Edit model card
TheBlokeAI

TheBloke's LLM work is generously supported by a grant from andreessen horowitz (a16z)


SUS Chat 34B - AWQ

Description

This repo contains AWQ model files for Southern university of science and technology's SUS Chat 34B.

These files were quantised using hardware kindly provided by Massed Compute.

About AWQ

AWQ is an efficient, accurate and blazing-fast low-bit weight quantization method, currently supporting 4-bit quantization. Compared to GPTQ, it offers faster Transformers-based inference with equivalent or better quality compared to the most commonly used GPTQ settings.

AWQ models are currently supported on Linux and Windows, with NVidia GPUs only. macOS users: please use GGUF models instead.

It is supported by:

Repositories available

Prompt template: SUS

### Human: {prompt}

### Assistant:

Provided files, and AWQ parameters

I currently release 128g GEMM models only. The addition of group_size 32 models, and GEMV kernel models, is being actively considered.

Models are released as sharded safetensors files.

Branch Bits GS AWQ Dataset Seq Len Size
main 4 128 VMware Open Instruct 8192 19.23 GB

How to easily download and use this model in text-generation-webui

Please make sure you're using the latest version of text-generation-webui.

It is strongly recommended to use the text-generation-webui one-click-installers unless you're sure you know how to make a manual install.

  1. Click the Model tab.
  2. Under Download custom model or LoRA, enter TheBloke/SUS-Chat-34B-AWQ.
  3. Click Download.
  4. The model will start downloading. Once it's finished it will say "Done".
  5. In the top left, click the refresh icon next to Model.
  6. In the Model dropdown, choose the model you just downloaded: SUS-Chat-34B-AWQ
  7. Select Loader: AutoAWQ.
  8. Click Load, and the model will load and is now ready for use.
  9. If you want any custom settings, set them and then click Save settings for this model followed by Reload the Model in the top right.
  10. Once you're ready, click the Text Generation tab and enter a prompt to get started!

Multi-user inference server: vLLM

Documentation on installing and using vLLM can be found here.

  • Please ensure you are using vLLM version 0.2 or later.
  • When using vLLM as a server, pass the --quantization awq parameter.

For example:

python3 -m vllm.entrypoints.api_server --model TheBloke/SUS-Chat-34B-AWQ --quantization awq --dtype auto
  • When using vLLM from Python code, again set quantization=awq.

For example:

from vllm import LLM, SamplingParams

prompts = [
    "Tell me about AI",
    "Write a story about llamas",
    "What is 291 - 150?",
    "How much wood would a woodchuck chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood?",
]
prompt_template=f'''### Human: {prompt}

### Assistant:
'''

prompts = [prompt_template.format(prompt=prompt) for prompt in prompts]

sampling_params = SamplingParams(temperature=0.8, top_p=0.95)

llm = LLM(model="TheBloke/SUS-Chat-34B-AWQ", quantization="awq", dtype="auto")

outputs = llm.generate(prompts, sampling_params)

# Print the outputs.
for output in outputs:
    prompt = output.prompt
    generated_text = output.outputs[0].text
    print(f"Prompt: {prompt!r}, Generated text: {generated_text!r}")

Multi-user inference server: Hugging Face Text Generation Inference (TGI)

Use TGI version 1.1.0 or later. The official Docker container is: ghcr.io/huggingface/text-generation-inference:1.1.0

Example Docker parameters:

--model-id TheBloke/SUS-Chat-34B-AWQ --port 3000 --quantize awq --max-input-length 3696 --max-total-tokens 4096 --max-batch-prefill-tokens 4096

Example Python code for interfacing with TGI (requires huggingface-hub 0.17.0 or later):

pip3 install huggingface-hub
from huggingface_hub import InferenceClient

endpoint_url = "https://your-endpoint-url-here"

prompt = "Tell me about AI"
prompt_template=f'''### Human: {prompt}

### Assistant:
'''

client = InferenceClient(endpoint_url)
response = client.text_generation(prompt,
                                  max_new_tokens=128,
                                  do_sample=True,
                                  temperature=0.7,
                                  top_p=0.95,
                                  top_k=40,
                                  repetition_penalty=1.1)

print(f"Model output: ", response)

Inference from Python code using Transformers

Install the necessary packages

pip3 install --upgrade "autoawq>=0.1.6" "transformers>=4.35.0"

Note that if you are using PyTorch 2.0.1, the above AutoAWQ command will automatically upgrade you to PyTorch 2.1.0.

If you are using CUDA 11.8 and wish to continue using PyTorch 2.0.1, instead run this command:

pip3 install https://github.com/casper-hansen/AutoAWQ/releases/download/v0.1.6/autoawq-0.1.6+cu118-cp310-cp310-linux_x86_64.whl

If you have problems installing AutoAWQ using the pre-built wheels, install it from source instead:

pip3 uninstall -y autoawq
git clone https://github.com/casper-hansen/AutoAWQ
cd AutoAWQ
pip3 install .

Transformers example code (requires Transformers 4.35.0 and later)

from transformers import AutoModelForCausalLM, AutoTokenizer, TextStreamer

model_name_or_path = "TheBloke/SUS-Chat-34B-AWQ"

tokenizer = AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained(model_name_or_path)
model = AutoModelForCausalLM.from_pretrained(
    model_name_or_path,
    low_cpu_mem_usage=True,
    device_map="cuda:0"
)

# Using the text streamer to stream output one token at a time
streamer = TextStreamer(tokenizer, skip_prompt=True, skip_special_tokens=True)

prompt = "Tell me about AI"
prompt_template=f'''### Human: {prompt}

### Assistant:
'''

# Convert prompt to tokens
tokens = tokenizer(
    prompt_template,
    return_tensors='pt'
).input_ids.cuda()

generation_params = {
    "do_sample": True,
    "temperature": 0.7,
    "top_p": 0.95,
    "top_k": 40,
    "max_new_tokens": 512,
    "repetition_penalty": 1.1
}

# Generate streamed output, visible one token at a time
generation_output = model.generate(
    tokens,
    streamer=streamer,
    **generation_params
)

# Generation without a streamer, which will include the prompt in the output
generation_output = model.generate(
    tokens,
    **generation_params
)

# Get the tokens from the output, decode them, print them
token_output = generation_output[0]
text_output = tokenizer.decode(token_output)
print("model.generate output: ", text_output)

# Inference is also possible via Transformers' pipeline
from transformers import pipeline

pipe = pipeline(
    "text-generation",
    model=model,
    tokenizer=tokenizer,
    **generation_params
)

pipe_output = pipe(prompt_template)[0]['generated_text']
print("pipeline output: ", pipe_output)

Compatibility

The files provided are tested to work with:

Discord

For further support, and discussions on these models and AI in general, join us at:

TheBloke AI's Discord server

Thanks, and how to contribute

Thanks to the chirper.ai team!

Thanks to Clay from gpus.llm-utils.org!

I've had a lot of people ask if they can contribute. I enjoy providing models and helping people, and would love to be able to spend even more time doing it, as well as expanding into new projects like fine tuning/training.

If you're able and willing to contribute it will be most gratefully received and will help me to keep providing more models, and to start work on new AI projects.

Donaters will get priority support on any and all AI/LLM/model questions and requests, access to a private Discord room, plus other benefits.

Special thanks to: Aemon Algiz.

Patreon special mentions: Michael Levine, 闃挎槑, Trailburnt, Nikolai Manek, John Detwiler, Randy H, Will Dee, Sebastain Graf, NimbleBox.ai, Eugene Pentland, Emad Mostaque, Ai Maven, Jim Angel, Jeff Scroggin, Michael Davis, Manuel Alberto Morcote, Stephen Murray, Robert, Justin Joy, Luke @flexchar, Brandon Frisco, Elijah Stavena, S_X, Dan Guido, Undi ., Komninos Chatzipapas, Shadi, theTransient, Lone Striker, Raven Klaugh, jjj, Cap'n Zoog, Michel-Marie MAUDET (LINAGORA), Matthew Berman, David, Fen Risland, Omer Bin Jawed, Luke Pendergrass, Kalila, OG, Erik Bj盲reholt, Rooh Singh, Joseph William Delisle, Dan Lewis, TL, John Villwock, AzureBlack, Brad, Pedro Madruga, Caitlyn Gatomon, K, jinyuan sun, Mano Prime, Alex, Jeffrey Morgan, Alicia Loh, Illia Dulskyi, Chadd, transmissions 11, fincy, Rainer Wilmers, ReadyPlayerEmma, knownsqashed, Mandus, biorpg, Deo Leter, Brandon Phillips, SuperWojo, Sean Connelly, Iucharbius, Jack West, Harry Royden McLaughlin, Nicholas, terasurfer, Vitor Caleffi, Duane Dunston, Johann-Peter Hartmann, David Ziegler, Olakabola, Ken Nordquist, Trenton Dambrowitz, Tom X Nguyen, Vadim, Ajan Kanaga, Leonard Tan, Clay Pascal, Alexandros Triantafyllidis, JM33133, Xule, vamX, ya boyyy, subjectnull, Talal Aujan, Alps Aficionado, wassieverse, Ari Malik, James Bentley, Woland, Spencer Kim, Michael Dempsey, Fred von Graf, Elle, zynix, William Richards, Stanislav Ovsiannikov, Edmond Seymore, Jonathan Leane, Martin Kemka, usrbinkat, Enrico Ros

Thank you to all my generous patrons and donaters!

And thank you again to a16z for their generous grant.

Original model card: Southern university of science and technology's SUS Chat 34B

馃惙SUS-Chat: Instruction tuning done right

News

  • 2023-12-05: SUS-Chat is ranked 2nd in Open LLM leaderboard and surpassed all models under 70B.

  • 2023-12-01: SUS-Chat-34B is now avaliable on HuggingFace馃.

Inrtoduction

Figure 1: DALL路E 2023-12-01 11.03.28 - An imposing, majestic wild boar combined with elements of a futuristic transformer robot. The boar itself should be intricately blended with these tra

SUS-Chat is a 34B bilingual Chinese-English dialogue model, jointly released by the Southern University of Science and Technology and International Digital Economy Academy. The SUS-Chat-34B model has been fine-tuned on millions of high-quality, multilingual instruction data. While maintaining the strong language capabilities of the base model, the SUS-Chat-34B model has improved the model鈥檚 response to human instructions through high-quality instruction fine-tuning and excels at imitating human thought processes through chains of thought. It introduces inter-instruction attention sharing in long texts, expanding the window size from 4K to 8K, significantly enhancing the usability of multi-round dialogues.

It has surpassed all models of the same size in almost all benchmark tests and is better suited to meet the practical needs of complex multilingual tasks. Compared to larger models, SUS-Chat-34B remains highly competitive and achieved state-of-the-art performance in our comprehensive evaluations.

SUS-Chat powerfully demonstrates that through the right instruction fine-tuning, academic institutions can achieve better performance without increasing model parameters, using open-source datasets and models. This bridges the gap between academia and industry in large language models and opens new possibilities for collaboration between academic and industrial sectors.

Performance

To better evaluate the performance of the SUS-Chat-34B model, we conducted assessments across multiple benchmark tests and have open-sourced the evaluation framework TLEM to facilitate replication and comparison by other researchers.

In TLEM, we utilized various benchmark tests including MMLU, CMMLU, C-Eval, BBH, GSM-8K, and MATH, focusing on measuring the model鈥檚 knowledge and thinking capabilities. In these metrics, the SUS-Chat-34B model achieved state-of-the-art performance. Additionally, we incorporated lm-eval to test SUS-Chat and similar models on winogrande, hellaswag, arc, and truthful-qa, assessing the model鈥檚 common-sense reasoning ability and susceptibility to illusions.

Overall, the SUS-Chat-34B model significantly outperformed models of similar scale and achieved the most advanced comprehensive performance.

model mmlu-chat cmmlu-chat ceval-chat gsm8k BBH MATH winogrande arc hellaswag truthfulqa average
GPT-4 83 71 69.9 91.4 86.7 45.8 87.5 94.5 91.4 nan 80.1333
SUS-Chat-34B 77.35 78.68 82.42 80.06 67.62 28.8 81.22 81.54 83.79 57.47 71.895
Qwen-72B-Chat 74.52 77.02 77.22 76.57 72.63 35.9 80.58 81.29 87.02 50.64 71.339
DeepSeek-67B-Chat 69.43 48.51 59.7 74.45 69.73 29.56 76.09 82.1 86.06 56.37 65.2
OrionStar-34B 68.51 66.88 65.13 54.36 62.88 12.8 77.27 80.19 84.54 53.24 62.58
Yi-34B-Chat 66.96 55.16 77.16 63.76 61.54 10.02 76.64 70.66 82.29 54.57 61.876

Figure 2: Benchmark

Usage

SUS-Chat-34B is a standard LLaMA model and should be seamlessly compatible with the LLaMA ecosystem. We provide the following example to demonstrate how it can be used for multi-turn dialogues.

from transformers import AutoModelForCausalLM, AutoTokenizer


def chat_template(messages):
    history = ""
    for message in messages:
        match message:
            case {"role": "user", "content": message}:
                history += f"### Human: {message}\n\n### Assistant: "
            case {"role": "assistant", "content": message}:
                history += message
    return history


model_path = "SUSTech/SUS-Chat-34B"

tokenizer = AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained(model_path, use_fast=False)
model = AutoModelForCausalLM.from_pretrained(
    model_path, device_map="auto", torch_dtype="auto"
).eval()

messages = [{"role": "user", "content": "hi"}]

input_ids = tokenizer.encode(chat_template(messages), return_tensors="pt").to("cuda")
output_ids = model.generate(input_ids.to("cuda"))
response = tokenizer.decode(
    output_ids[0][input_ids.shape[1] :], skip_special_tokens=True
)

messages.append({"role": "assistant", "content": response})

# Second round

messages.append({"role": "user", "content": "What is the capital of China?"})

input_ids = tokenizer.encode(chat_template(messages), return_tensors="pt").to("cuda")
output_ids = model.generate(input_ids.to("cuda"))
response = tokenizer.decode(
    output_ids[0][input_ids.shape[1] :], skip_special_tokens=True
)

messages.append({"role": "assistant", "content": response})

Limitations

SUS-Chat has only undergone supervised fine-tuning and has not yet been trained on human preference learning. As a result, it may produce unreasonable responses in some situations and exacerbate existing issues in language models, including hallucinations, non-determinism, and cumulative errors. To achieve better performance for downstream tasks, we recommend adjusting the generation configuration parameters accordingly.

Disclaimer

During the training process, we used data compliance check algorithms to ensure the compliance of the training model as much as possible. Due to the complexity of the data and the diverse use cases of language models, we cannot guarantee that the model will produce correct and reasonable outputs in all scenarios. Please be aware that there is still a risk of the model generating problematic outputs. We will not be responsible for any risks or issues arising from misuse, misguidance, illegal use, and related misinformation, as well as data security issues related to the model.

License

This model is developed entirely for academic research and free commercial use, but it must adhere to the license from 01-ai.

Downloads last month
7
Safetensors
Model size
5.4B params
Tensor type
I32
FP16
Inference Examples
Inference API (serverless) has been turned off for this model.

Model tree for TheBloke/SUS-Chat-34B-AWQ

Quantized
this model