Georgi Gerganov fde69a3607 examples : add llama-eval (#21152)
* working llama-eval mc and math suite

* multi source llama-eval

* Add readme

* add checkpointing

* examples: add llama-server simulator for testing eval scripts

Add a standalone Python script that simulates a llama-server HTTP endpoint
for testing the eval script. The simulator:

- Implements /v1/chat/completions endpoint with OpenAI-compatible format
- Loads AIME dataset from HuggingFace with local caching
- Uses Levenshtein distance for intelligent question matching
- Supports configurable success rate for correct/wrong answer generation
- Provides debug logging for troubleshooting

Also includes test scripts and documentation for testing and understanding
the simulator functionality.

* examples: refactor test-simulator.sh for better readability

Extract repeating question string into TEST_QUESTION variable and
create make_request() helper function to reduce code duplication.
Add proper error handling for error responses.

* docs: update llama-eval-discussion.md with session work summary

Add summary of llama-server-simulator implementation work including
features, testing results, technical decisions, and refactoring.

* examples: add simplified llama-eval-new.py for AIME evaluation

- Create new simplified evaluation script focused only on AIME
- Implement EvalState and Processor dataclasses for structured state management
- Add real-time feedback showing correct/incorrect status per case
- Abstract grading interface for external grader support
- Use structured JSON output for eval state
- Apply HuggingFace dataset caching to avoid repeated downloads
- Remove Levenshtein matching - eval script only sends requests and validates answers

* docs: remove README.md from llama-eval

* examples: implement flexible grader system for answer validation

- Add Grader class supporting regex and CLI-based grading
- Implement built-in regex patterns for AIME, GSM8K, MMLU, HellaSwag, ARC, WinoGrande
- Add CLI grader interface: python script.py --answer <pred> --expected <gold>
- Add HF telemetry disable to avoid warnings
- Support exact match requirement for regex patterns
- Add 30-second timeout for CLI grader
- Handle both boxed and plain text formats for AIME answers

* examples: use HF_HUB_OFFLINE to avoid HF Hub warnings

* examples: remove HF_HUB_OFFLINE to allow dataset download

* examples: use cached dataset path to avoid HF Hub requests

* examples: use cached dataset path in simulator to avoid HF Hub requests

* docs: update llama-eval-discussion.md with session work summary

* examples: add threading support and model parameter to llama-eval-new.py

- Add ThreadPoolExecutor for parallel request processing controlled by --threads
- Add --model argument to specify model name in request data
- Refactor process() to use thread-safe _process_single_case() method
- Update progress tracking to work with concurrent execution

* docs: update llama-eval-discussion.md with threading and model parameter updates

- Add threading support implementation details
- Document ThreadPoolExecutor usage and thread safety
- Add model parameter implementation details
- Include testing results for both features

* examples: add task summary table to llama-eval-new.py

* eval : print progress

* eval : add prompts

* test : fix path

* sim : fix answer matching

* eval : support multiple dataset runs

* minor

* improve grader

* docs

* remove old files

* datasets : add gsm8k

* add gpqa + sampling + docs

* rename

* grader : improve example answers

* cont

* datasets : add aime2025

* grader : update prompt

* grade : improve regex + logs

* datasets : fix aime2025

* cleanup

* add AGENTS.md

* ignore errors

* resume eval

* cleanup

* fix counts

* simplify

* fix prompts

* add html

* store full response

* add tokens

* resoning and error handling

* refactor

* track total time

* remove junk

* eval : unify "judge" terminology to "grader"

Replace all occurrences of "judge" with "grader" for consistency
across the codebase (CLI args, Grader class fields, help text).

Assisted-by: llama.cpp:local pi

* eval : add Wilson score confidence interval to results

Compute 95% CI on-the-fly from completed cases. Displayed in
terminal output, HTML report, and JSON state.

* llama-eval : add per-task generation speed from server timings

Extract predicted_per_second from the server timings response and store
it as tps_gen per task. Display in console progress, print_all_tasks,
and HTML report.

Assisted-by: llama.cpp:local pi

* llama-eval : add per-task generation time from server timings

Extract predicted_ms from the server timings response and store it as
t_gen_ms per task. Display in seconds with one decimal digit in console
progress, print_all_tasks, and HTML report.

Assisted-by: llama.cpp:local pi

* llama-eval : rename display, escaped, and count variables to use prefix convention

- _display suffix → display_ prefix (answer, tokens, tps, t_gen)
- _escaped suffix → escaped_ prefix (response, prompt, reasoning)
- _count suffix → n_ prefix (correct, incorrect, pending)

Assisted-by: llama.cpp:local pi

* llama-eval : support multiple evaluation endpoints with dynamic task distribution

- Add ServerConfig dataclass (url, threads, name)
- Accept comma-separated --server, --threads, --server-name CLI args
- Dynamic shared-queue task distribution across servers (fast servers do more work)
- One ThreadPoolExecutor per server, workers pull from shared Queue
- Track which server processed each task (server_name in results)
- Thread-safe EvalState with threading.Lock for concurrent mutations
- Server column in HTML report and console output
- Backward compatible: single server works as before

Assisted-by: llama.cpp:local pi

* llama-server-simulator : replace Flask with stdlib http.server

- Use HTTPServer + BaseHTTPRequestHandler instead of Flask
- RequestHandler handles POST /v1/chat/completions
- Server runs in daemon thread with clean Ctrl+C shutdown
- Remove flask and unused asdict imports

Assisted-by: llama.cpp:local pi

* llama-eval : update README with PR link and quick-start examples

Assisted-by: llama.cpp:local pi

* llama-eval : track model name in eval state and verify on resume

- Store model_name in EvalState and JSON output
- Display model in HTML summary table
- Verify --model matches stored model when resuming

Assisted-by: llama.cpp:local pi

* llama-server-simulator : fix comment - Dice coefficient, not Levenshtein

Assisted-by: llama.cpp:local pi

* llama-eval : require --grader-model or --model when using --grader-type llm

Assisted-by: llama.cpp:local pi

* llama-eval : protect dump() with lock for thread safety

Assisted-by: llama.cpp:local pi

* llama-eval : compact HTML report output

- Replace verbose summary table with single inline bar
- Shorten status text: '✓'/'✗'/'–'/'!' instead of full words
- Flatten CSS: remove box-shadows, border-radius, reduce padding
- Use system-ui font, 13px table, 12px details
- Conditional reasoning section (only shown when present)
- Single toggle JS function instead of two
- Shorter column headers

Assisted-by: llama.cpp:local pi

* llama-eval : check server connectivity on startup

- Hit /v1/models for each server before evaluation
- Exit with error if any server is unreachable
- Print comma-separated model IDs per server in startup output
- Sequential checks, no retries, no timeout override

Assisted-by: llama.cpp:local pi

* llama-eval : use server1/server2 instead of gpu1/gpu2 in README

Assisted-by: llama.cpp:local pi

---------

Co-authored-by: gatbontonpc <gatbontonpc@gmail.com>
2026-05-12 15:07:00 +03:00
2026-05-12 11:34:10 +02:00
2026-05-11 08:01:47 +03:00
2026-05-12 11:11:14 +02:00
2026-02-02 08:51:25 +02:00
2026-02-02 08:38:55 +02:00

llama.cpp

llama

License: MIT Release Server

Manifesto / ggml / ops

LLM inference in C/C++

Recent API changes

Hot topics


Quick start

Getting started with llama.cpp is straightforward. Here are several ways to install it on your machine:

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

Multimodal

Bindings
UIs

(to have a project listed here, it should clearly state that it depends on llama.cpp)

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:

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 -cnv and specifying a suitable chat template with --chat-template NAME

    llama-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.cpp repo and merge PRs into the master branch
  • 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:

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
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