTQ-4bit.compat.no-act-order.safetensors
.
stable-vicuna-13B-GPTQ-4bit.compat.no-act-order.safetensors
- Works with all versions of GPTQ-for-LLaMa code, both Triton and CUDA branches
- Works with text-generation-webui one-click-installers
- Works on Windows
- Parameters: Groupsize = 128g. No act-order.
- Command used to create the GPTQ:
CUDA_VISIBLE_DEVICES=0 python3 llama.py stable-vicuna-13B-HF c4 --wbits 4 --true-sequential --groupsize 128 --save_safetensors stable-vicuna-13B-GPTQ-4bit.no-act-order.safetensors
stable-vicuna-13B-GPTQ-4bit.latest.act-order.safetensors
- Only works with recent GPTQ-for-LLaMa code
- Does not work with text-generation-webui one-click-installers
- Parameters: Groupsize = 128g. act-order.
- Offers highest quality quantisation, but requires recent GPTQ-for-LLaMa code
- Command used to create the GPTQ:
CUDA_VISIBLE_DEVICES=0 python3 llama.py stable-vicuna-13B-HF c4 --wbits 4 --true-sequential --act-order --groupsize 128 --save_safetensors stable-vicuna-13B-GPTQ-4bit.act-order.safetensors
Manual instructions for text-generation-webui
File stable-vicuna-13B-GPTQ-4bit.compat.no-act-order.safetensors
can be loaded the same as any other GPTQ file, without requiring any updates to oobaboogas text-generation-webui.
Instructions on using GPTQ 4bit files in text-generation-webui are here.
The other safetensors
model file was created using --act-order
to give the maximum possible quantisation quality, but this means it requires that the latest GPTQ-for-LLaMa is used inside the UI.
If you want to use the act-order safetensors
files and need to update the Triton branch of GPTQ-for-LLaMa, here are the commands I used to clone the Triton branch of GPTQ-for-LLaMa, clone text-generation-webui, and install GPTQ into the UI:
# Clone text-generation-webui, if you don't already have it
git clone https://github.com/oobabooga/text-generation-webui
# Make a repositories directory
mkdir text-generation-webui/repositories
cd text-generation-webui/repositories
# Clone the latest GPTQ-for-LLaMa code inside text-generation-webui
git clone https://github.com/qwopqwop200/GPTQ-for-LLaMa
Then install this model into text-generation-webui/models
and launch the UI as follows:
cd text-generation-webui
python server.py --model stable-vicuna-13B-GPTQ --wbits 4 --groupsize 128 --model_type Llama # add any other command line args you want
The above commands assume you have installed all dependencies for GPTQ-for-LLaMa and text-generation-webui. Please see their respective repositories for further information.
If you can't update GPTQ-for-LLaMa or don't want to, you can use stable-vicuna-13B-GPTQ-4bit.no-act-order.safetensors
as mentioned above, which should work without any upgrades to text-generation-webui.
Original StableVicuna-13B model card
Model Description
StableVicuna-13B is a Vicuna-13B v0 model fine-tuned using reinforcement learning from human feedback (RLHF) via Proximal Policy Optimization (PPO) on various conversational and instructional datasets.
Model Details
- Trained by: Duy Phung of CarperAI
- Model type: StableVicuna-13B is an auto-regressive language model based on the LLaMA transformer architecture.
- Language(s): English
- Library: trlX
- License for delta weights: CC-BY-NC-SA-4.0
- Note: License for the base LLaMA model's weights is Meta's non-commercial bespoke license.
- Contact: For questions and comments about the model, visit the CarperAI and StableFoundation Discord servers.
Hyperparameter | Value |
---|---|
13B | |
5120 | |
40 | |
40 |
Training
Training Dataset
StableVicuna-13B is fine-tuned on a mix of three datasets. OpenAssistant Conversations Dataset (OASST1), a human-generated, human-annotated assistant-style conversation corpus consisting of 161,443 messages distributed across 66,497 conversation trees, in 35 different languages; GPT4All Prompt Generations, a dataset of 400k prompts and responses generated by GPT-4; and Alpaca, a dataset of 52,000 instructions and demonstrations generated by OpenAI's text-davinci-003 engine.
The reward model used during RLHF was also trained on OpenAssistant Conversations Dataset (OASST1) along with two other datasets: Anthropic HH-RLHF, a dataset of preferences about AI assistant helpfulness and harmlessness; and Stanford Human Preferences Dataset a dataset of 385K collective human preferences over responses to questions/instructions in 18 different subject areas, from cooking to legal advice.
Training Procedure
CarperAI/stable-vicuna-13b-delta
was trained using PPO as implemented in trlX
with the following configuration:
Hyperparameter | Value |
---|---|
num_rollouts | 128 |
chunk_size | 16 |
ppo_epochs | 4 |
init_kl_coef | 0.1 |
target | 6 |
horizon | 10000 |
gamma | 1 |
lam | 0.95 |
cliprange | 0.2 |
cliprange_value | 0.2 |
vf_coef | 1.0 |
scale_reward | None |
cliprange_reward | 10 |
generation_kwargs | |
max_length | 512 |
min_length | 48 |
top_k | 0.0 |
top_p | 1.0 |
do_sample | True |
temperature | 1.0 |
Use and Limitations
Intended Use
This model is intended to be used for text generation with a focus on conversational tasks. Users may further fine-tune the model on their own data to improve the model's performance on their specific tasks in accordance with the non-commercial license.
Limitations and bias
The base LLaMA model is trained on various data, some of which may contain offensive, harmful, and biased content that can lead to toxic behavior. See Section 5.1 of the LLaMA paper. We have not performed any studies to determine how fine-tuning on the aforementioned datasets affect the model's behavior and toxicity. Do not treat chat responses from this model as a substitute for human judgment or as a source of truth. Please use responsibly.
Acknowledgements
This work would not have been possible without the support of Stability AI.
Citations
@article{touvron2023llama,
title={LLaMA: Open and Efficient Foundation Language Models},
author={Touvron, Hugo and Lavril, Thibaut and Izacard, Gautier and Martinet, Xavier and Lachaux, Marie-Anne and Lacroix, Timoth{\'e}e and Rozi{\`e}re, Baptiste and Goyal, Naman and Hambro, Eric and Azhar, Faisal and Rodriguez, Aurelien and Joulin, Armand and Grave, Edouard and Lample, Guillaume},
journal={arXiv preprint arXiv:2302.13971},
year={2023}
}
@misc{vicuna2023,
title = {Vicuna: An Open-Source Chatbot Impressing GPT-4 with 90%* ChatGPT Quality},
url = {https://vicuna.lmsys.org},
author = {Chiang, Wei-Lin and Li, Zhuohan and Lin, Zi and Sheng, Ying and Wu, Zhanghao and Zhang, Hao and Zheng, Lianmin and Zhuang, Siyuan and Zhuang, Yonghao and Gonzalez, Joseph E. and Stoica, Ion and Xing, Eric P.},
month = {March},
year = {2023}
}
@misc{gpt4all,
author = {Yuvanesh Anand and Zach Nussbaum and Brandon Duderstadt and Benjamin Schmidt and Andriy Mulyar},
title = {GPT4All: Training an Assistant-style Chatbot with Large Scale Data Distillation from GPT-3.5-Turbo},
year = {2023},
publisher = {GitHub},
journal = {GitHub repository},
howpublished = {\url{https://github.com/nomic-ai/gpt4all}},
}
@misc{alpaca,
author = {Rohan Taori and Ishaan Gulrajani and Tianyi Zhang and Yann Dubois and Xuechen Li and Carlos Guestrin and Percy Liang and Tatsunori B. Hashimoto },
title = {Stanford Alpaca: An Instruction-following LLaMA model},
year = {2023},
publisher = {GitHub},
journal = {GitHub repository},
howpublished = {\url{https://github.com/tatsu-lab/stanford_alpaca}},
}
@software{leandro_von_werra_2023_7790115,
author = {Leandro von Werra and
Alex Havrilla and
Max reciprocated and
Jonathan Tow and
Aman cat-state and
Duy V. Phung and
Louis Castricato and
Shahbuland Matiana and
Alan and
Ayush Thakur and
Alexey Bukhtiyarov and
aaronrmm and
Fabrizio Milo and
Daniel and
Daniel King and
Dong Shin and
Ethan Kim and
Justin Wei and
Manuel Romero and
Nicky Pochinkov and
Omar Sanseviero and
Reshinth Adithyan and
Sherman Siu and
Thomas Simonini and
Vladimir Blagojevic and
Xu Song and
Zack Witten and
alexandremuzio and
crumb},
title = {{CarperAI/trlx: v0.6.0: LLaMa (Alpaca), Benchmark
Util, T5 ILQL, Tests}},
month = mar,
year = 2023,
publisher = {Zenodo},
version = {v0.6.0},
doi = {10.5281/zenodo.7790115},
url = {https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7790115}
}