mirror of
https://github.com/mudler/LocalAI.git
synced 2026-04-30 20:15:35 -04:00
* feat(voice-recognition): add /v1/voice/{verify,analyze,embed} + speaker-recognition backend
Audio analog to face recognition. Adds three gRPC RPCs
(VoiceVerify / VoiceAnalyze / VoiceEmbed), their Go service and HTTP
layers, a new FLAG_SPEAKER_RECOGNITION capability flag, and a Python
backend scaffold under backend/python/speaker-recognition/ wrapping
SpeechBrain ECAPA-TDNN with a parallel OnnxDirectEngine for
WeSpeaker / 3D-Speaker ONNX exports.
The kokoros Rust backend gets matching unimplemented trait stubs —
tonic's async_trait has no defaults, so adding an RPC without Rust
stubs breaks the build (same regression fixed by eb01c772 for face).
Swagger, /api/instructions, and the auth RouteFeatureRegistry /
APIFeatures list are updated so the endpoints surface everywhere a
client or admin UI looks.
Assisted-by: Claude:claude-opus-4-7
* feat(voice-recognition): add 1:N identify + register/forget endpoints
Mirrors the face-recognition register/identify/forget surface. New
package core/services/voicerecognition/ carries a Registry interface
and a local-store-backed implementation (same in-memory vector-store
plumbing facerecognition uses, separate instance so the embedding
spaces stay isolated).
Handlers under /v1/voice/{register,identify,forget} reuse
backend.VoiceEmbed to compute the probe vector, then delegate the
nearest-neighbour search to the registry. Default cosine-distance
threshold is tuned for ECAPA-TDNN on VoxCeleb (0.25, EER ~1.9%).
As with the face registry, the current backing is in-memory only — a
pgvector implementation is a future constructor-level swap.
Assisted-by: Claude:claude-opus-4-7
* feat(voice-recognition): gallery, docs, CI and e2e coverage
- backend/index.yaml: speaker-recognition backend entry + CPU and
CUDA-12 image variants (plus matching development variants).
- gallery/index.yaml: speechbrain-ecapa-tdnn (default) and
wespeaker-resnet34 model entries. The WeSpeaker SHA-256 is a
deliberate placeholder — the HF URI must be curl'd and its hash
filled in before the entry installs.
- docs/content/features/voice-recognition.md: API reference + quickstart,
mirrors the face-recognition docs.
- React UI: CAP_SPEAKER_RECOGNITION flag export (consumers follow face's
precedent — no dedicated tab yet).
- tests/e2e-backends: voice_embed / voice_verify / voice_analyze specs.
Helper resolveFaceFixture is reused as-is — the only thing face/voice
share is "download a file into workDir", so no need for a new helper.
- Makefile: docker-build-speaker-recognition + test-extra-backend-
speaker-recognition-{ecapa,all} targets. Audio fixtures default to
VCTK p225/p226 samples from HuggingFace.
- CI: test-extra.yml grows a tests-speaker-recognition-grpc job
mirroring insightface. backend.yml matrix gains CPU + CUDA-12 image
build entries — scripts/changed-backends.js auto-picks these up.
Assisted-by: Claude:claude-opus-4-7
* feat(voice-recognition): wire a working /v1/voice/analyze head
Adds AnalysisHead: a lazy-loading age / gender / emotion inference
wrapper that plugs into both SpeechBrainEngine and OnnxDirectEngine.
Defaults to two open-licence HuggingFace checkpoints:
- audeering/wav2vec2-large-robust-24-ft-age-gender (Apache 2.0) —
age regression + 3-way gender (female / male / child).
- superb/wav2vec2-base-superb-er (Apache 2.0) — 4-way emotion.
Both are optional and degrade gracefully when transformers or the
model can't be loaded — the engine raises NotImplementedError so the
gRPC layer returns 501 instead of a generic 500.
Emotion classes pass through from the model (neutral/happy/angry/sad
on the default checkpoint); the e2e test now accepts any non-empty
dominant gender so custom age_gender_model overrides don't fail it.
Adds transformers to the backend's CPU and CUDA-12 requirements.
Assisted-by: Claude:claude-opus-4-7
* fix(voice-recognition): pin real WeSpeaker ResNet34 ONNX SHA-256
Replaces the placeholder hash in gallery/index.yaml with the actual
SHA-256 (7bb2f06e…) of the upstream
Wespeaker/wespeaker-voxceleb-resnet34-LM ONNX at ~25MB. `local-ai
models install wespeaker-resnet34` now succeeds.
Assisted-by: Claude:claude-opus-4-7
* fix(voice-recognition): soundfile loader + honest analyze default
Two issues surfaced on first end-to-end smoke with the actual backend
image:
1. torchaudio.load in torchaudio 2.8+ requires the torchcodec package
for audio decoding. Switch SpeechBrainEngine._load_waveform to the
already-present soundfile (listed in requirements.txt) plus a numpy
linear resample to 16kHz. Drops a heavy ffmpeg-linked dep and the
codepath we never exercise (torchaudio's ffmpeg backend).
2. The AnalysisHead was defaulting to audeering/wav2vec2-large-robust-
24-ft-age-gender, but AutoModelForAudioClassification silently
mangles that checkpoint — it reports the age head weights as
UNEXPECTED and re-initialises the classifier head with random
values, so the "gender" output is noise and there is no age output
at all. Make age/gender opt-in instead (empty default; users wire
a cleanly-loadable Wav2Vec2ForSequenceClassification checkpoint via
age_gender_model: option). Emotion keeps its working Superb default.
Also broaden _infer_age_gender's tensor-shape handling and catch
runtime exceptions so a dodgy age/gender head never takes down the
whole analyze call.
Docs and README updated to match the new policy.
Verified with the branch-scoped gallery on localhost:
- voice/embed → 192-d ECAPA-TDNN vector
- voice/verify → same-clip dist≈6e-08 verified=true; cross-speaker
dist 0.76–0.99 verified=false (as expected)
- voice/register/identify/forget → round-trip works, 404 on unknown id
- voice/analyze → emotion populated, age/gender omitted (opt-in)
Assisted-by: Claude:claude-opus-4-7
* fix(voice-recognition): real CI audio fixtures + fixture-agnostic verify spec
Two issues surfaced after CI actually ran the speaker-recognition e2e
target (I'd curl-tested against a running server but hadn't run the
make target locally):
1. The default BACKEND_TEST_VOICE_AUDIO_* URLs pointed at
huggingface.co/datasets/CSTR-Edinburgh/vctk paths that return 404
(the dataset is gated). Swap them for the speechbrain test samples
served from github.com/speechbrain/speechbrain/raw/develop/ —
public, no auth, correct 16kHz mono format.
2. The VoiceVerify spec required d(file1,file2) < 0.4, assuming
file1/file2 were same-speaker. The speechbrain samples are three
different speakers (example1/2/5), and there is no easy un-gated
source of true same-speaker audio pairs (VoxCeleb/VCTK/LibriSpeech
are all license- or size-gated for CI use). Replace the ceiling
check with a relative-ordering assertion: d(pair) > d(same-clip)
for both file2 and file3 — that's enough to prove the embeddings
encode speaker info, and it works with any three non-identical
clips. Actual speaker ordering d(1,2) vs d(1,3) is logged but not
asserted.
Local run: 4/4 voice specs pass (Health, LoadModel, VoiceEmbed,
VoiceVerify) on the built backend image. 12 non-voice specs skipped
as expected.
Assisted-by: Claude:claude-opus-4-7
* fix(ci): checkout with submodules in the reusable backend_build workflow
The kokoros Rust backend build fails with
failed to read .../sources/Kokoros/kokoros/Cargo.toml: No such file
because the reusable backend_build.yml workflow's actions/checkout
step was missing `submodules: true`. Dockerfile.rust does `COPY .
/LocalAI`, and without the submodule files the subsequent `cargo
build` can't find the vendored Kokoros crate.
The bug pre-dates this PR — scripts/changed-backends.js only triggers
the kokoros image job when something under backend/rust/kokoros or
the shared proto changes, so master had been coasting past it. The
voice-recognition proto addition re-broke it.
Other checkouts in backend.yml (llama-cpp-darwin) and test-extra.yml
(insightface, kokoros, speaker-recognition) already pass
`submodules: true`; this brings the shared backend image builder in
line.
Assisted-by: Claude:claude-opus-4-7
Python Backends for LocalAI
This directory contains Python-based AI backends for LocalAI, providing support for various AI models and hardware acceleration targets.
Overview
The Python backends use a unified build system based on libbackend.sh that provides:
- Automatic virtual environment management with support for both
uvandpip - Hardware-specific dependency installation (CPU, CUDA, Intel, MLX, etc.)
- Portable Python support for standalone deployments
- Consistent backend execution across different environments
Available Backends
Core AI Models
- transformers - Hugging Face Transformers framework (PyTorch-based)
- vllm - High-performance LLM inference engine
- mlx - Apple Silicon optimized ML framework
Audio & Speech
- coqui - Coqui TTS models
- faster-whisper - Fast Whisper speech recognition
- kitten-tts - Lightweight TTS
- mlx-audio - Apple Silicon audio processing
- chatterbox - TTS model
- kokoro - TTS models
Computer Vision
- diffusers - Stable Diffusion and image generation
- mlx-vlm - Vision-language models for Apple Silicon
- rfdetr - Object detection models
Specialized
- rerankers - Text reranking models
Quick Start
Prerequisites
- Python 3.10+ (default: 3.10.18)
uvpackage manager (recommended) orpip- Appropriate hardware drivers for your target (CUDA, Intel, etc.)
Installation
Each backend can be installed individually:
# Navigate to a specific backend
cd backend/python/transformers
# Install dependencies
make transformers
# or
bash install.sh
# Run the backend
make run
# or
bash run.sh
Using the Unified Build System
The libbackend.sh script provides consistent commands across all backends:
# Source the library in your backend script
source $(dirname $0)/../common/libbackend.sh
# Install requirements (automatically handles hardware detection)
installRequirements
# Start the backend server
startBackend $@
# Run tests
runUnittests
Hardware Targets
The build system automatically detects and configures for different hardware:
- CPU - Standard CPU-only builds
- CUDA - NVIDIA GPU acceleration (supports CUDA 12/13)
- Intel - Intel XPU/GPU optimization
- MLX - Apple Silicon (M1/M2/M3) optimization
- HIP - AMD GPU acceleration
Target-Specific Requirements
Backends can specify hardware-specific dependencies:
requirements.txt- Base requirementsrequirements-cpu.txt- CPU-specific packagesrequirements-cublas12.txt- CUDA 12 packagesrequirements-cublas13.txt- CUDA 13 packagesrequirements-intel.txt- Intel-optimized packagesrequirements-mps.txt- Apple Silicon packages
Configuration Options
Environment Variables
PYTHON_VERSION- Python version (default: 3.10)PYTHON_PATCH- Python patch version (default: 18)BUILD_TYPE- Force specific build targetUSE_PIP- Use pip instead of uv (default: false)PORTABLE_PYTHON- Enable portable Python buildsLIMIT_TARGETS- Restrict backend to specific targets
Example: CUDA 12 Only Backend
# In your backend script
LIMIT_TARGETS="cublas12"
source $(dirname $0)/../common/libbackend.sh
Example: Intel-Optimized Backend
# In your backend script
LIMIT_TARGETS="intel"
source $(dirname $0)/../common/libbackend.sh
Development
Adding a New Backend
- Create a new directory in
backend/python/ - Copy the template structure from
common/template/ - Implement your
backend.pywith the required gRPC interface - Add appropriate requirements files for your target hardware
- Use
libbackend.shfor consistent build and execution
Testing
# Run backend tests
make test
# or
bash test.sh
Building
# Install dependencies
make <backend-name>
# Clean build artifacts
make clean
Architecture
Each backend follows a consistent structure:
backend-name/
├── backend.py # Main backend implementation
├── requirements.txt # Base dependencies
├── requirements-*.txt # Hardware-specific dependencies
├── install.sh # Installation script
├── run.sh # Execution script
├── test.sh # Test script
├── Makefile # Build targets
└── test.py # Unit tests
Troubleshooting
Common Issues
- Missing dependencies: Ensure all requirements files are properly configured
- Hardware detection: Check that
BUILD_TYPEmatches your system - Python version: Verify Python 3.10+ is available
- Virtual environment: Use
ensureVenvto create/activate environments
Contributing
When adding new backends or modifying existing ones:
- Follow the established directory structure
- Use
libbackend.shfor consistent behavior - Include appropriate requirements files for all target hardware
- Add comprehensive tests
- Update this README if adding new backend types