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GGUF file format specification #302

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382 changes: 382 additions & 0 deletions docs/gguf.md
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# GGUF

GGUF is a file format for storing models for inference with GGML and executors based on GGML. GGUF is a binary format that is designed for fast loading and saving of models, and for ease of reading. Models are traditionally developed using PyTorch or another framework, and then converted to GGUF for use in GGML.

It is a successor file format to GGML, GGMF and GGJT, and is designed to be unambiguous by containing all the information needed to load a model. It is also designed to be extensible, so that new features can be added to GGML without breaking compatibility with older models.

For more information about the motivation behind GGUF, see [Current State of Affairs](#current-state-of-affairs).

## Specification

GGUF is a format based on the existing GGJT, but makes a few changes to the format to make it more extensible and easier to use. The following features are desired:

- Single-file deployment: they can be easily distributed and loaded, and do not require any external files for additional information.
- Extensible: new features can be added to GGML without breaking compatibility with existing models.
- `mmap` compatibility: models can be loaded using `mmap` for fast loading and saving.
- Easy to use: models can be easily loaded and saved using a small amount of code, with no need for external libraries, regardless of the language used.
- Full information: all information needed to load a model is contained in the model file, and no additional information needs to be provided by the user.

The key difference between GGJT and GGUF is the use of a key-value structure for the hyperparameters (now referred to as metadata), rather than a list of untyped values. This allows for new metadata to be added without breaking compatibility with existing models, and to annotate the model with additional information that may be useful for inference or for identifying the model.

### File Structure

GGUF files are structured as follows. They assume the use of a global `ALIGNMENT` constant, which is the alignment of the model data. This is currently 64 bytes, but may change in the future. [^1] To achieve this, where relevant, the file is padded with `0x00` bytes to the next multiple of `ALIGNMENT`.

Fields, including arrays, are written sequentially without alignment unless otherwise specified.

[^1]: This may be moved to a per-model key-value pair in the future.

```c
enum ggml_type {
GGML_TYPE_F32 = 0,
GGML_TYPE_F16 = 1,
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What about BF16 ?

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Currently if you want the highest quality you have to double the tensor sizes by using F32. My guess is that BF16 is not natively supported by many platform architectures yet. I would also like to see support for BF16 in ggml. I wonder if BF16 emulation really is slower than F32, since it is in fact a truncated version of F32. @ggerganov ?

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No plans for adding BF16 support - it would be too big change for what I think is too small benefit

GGML_TYPE_Q4_0 = 2,
GGML_TYPE_Q4_1 = 3,
// GGML_TYPE_Q4_2 = 4, support has been removed
// GGML_TYPE_Q4_3 (5) support has been removed
GGML_TYPE_Q5_0 = 6,
GGML_TYPE_Q5_1 = 7,
GGML_TYPE_Q8_0 = 8,
GGML_TYPE_Q8_1 = 9,
// k-quantizations
GGML_TYPE_Q2_K = 10,
GGML_TYPE_Q3_K = 11,
GGML_TYPE_Q4_K = 12,
GGML_TYPE_Q5_K = 13,
GGML_TYPE_Q6_K = 14,
GGML_TYPE_Q8_K = 15,
GGML_TYPE_I8,
GGML_TYPE_I16,
GGML_TYPE_I32,
GGML_TYPE_COUNT,
};

enum gguf_metadata_value_type: uint32_t {
// The value is a 8-bit unsigned integer.
GGUF_METADATA_VALUE_TYPE_UINT8 = 0,
// The value is a 8-bit signed integer.
GGUF_METADATA_VALUE_TYPE_INT8 = 1,
// The value is a 16-bit unsigned little-endian integer.
GGUF_METADATA_VALUE_TYPE_UINT16 = 2,
// The value is a 16-bit signed little-endian integer.
GGUF_METADATA_VALUE_TYPE_INT16 = 3,
// The value is a 32-bit unsigned little-endian integer.
GGUF_METADATA_VALUE_TYPE_UINT32 = 4,
// The value is a 32-bit signed little-endian integer.
GGUF_METADATA_VALUE_TYPE_INT32 = 5,
// The value is a 32-bit IEEE754 floating point number.
GGUF_METADATA_VALUE_TYPE_FLOAT32 = 6,
// The value is a boolean.
// 1-byte value where 0 is false and 1 is true.
// Anything else is invalid, and should be treated as either the model being invalid or the reader being buggy.
GGUF_METADATA_VALUE_TYPE_BOOL = 7,
// The value is a UTF-8 non-null-terminated string, with length prepended.
GGUF_METADATA_VALUE_TYPE_STRING = 8,
// The value is an array of other values, with the length and type prepended.
///
// Arrays can be nested, and the length of the array is the number of elements in the array, not the number of bytes.
GGUF_METADATA_VALUE_TYPE_ARRAY = 9,
}

// A string in GGUF.
struct gguf_string_t {
// The length of the string, in bytes.
uint32_t len;
// The string as a UTF-8 non-null-terminated string.
char string[len];
}

union gguf_metadata_value_t {
uint8_t uint8;
int8_t int8;
uint16_t uint16;
int16_t int16;
uint32_t uint32;
int32_t int32;
float float32;
bool bool_;
gguf_string_t string;
struct {
// Number of elements, not bytes
uint32_t len;
// Any value type is valid, including arrays.
gguf_metadata_value_type type;
// The array of values.
gguf_metadata_value_t array[len];
} array;
};

struct gguf_metadata_kv_t {
// A standard GGUF string, with the following caveats:
// - It must be a valid ASCII string.
// - It must be a hierarchical key, where each segment is `lower_snake_case` and separated by a `.`.
// - It must be at most 2^16-1 bytes long.
// Any keys that do not follow these rules are invalid.
gguf_string_t key;

// The length of the value, in bytes
uint32_t value_len;
// The type of the value.
// Must be one of the `gguf_metadata_value_type` values.
gguf_metadata_value_type value_type;
// The value.
gguf_metadata_value_t value;
};

struct gguf_header_t {
// Magic number to announce that this is a GGUF file.
// Must be `'GGUF'`/`0x47475546`.
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This should be reversed so it is written as GGUF in the model file. 0x46554747

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It's written as 'GGUF' if you look at it bytewise (0x47 0x47 0x55 0x46 is G G U F), but not if you look at it as a 32-bit little-endian integer. I think it's better to keep it this way to ensure that little/big-endian isn't a concern?

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In ggerganov/llama.cpp#2398 we already changed this. But it could possibly be reversed. @ggerganov

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...too late it seems, llama.cpp's implementation seems to do little-endian. OK.

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I've updated this, but I think it makes more sense the way it was specified before (i.e. as a 4-byte string, not as a little-endian 4-byte integer).

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...okay, turns out it actually is GGUF in the resulting file right now, it's just the little endian cancels out:

# hexdump -C models/llama2/llama-2-7b-f16.gguf | head -n 1 
00000000  47 47 55 46 01 00 00 00  23 01 00 00 0c 00 00 00  |GGUF....#.......|

and this is because the header is written as a little-endian integer:
self.fout.write(struct.pack("<I", GGUF_MAGIC))

but the constant is already little-endian:
GGUF_MAGIC = 0x46554747

so in the write it gets reversed and becomes 'GGUF'. I'm going to mention that's what it is in the spec, but both the Python and C/C++ should probably be updated to not treat them as integers O_o

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Yes, it would probably be less confusing to write the magic as 4 bytes instead.

uint32_t magic;
// The version of the format implemented.
// Must be `1` for version described in this spec.
//
// This version should only be increased for structural changes to the format.
// Changes that do not affect the structure of the file should instead update the metadata
// to signify the change.
uint32_t version;
// The number of tensors in the file.
// This is explicit, instead of being included in the metadata, to ensure it is always present
// for loading the tensors.
uint32_t tensor_count;
// The number of metadata key-value pairs.
uint32_t metadata_kv_count;
// The metadata key-value pairs.
gguf_metadata_kv_t metadata_kv[metadata_kv_count];
};

struct gguf_tensor_info_t {
// The name of the tensor.
gguf_string_t name;
// The number of dimensions in the tensor.
// Currently at most 4, but this may change in the future.
uint32_t n_dimensions;
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// The dimensions of the tensor.
uint32_t dimensions[n_dimensions];
// The number of elements in the tensor.
uint32_t n_elements;
// The type of the tensor.
ggml_type type;
// The offset of the tensor's data in this file in bytes.
// Must be a multiple of `ALIGNMENT`.
uint64_t offset;
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};

struct gguf_file_t {
// The header of the file.
gguf_header_t header;

// Padding to the nearest multiple of `ALIGNMENT`.
uint8_t _padding[ALIGNMENT - (sizeof(header) % ALIGNMENT)];
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// Tensor infos, which can be used to locate the tensor data.
gguf_tensor_info_t tensor_infos[header.tensor_count];

// Tensor data.
//
// This is arbitrary binary data corresponding to the weights of the model. This data should be close
// or identical to the data in the original model file, but may be different due to quantization or
// other optimizations for inference. Any such deviations should be recorded in the metadata or as
// part of the architecture definition.
//
// Each tensor's data must be stored within this array, and located through its `tensor_infos` entry.
// The offset of each tensor's data must be a multiple of `ALIGNMENT`, and the space between tensors
// should be padded to `ALIGNMENT` bytes.
uint8_t tensor_data[];
};
```

## Standardized key-value pairs

The following key-value pairs are standardized. This list may grow in the future as more use cases are discovered. Where possible, names are shared with the original model definitions to make it easier to map between the two.

Not all of these are required, but they are all recommended. Keys that are required are bolded. For omitted pairs, the reader should assume that the value is unknown and either default or error as appropriate.

The community can develop their own key-value pairs to carry additional data. However, these should be namespaced with the relevant community name to avoid collisions. For example, the `rustformers` community might use `rustformers.` as a prefix for all of their keys.

If a particular community key is widely used, it may be promoted to a standardized key.

### General

- **`general.architecture: string`**: describes what architecture this model implements. All lowercase ASCII, with only `[a-z0-9]+` characters allowed. Known values include:
- `llama`
- `mpt`
- `gptneox`
- `gptj`
- `gpt2`
- `bloom`
- `falcon`
- `rwkv`
- **`general.quantization_version: u32`**: version of quantization scheme
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- `general.file_type: string`: type of the majority of the tensors in the file. This shouldn't have any semantic meaning and should be purely informational, hence the use of `string`.
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- `general.license: string`: SPDX license of the model
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I think this should be uint32 and an enum value instead of string. Executors may choose to generate human-readable descriptions based on that value. I can see that custom values in this can easily lead to confusions or leave this metadata as redundant.

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My reasoning for this is it's what Rust/Cargo does, and it seems to work quite well and leave the door open for future expansion / non-standard licenses (as is relatively common in ML). I could be convinced otherwise, but I don't see a strong reason to install that restriction.

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Maybe clarify if the string should contain the license name / identifier, a link to the document or even the whole license document?

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Good point - I intended to refer to SPDX license expressions, but I didn't use that verbiage. Fixed.

- `general.description: string`: free-form description of the model including anything that isn't covered by the other fields
- `general.source.url: string`: URL to the source of the model. Can be a GitHub repo, a paper, etc.
- `general.source.huggingface.repository: string`: Hugging Face model repository that this model is either hosted on or based on

### LLM

In the following, `[llm]` is used to fill in for the name of a specific LLM architecture. They will be used in each architecture's section.

- `[llm].context_length: u32`: size of the maximum supported context
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- `[llm].hidden_size: u32`: embedding layer size
- `[llm].num_layers: u32`: number of layers
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- `[llm].num_ff: u32`: The length of the feedforward layer.
- `[llm].use_parallel_residual: bool`: whether or not the parallel residual logic should be used
- `[llm].max_seq_len: u32`: Maximum sequence length
- `[llm].attention.num_heads: u32`: number of attention heads
- `[llm].attention.alibi_bias_max: f32`: The maximum bias to use for ALiBI
- `[llm].attention.clip_kqv: f32`: Value (`C`) to clamp the values of the `Q`, `K`, and `V` tensors between (`[-C, C]`).
- `[llm].rope.num_dims: u32`: The number of rotary dimensions for RoPE.
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#### Models

The following sections describe the metadata for each model architecture. Each key specified _must_ be present.

##### LLaMA

- `llama.context_length`
- `llama.hidden_size`
- `llama.num_layers`
- `llama.num_ff`
- `llama.rope.num_dims`
- `llama.attention.num_heads`

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##### MPT

- `mpt.max_seq_len`
- `mpt.hidden_size`
- `mpt.num_layers`
- `mpt.attention.num_heads`
- `mpt.attention.alibi_bias_max`
- `mpt.attention.clip_kqv`

##### GPT-NeoX

- `gptneox.context_length`
- `gptneox.hidden_size`
- `gptneox.num_layers`
- `gptneox.use_parallel_residual`
- `gptneox.rope.num_dims`
- `gptneox.attention.num_heads`

##### GPT-J

- `gptj.context_length`
- `gptj.hidden_size`
- `gptj.num_layers`
- `gptj.rope.num_dims`
- `gptj.attention.num_heads`

##### GPT-2

- `gpt2.context_length`
- `gpt2.hidden_size`
- `gpt2.num_layers`
- `gpt2.attention.num_heads`

##### BLOOM

- `bloom.context_length`
- `bloom.hidden_size`
- `bloom.num_layers`
- `bloom.num_ff`
- `bloom.attention.num_heads`

##### Falcon

**TODO**.
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##### RWKV

**TODO**.
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#### Prompting

**TODO**: Include prompt format, and/or metadata about how it should be used (instruction, conversation, autocomplete, etc).

### Tokenizer

The following keys are used to describe the tokenizer of the model. It is recommended that model authors support as many of these as possible, as it will allow for better tokenization quality with supported executors.

#### GGML

GGML supports an embedded vocabulary that may be lossily compressed from a more complete tokenizer. It is simplistic and specific to GGML. This should enable inferencing of the model, but it may not fully capture the nuances of tokenization. When a more accurate tokenizer is available and supported, it should be used instead.
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It is not guaranteed to be standardized across models, and may change in the future. It is recommended that model authors use a more standardized tokenizer if possible.

- `tokenizer.ggml.tokens: array[string]`: A list of tokens.
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- `tokenizer.ggml.scores: array[f32]`: If present, the score/probability of each token. If not present, all tokens are assumed to have equal probability. Must be the same length as `tokens`.

#### Hugging Face

Hugging Face maintains their own `tokenizers` library that supports a wide variety of tokenizers. If your executor uses this library, it may be able to use the model's tokenizer directly.

- `tokenizer.huggingface.json: string`: the entirety of the HF `tokenizer.json` for a given model (e.g. <https://huggingface.co/mosaicml/mpt-7b-instruct/blob/main/tokenizer.json>). Included for compatibility with executors that support HF tokenizers directly.

#### Other

Other tokenizers may be used, but are not necessarily standardized. They may be executor-specific. They will be documented here as they are discovered/further developed.

- `tokenizer.rwkv.world: string`: a RWKV World tokenizer, like [this](https://github.com/BlinkDL/ChatRWKV/blob/main/tokenizer/rwkv_vocab_v20230424.txt). This text file should be included verbatim.

### Computation graph

This is a future extension and still needs to be discussed, and may necessitate a new GGUF version. At the time of writing, the primary blocker is the stabilization of the computation graph format.

A sample computation graph of GGML nodes could be included in the model itself, allowing an executor to run the model without providing its own implementation of the architecture. This would allow for a more consistent experience across executors, and would allow for more complex architectures to be supported without requiring the executor to implement them.

## Migration

All existing Python conversion scripts will be consolidated to use one `gguf` library. They will take models from Hugging Face or elsewhere and produce compliant GGUF files with all of the recommended metadata.

Existing models do not have enough information to be directly converted to GGUF. Instead, a migration tool may be built that takes an existing GGML/GGMF/GGJT file and prompts the user for the missing information. This tool will be executor-agnostic, and will be able to produce a GGUF file that can be used by any executor. This tool may hardcode settings for models with known hashes to ease the migration process, such that a user can run `./migrate nous-hermes-13b.ggmlv3.q5_1.bin` and obtain a `nous-hermes-13b.ggmlv3.q5_1.gguf` file that is ready to use and consistent with uploaded models.
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---

## Current State of Affairs

The following information is provided for context, but is not necessary to understand the rest of this document.

### Overview

At present, there are three GGML file formats floating around for LLMs:

- **GGML** (unversioned): baseline format, with no versioning or alignment.
- **GGMF** (versioned): the same as GGML, but with versioning. Only one version exists.
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- **GGJT**: Aligns the tensors to allow for use with `mmap`, which requires alignment. v1, v2 and v3 are identical, but the latter versions use a different quantization scheme that is incompatible with previous versions.

GGML is primarily used by the examples in `ggml`, while GGJT is used by `llama.cpp` models. Other executors may use any of the three formats, but this is not 'officially' supported.

These formats share the same fundamental structure:

- a magic number with an optional version number
- model-specific hyperparameters, including
- metadata about the model, such as the number of layers, the number of heads, etc.
- a `ftype` that describes the type of the majority of the tensors,
- for GGML files, the quantization version is encoded in the `ftype` divided by 1000
- an embedded vocabulary, which is a list of strings with length prepended. The GGMF/GGJT formats embed a f32 score next to the strings.
- finally, a list of tensors with their length-prepended name, type, and (aligned, in the case of GGJT) tensor data

Notably, this structure does not identify what model architecture the model belongs to, nor does it offer any flexibility for changing the structure of the hyperparameters. This means that the only way to add new hyperparameters is to add them to the end of the list, which is a breaking change for existing models.

### Drawbacks

Unfortunately, over the last few months, there are a few issues that have become apparent with the existing models:

- There's no way to identify which model architecture a given model is for, because that information isn't present
- Similarly, existing programs cannot intelligently fail upon encountering new architectures
- Adding or removing any new hyperparameters is a breaking change, which is impossible for a reader to detect without using heuristics
- Each model architecture requires its own conversion script to their architecture's variant of GGML
- Maintaining backwards compatibility without breaking the structure of the format requires clever tricks, like packing the quantization version into the ftype, which are not guaranteed to be picked up by readers/writers, and are not consistent between the two formats

### Why not other formats?

There are a few other formats that could be used, but issues include:

- requiring additional dependencies to load or save the model, which is complicated in a C environment
- limited or no support for 4-bit quantization
- existing cultural expectations (e.g. whether or not the model is a directory or a file)
- lack of support for embedded vocabularies
- lack of control over direction of future development

Ultimately, it is likely that GGUF will remain necessary for the foreseeable future, and it is better to have a single format that is well-documented and supported by all executors than to contort an existing format to fit the needs of GGML.