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Drop the 295-line vendor/llama.py fork in favor of `tinygrad.apps.llm`, which now provides the Transformer blocks, GGUF loader (incl. Q4/Q6/Q8 quantization), KV-cache and generate loop we were maintaining ourselves. What changed: - New vendor/appsllm_adapter.py (~90 LOC) — HF -> GGUF-native state-dict keymap, Transformer kwargs builder, `_embed_hidden` helper, and a hard rejection of qkv_bias models (Qwen2 / 2.5 are no longer supported; the apps.llm Transformer ties `bias=False` on Q/K/V projections). - backend.py routes both safetensors and GGUF paths through apps.llm.Transformer. Generation now delegates to its (greedy-only) `generate()`; Temperature / TopK / TopP / RepetitionPenalty are still accepted on the wire but ignored — documented in the module docstring. - Jinja chat render now passes `enable_thinking=False` so Qwen3's reasoning preamble doesn't eat the tool-call token budget on small models. - Embedding path uses `_embed_hidden` (block stack + output_norm) rather than the custom `embed()` method we were carrying on the vendored Transformer. - test.py gains TestAppsLLMAdapter covering the keymap rename, tied embedding fallback, unknown-key skipping, and qkv_bias rejection. - Makefile fixtures move from Qwen/Qwen2.5-0.5B-Instruct to Qwen/Qwen3-0.6B (apps.llm-compatible) and tool_parser from qwen3_xml to hermes (the HF chat template emits hermes-style JSON tool calls). Verified with the docker-backed targets: test-extra-backend-tinygrad 5/5 PASS test-extra-backend-tinygrad-embeddings 3/3 PASS test-extra-backend-tinygrad-whisper 4/4 PASS test-extra-backend-tinygrad-sd 3/3 PASS
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