Bert.cpp has been integrated into llama.cpp! See ggerganov/llama.cpp#5423 and the discussions
Updated forks: iamlemec/bert.cpp xyzhang626/embeddings.cpp
ggml inference of BERT neural net architecture with pooling and normalization from SentenceTransformers (sbert.net). High quality sentence embeddings in pure C++ (with C API).
The main goal of bert.cpp
is to run the BERT model using 4-bit integer quantization on CPU
- Plain C/C++ implementation without dependencies
- Inherit support for various architectures from ggml (x86 with AVX2, ARM, etc.)
- Choose your model size from 32/16/4 bits per model weigth
- all-MiniLM-L6-v2 with 4bit quantization is only 14MB. Inference RAM usage depends on the length of the input
- Sample cpp server over tcp socket and a python test client
- Benchmarks to validate correctness and speed of inference
- Tokenizer doesn't correctly handle asian writing (CJK, maybe others)
- bert.cpp doesn't respect tokenizer, pooling or normalization settings from the model card:
- All inputs are lowercased and trimmed
- All outputs are mean pooled and normalized
- Batching support is WIP. Lack of real batching means that this library is slower than it could be in usecases where you have multiple sentences
git submodule update --init --recursive
pip3 install -r requirements.txt
# python3 models/download-ggml.py list_models
python3 models/download-ggml.py download all-MiniLM-L6-v2 q4_0
To build the dynamic library for usage from e.g. Python:
mkdir build
cd build
cmake .. -DBUILD_SHARED_LIBS=ON -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release
make
cd ..
To build the native binaries, like the example server, with static libraries, run:
mkdir build
cd build
cmake .. -DBUILD_SHARED_LIBS=OFF -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release
make
cd ..
python3 examples/sample_dylib.py models/all-MiniLM-L6-v2/ggml-model-f16.bin
# bert_load_from_file: loading model from '../models/all-MiniLM-L6-v2/ggml-model-f16.bin' - please wait ...
# bert_load_from_file: n_vocab = 30522
# bert_load_from_file: n_max_tokens = 512
# bert_load_from_file: n_embd = 384
# bert_load_from_file: n_intermediate = 1536
# bert_load_from_file: n_head = 12
# bert_load_from_file: n_layer = 6
# bert_load_from_file: f16 = 1
# bert_load_from_file: ggml ctx size = 43.12 MB
# bert_load_from_file: ............ done
# bert_load_from_file: model size = 43.10 MB / num tensors = 101
# bert_load_from_file: mem_per_token 450 KB
# Loading texts from sample_client_texts.txt...
# Loaded 1738 lines.
# Starting with a test query "Should I get health insurance?"
# Closest texts:
# 1. Can I sign up for Medicare Part B if I am working and have health insurance through an employer?
# (similarity score: 0.4790)
# 2. Will my Medicare premiums be higher because of my higher income?
# (similarity score: 0.4633)
# 3. Should I sign up for Medicare Part B if I have Veterans' Benefits?
# (similarity score: 0.4208)
# Enter a text to find similar texts (enter 'q' to quit): poaching
# Closest texts:
# 1. The exotic animal trade is enormous , and it continues to spiral out of control .
# (similarity score: 0.2825)
# 2. " PeopleSoft management entrenchment tactics continue to destroy the value of the company for its shareholders , " said Deborah Lilienthal , an Oracle spokeswoman .
# (similarity score: 0.2709)
# 3. " I 've stopped looters , run political parties out of abandoned buildings , caught people with large amounts of cash and weapons , " Williams said .
# (similarity score: 0.2672)
./build/bin/server -m models/all-MiniLM-L6-v2/ggml-model-q4_0.bin --port 8085
# bert_model_load: loading model from 'models/all-MiniLM-L6-v2/ggml-model-q4_0.bin' - please wait ...
# bert_model_load: n_vocab = 30522
# bert_model_load: n_ctx = 512
# bert_model_load: n_embd = 384
# bert_model_load: n_intermediate = 1536
# bert_model_load: n_head = 12
# bert_model_load: n_layer = 6
# bert_model_load: f16 = 2
# bert_model_load: ggml ctx size = 13.57 MB
# bert_model_load: ............ done
# bert_model_load: model size = 13.55 MB / num tensors = 101
# Server running on port 8085 with 4 threads
# Waiting for a client
python3 examples/sample_client.py 8085
# Loading texts from sample_client_texts.txt...
# Loaded 1738 lines.
# Starting with a test query "Should I get health insurance?"
# Closest texts:
# 1. Will my Medicare premiums be higher because of my higher income?
# (similarity score: 0.4844)
# 2. Can I sign up for Medicare Part B if I am working and have health insurance through an employer?
# (similarity score: 0.4575)
# 3. Should I sign up for Medicare Part B if I have Veterans' Benefits?
# (similarity score: 0.4052)
# Enter a text to find similar texts (enter 'q' to quit): expensive
# Closest texts:
# 1. It is priced at $ 5,995 for an unlimited number of users tapping into the single processor , or $ 195 per user with a minimum of five users .
# (similarity score: 0.4597)
# 2. The new system costs between $ 1.1 million and $ 22 million , depending on configuration .
# (similarity score: 0.4547)
# 3. Each hull will cost about $ 1.4 billion , with each fully outfitted submarine costing about $ 2.2 billion , Young said .
# (similarity score: 0.4078)
Converting models is similar to llama.cpp. Use models/convert-to-ggml.py to make hf models into either f32 or f16 ggml models. Then use ./build/bin/quantize to turn those into Q4_0, 4bit per weight models.
There is also models/run_conversions.sh which creates all 4 versions (f32, f16, Q4_0, Q4_1) at once.
cd models
# Clone a model from hf
git clone https://huggingface.co/sentence-transformers/multi-qa-MiniLM-L6-cos-v1
# Run conversions to 4 ggml formats (f32, f16, Q4_0, Q4_1)
sh run_conversions.sh multi-qa-MiniLM-L6-cos-v1
Running MTEB (Massive Text Embedding Benchmark) with bert.cpp vs. sbert(cpu mode) gives comparable results between the two, with quantization having minimal effect on accuracy and eval time being similar or better than sbert with batch_size=1 (bert.cpp doesn't support batching).
See benchmarks more info.
Data Type | STSBenchmark | eval time | EmotionClassification | eval time |
---|---|---|---|---|
f32 | 0.8201 | 6.83 | 0.4082 | 11.34 |
f16 | 0.8201 | 6.17 | 0.4085 | 10.28 |
q4_0 | 0.8175 | 5.45 | 0.3911 | 10.63 |
q4_1 | 0.8223 | 6.79 | 0.4027 | 11.41 |
sbert | 0.8203 | 2.74 | 0.4085 | 5.56 |
sbert-batchless | 0.8203 | 13.10 | 0.4085 | 15.52 |
Data Type | STSBenchmark | eval time | EmotionClassification | eval time |
---|---|---|---|---|
f32 | 0.8306 | 13.36 | 0.4117 | 21.23 |
f16 | 0.8306 | 11.51 | 0.4119 | 20.08 |
q4_0 | 0.8310 | 11.27 | 0.4183 | 20.81 |
q4_1 | 0.8325 | 12.37 | 0.4093 | 19.38 |
sbert | 0.8309 | 5.11 | 0.4117 | 8.93 |
sbert-batchless | 0.8309 | 22.81 | 0.4117 | 28.04 |
bert-base-uncased is not a very good sentence embeddings model, but it's here to show that bert.cpp correctly runs models that are not from SentenceTransformers. Technically any hf model with architecture BertModel
or BertForMaskedLM
should work.
Data Type | STSBenchmark | eval time | EmotionClassification | eval time |
---|---|---|---|---|
f32 | 0.4738 | 52.38 | 0.3361 | 88.56 |
f16 | 0.4739 | 33.24 | 0.3361 | 55.86 |
q4_0 | 0.4940 | 33.93 | 0.3375 | 57.82 |
q4_1 | 0.4612 | 36.86 | 0.3318 | 59.63 |
sbert | 0.4729 | 16.97 | 0.3527 | 28.77 |
sbert-batchless | 0.4729 | 69.97 | 0.3526 | 79.02 |