.tar.gz of the main gpt code that can be extracted and run on anyone's system.
This package contains a set of Python bindings around the llmodel
C-API.
Package on PyPI: https://pypi.org/project/gpt4all/
https://docs.gpt4all.io/gpt4all_python.html
pip install gpt4all
NOTE: If you are doing this on a Windows machine, you must build the GPT4All backend using MinGW64 compiler.
- Setup
llmodel
git clone --recurse-submodules [email protected]:nomic-ai/gpt4all.git
cd gpt4all/gpt4all-backend/
mkdir build
cd build
cmake ..
cmake --build . --parallel # optionally append: --config Release
Confirm that libllmodel.*
exists in gpt4all-backend/build
.
- Setup Python package
cd ../../gpt4all-bindings/python
pip3 install -e .
Test it out! In a Python script or console:
from gpt4all import GPT4All
model = GPT4All("orca-mini-3b.ggmlv3.q4_0.bin")
output = model.generate("The capital of France is ", max_tokens=3)
print(output)
-
If you're on Windows and have compiled with a MinGW toolchain, you might run into an error like:
FileNotFoundError: Could not find module '<...>\gpt4all-bindings\python\gpt4all\llmodel_DO_NOT_MODIFY\build\libllmodel.dll' (or one of its dependencies). Try using the full path with constructor syntax.
The key phrase in this case is "or one of its dependencies". The Python interpreter you're using probably doesn't see the MinGW runtime dependencies. At the moment, the following three are required:
libgcc_s_seh-1.dll
,libstdc++-6.dll
andlibwinpthread-1.dll
. You should copy them from MinGW into a folder where Python will see them, preferably next tolibllmodel.dll
. -
Note regarding the Microsoft toolchain: Compiling with MSVC is possible, but not the official way to go about it at the moment. MSVC doesn't produce DLLs with a
lib
prefix, which the bindings expect. You'd have to amend that yourself.