Files
LocalAI/backend/python
Richard Palethorpe 3fa7b2955c feat(pii): NER tier engine — privacy-filter.cpp backend + NER-centric PII filter (#10360)
Squashed feat/pii-ner-tier-engine rebased onto master (was 45 commits; see
backup/pii-ner-tier-engine-prerebase). Net change:

- privacy-filter.cpp: standalone GGML engine for the openai-privacy-filter
  PII/NER token classifier, wired as a LocalAI gRPC backend (CPU/CUDA/Vulkan).
  TokenClassify moves off the patched llama.cpp path onto this backend.
- PII filter reworked to be NER-centric (encoder/NER detection tier scanning
  whole conversations as one document), with a recreated bounded restricted-
  regex secret-matching pattern detector tier alongside it (per-model
  pii_detection.builtins / .patterns + core/services/routing/piipattern).
- Detection labelled by source (ner vs pattern); backend trace / confidence /
  debug observability; analyze/redact exposed as a synchronous API.
- Instance-wide default detector policy + per-usecase default-on; request
  filtering extended to completions, embeddings, edits & Ollama.
- React UI: NER-centric PII editor, detector-models table, pattern/builtins
  editor, middleware default-policy UI.
- Gallery: privacy-filter-multilingual token-classify model + NER install
  filter; token_classify known_usecase; batch sized to context for NER models.
  privacy-filter backend registered in the backend gallery (cpu/vulkan/cuda-13
  meta + image entries with a capabilities map) matching its CI matrix jobs,
  and an /import-model auto-detect importer (PrivacyFilterImporter, narrow
  privacy-filter GGUF detection) replacing the prior pref-only registration.

Reconciled against master's independent evolution:

- Dropped master's PIIPatternOverrides feature (global-pattern runtime
  overrides + /api/pii/patterns API + runtime_settings.json persistence). The
  per-model NER + pattern-detector design supersedes it; it was built on the
  global redactor pattern set this branch replaced.
- Reverted the llama.cpp Score carry-patch (0006-server-task-type-score):
  removed the patch and restored master's grpc-server.cpp Score RPC (direct
  llama_decode, slot-loop bypass) and LLAMA_VERSION pin, plus master's
  model_config validation forbidding score + chat/completion/embeddings on
  llama-cpp. token_classify is unaffected (it runs on the privacy-filter
  backend, not llama-cpp).

Assisted-by: Claude:claude-opus-4-8 [Claude Code]

Signed-off-by: Richard Palethorpe <io@richiejp.com>
2026-06-18 11:45:22 +01:00
..
2026-04-12 08:51:30 +02:00
2026-04-12 08:51:30 +02:00
2026-04-12 08:51:30 +02:00
2026-04-12 08:51:30 +02:00
2026-03-30 00:47:27 +02:00
2026-04-12 08:51:30 +02:00
2026-04-12 08:51:30 +02:00

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 uv and pip
  • 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)
  • uv package manager (recommended) or pip
  • 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 requirements
  • requirements-cpu.txt - CPU-specific packages
  • requirements-cublas12.txt - CUDA 12 packages
  • requirements-cublas13.txt - CUDA 13 packages
  • requirements-intel.txt - Intel-optimized packages
  • requirements-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 target
  • USE_PIP - Use pip instead of uv (default: false)
  • PORTABLE_PYTHON - Enable portable Python builds
  • LIMIT_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

  1. Create a new directory in backend/python/
  2. Copy the template structure from common/template/
  3. Implement your backend.py with the required gRPC interface
  4. Add appropriate requirements files for your target hardware
  5. Use libbackend.sh for 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

  1. Missing dependencies: Ensure all requirements files are properly configured
  2. Hardware detection: Check that BUILD_TYPE matches your system
  3. Python version: Verify Python 3.10+ is available
  4. Virtual environment: Use ensureVenv to create/activate environments

Contributing

When adding new backends or modifying existing ones:

  1. Follow the established directory structure
  2. Use libbackend.sh for consistent behavior
  3. Include appropriate requirements files for all target hardware
  4. Add comprehensive tests
  5. Update this README if adding new backend types