Files
LocalAI/backend
Ettore Di Giacinto 24ce7d0823 feat(llama-cpp/paged): dynamic decode-first prefill budget (patch 0016, continuous-batch P1)
Mirror the P1 engine change of CONTINUOUS_BATCH_SCHEDULER_SCOPE.md into the
vendored paged patch series and surface it as a LocalAI model option.

- patches/paged/0016-paged-dynamic-prefill-budget-continuous-batch.patch:
  supersede patch 0013's STATIC per-step prefill cap with a DYNAMIC,
  decode-first token budget in update_slots(). At the budget seam (already
  after Phase 1's decode fill, so batch.n_tokens == D is known) compute
  T = clamp(LLAMA_MAX_BATCH_TOKENS ?: n_batch, n_ubatch, n_batch),
  prefill_budget_step = max(n_ubatch, T - D), and a per-slot prompt-chunk
  cap prefill_cap_per_slot; bound the Phase-2 prompt-fill loop and outer
  admission break by these instead of 0013's constant. Policy-only change,
  no new slot states, no batch-formation rewrite, zero libllama changes.
  Decode is structurally claimed first (Phase 1) so the decode-first
  guarantee is free. As decode load D rises the leftover auto-shrinks, so
  the budget self-tunes across npl 8..128 and dense vs MoE and holds the
  GB10 decode ceiling tuning-free (vs 0013's hand-picked 256). The legacy
  LLAMA_PREFILL_BUDGET path is preserved (honoured only when the dynamic
  knob is unset), so 0013 is cleanly subsumed. DEFAULT-OFF byte-identical:
  all-knobs-unset and the degenerate T == n_batch case are bit-identical to
  stock by construction (the n_batch hard ceiling is kept and the dynamic
  bounds reach it at the same point for every D). Orthogonal to
  LLAMA_KV_PAGED.

- grpc-server.cpp: wire the new knob as model options max_batch_tokens / mbt
  (-> LLAMA_MAX_BATCH_TOKENS) and prefill_cap (-> LLAMA_PREFILL_CAP), beside
  the existing max_prefill_tokens / mpt seam; default-off, takes precedence
  over the legacy static budget when set.

- patches/paged/P1_DYNAMIC_BUDGET_RESULTS.md: design, the byte-identical
  determinism analysis (verified by construction), the local patch-apply
  verification, and the gate + A/B bench methodology.

Validation status: the patch applies cleanly on top of LLAMA_VERSION
(f3e1828) + paged 0001-0015, and the off-path / T==n_batch determinism is
proven by construction. The GB10 sm_121 build, the four runtime gates, and
the dense+MoE A/B sweep are PENDING a DGX run (the dev box was unreachable
this session) and are documented as such in P1_DYNAMIC_BUDGET_RESULTS.md; do
not sell the quantitative TTFT payoff until that re-run lands.

Assisted-by: Claude:opus-4.8 [Claude Code]
Signed-off-by: Ettore Di Giacinto <mudler@localai.io>
2026-06-24 07:48:20 +00:00
..

LocalAI Backend Architecture

This directory contains the core backend infrastructure for LocalAI, including the gRPC protocol definition, multi-language Dockerfiles, and language-specific backend implementations.

Overview

LocalAI uses a unified gRPC-based architecture that allows different programming languages to implement AI backends while maintaining consistent interfaces and capabilities. The backend system supports multiple hardware acceleration targets and provides a standardized way to integrate various AI models and frameworks.

Architecture Components

1. Protocol Definition (backend.proto)

The backend.proto file defines the gRPC service interface that all backends must implement. This ensures consistency across different language implementations and provides a contract for communication between LocalAI core and backend services.

Core Services

  • Text Generation: Predict, PredictStream for LLM inference
  • Embeddings: Embedding for text vectorization
  • Image Generation: GenerateImage for stable diffusion and image models
  • Audio Processing: AudioTranscription, TTS, SoundGeneration
  • Video Generation: GenerateVideo for video synthesis
  • Object Detection: Detect for computer vision tasks
  • Vector Storage: StoresSet, StoresGet, StoresFind for RAG operations
  • Reranking: Rerank for document relevance scoring
  • Voice Activity Detection: VAD for audio segmentation

Key Message Types

  • PredictOptions: Comprehensive configuration for text generation
  • ModelOptions: Model loading and configuration parameters
  • Result: Standardized response format
  • StatusResponse: Backend health and memory usage information

2. Multi-Language Dockerfiles

The backend system provides language-specific Dockerfiles that handle the build environment and dependencies for different programming languages:

  • Dockerfile.python
  • Dockerfile.golang
  • Dockerfile.llama-cpp

3. Language-Specific Implementations

Python Backends (python/)

  • transformers: Hugging Face Transformers framework
  • vllm: High-performance LLM inference
  • mlx: Apple Silicon optimization
  • diffusers: Stable Diffusion models
  • Audio: coqui, faster-whisper, kitten-tts
  • Vision: mlx-vlm, rfdetr
  • Specialized: rerankers, chatterbox, kokoro

Go Backends (go/)

  • whisper: OpenAI Whisper speech recognition in Go with GGML cpp backend (whisper.cpp)
  • stablediffusion-ggml: Stable Diffusion in Go with GGML Cpp backend
  • piper: Text-to-speech synthesis Golang with C bindings using rhaspy/piper
  • local-store: Vector storage backend

C++ Backends (cpp/)

  • llama-cpp: Llama.cpp integration
  • grpc: GRPC utilities and helpers

Hardware Acceleration Support

CUDA (NVIDIA)

  • Versions: CUDA 12.x, 13.x
  • Features: cuBLAS, cuDNN, TensorRT optimization
  • Targets: x86_64, ARM64 (Jetson)

ROCm (AMD)

  • Features: HIP, rocBLAS, MIOpen
  • Targets: AMD GPUs with ROCm support

Intel

  • Features: oneAPI, Intel Extension for PyTorch
  • Targets: Intel GPUs, XPUs, CPUs

Vulkan

  • Features: Cross-platform GPU acceleration
  • Targets: Windows, Linux, Android, macOS

Apple Silicon

  • Features: MLX framework, Metal Performance Shaders
  • Targets: M1/M2/M3 Macs

Backend Registry (index.yaml)

The index.yaml file serves as a central registry for all available backends, providing:

  • Metadata: Name, description, license, icons
  • Capabilities: Hardware targets and optimization profiles
  • Tags: Categorization for discovery
  • URLs: Source code and documentation links

Building Backends

Prerequisites

  • Docker with multi-architecture support
  • Appropriate hardware drivers (CUDA, ROCm, etc.)
  • Build tools (make, cmake, compilers)

Build Commands

Example of build commands with Docker

# Build Python backend
docker build -f backend/Dockerfile.python \
  --build-arg BACKEND=transformers \
  --build-arg BUILD_TYPE=cublas12 \
  --build-arg CUDA_MAJOR_VERSION=12 \
  --build-arg CUDA_MINOR_VERSION=0 \
  -t localai-backend-transformers .

# Build Go backend
docker build -f backend/Dockerfile.golang \
  --build-arg BACKEND=whisper \
  --build-arg BUILD_TYPE=cpu \
  -t localai-backend-whisper .

# Build C++ backend
docker build -f backend/Dockerfile.llama-cpp \
  --build-arg BACKEND=llama-cpp \
  --build-arg BUILD_TYPE=cublas12 \
  -t localai-backend-llama-cpp .

For ARM64/Mac builds, docker can't be used, and the makefile in the respective backend has to be used.

Build Types

  • cpu: CPU-only optimization
  • cublas12, cublas13: CUDA 12.x, 13.x with cuBLAS
  • hipblas: ROCm with rocBLAS
  • intel: Intel oneAPI optimization
  • vulkan: Vulkan-based acceleration
  • metal: Apple Metal optimization

Backend Development

Creating a New Backend

  1. Choose Language: Select Python, Go, or C++ based on requirements
  2. Implement Interface: Implement the gRPC service defined in backend.proto
  3. Add Dependencies: Create appropriate requirements files
  4. Configure Build: Set up Dockerfile and build scripts
  5. Register Backend: Add entry to index.yaml
  6. Test Integration: Verify gRPC communication and functionality

Backend Structure

backend-name/
├── backend.py/go/cpp    # Main implementation
├── requirements.txt      # Dependencies
├── Dockerfile           # Build configuration
├── install.sh           # Installation script
├── run.sh              # Execution script
├── test.sh             # Test script
└── README.md           # Backend documentation

Required gRPC Methods

At minimum, backends must implement:

  • Health() - Service health check
  • LoadModel() - Model loading and initialization
  • Predict() - Main inference endpoint
  • Status() - Backend status and metrics

Integration with LocalAI Core

Backends communicate with LocalAI core through gRPC:

  1. Service Discovery: Core discovers available backends
  2. Model Loading: Core requests model loading via LoadModel
  3. Inference: Core sends requests via Predict or specialized endpoints
  4. Streaming: Core handles streaming responses for real-time generation
  5. Monitoring: Core tracks backend health and performance

Performance Optimization

Memory Management

  • Model Caching: Efficient model loading and caching
  • Batch Processing: Optimize for multiple concurrent requests
  • Memory Pinning: GPU memory optimization for CUDA/ROCm

Hardware Utilization

  • Multi-GPU: Support for tensor parallelism
  • Mixed Precision: FP16/BF16 for memory efficiency
  • Kernel Fusion: Optimized CUDA/ROCm kernels

Troubleshooting

Common Issues

  1. GRPC Connection: Verify backend service is running and accessible
  2. Model Loading: Check model paths and dependencies
  3. Hardware Detection: Ensure appropriate drivers and libraries
  4. Memory Issues: Monitor GPU memory usage and model sizes

Contributing

When contributing to the backend system:

  1. Follow Protocol: Implement the exact gRPC interface
  2. Add Tests: Include comprehensive test coverage
  3. Document: Provide clear usage examples
  4. Optimize: Consider performance and resource usage
  5. Validate: Test across different hardware targets