🤗 Models on Hugging Face | Blog | Website | Get Started
Thank you for developing with Llama models. As part of the Llama 3.1 release, we’ve consolidated GitHub repos and added some additional repos as we’ve expanded Llama’s functionality into being an e2e Llama Stack. Please use the following repos going forward:
- llama-models - Central repo for the foundation models including basic utilities, model cards, license and use policies
- PurpleLlama - Key component of Llama Stack focusing on safety risks and inference time mitigations
- llama-toolchain - Model development (inference/fine-tuning/safety shields/synthetic data generation) interfaces and canonical implementations
- llama-agentic-system - E2E standalone Llama Stack system, along with opinionated underlying interface, that enables creation of agentic applications
- llama-recipes - Community driven scripts and integrations
If you have any questions, please feel free to file an issue on any of the above repos and we will do our best to respond in a timely manner.
Thank you!
We are unlocking the power of large language models. Our latest version of Llama is now accessible to individuals, creators, researchers, and businesses of all sizes so that they can experiment, innovate, and scale their ideas responsibly.
This release includes model weights and starting code for pre-trained and instruction-tuned Llama 3 language models — including sizes of 8B to 70B parameters.
This repository is a minimal example of loading Llama 3 models and running inference. For more detailed examples, see llama-recipes.
To download the model weights and tokenizer, please visit the Meta Llama website and accept our License.
Once your request is approved, you will receive a signed URL over email. Then, run the download.sh script, passing the URL provided when prompted to start the download.
Pre-requisites: Ensure you have wget
and md5sum
installed. Then run the script: ./download.sh
.
Remember that the links expire after 24 hours and a certain amount of downloads. You can always re-request a link if you start seeing errors such as 403: Forbidden
.
We also provide downloads on Hugging Face, in both transformers and native llama3
formats. To download the weights from Hugging Face, please follow these steps:
- Visit one of the repos, for example meta-llama/Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct.
- Read and accept the license. Once your request is approved, you'll be granted access to all the Llama 3 models. Note that requests used to take up to one hour to get processed.
- To download the original native weights to use with this repo, click on the "Files and versions" tab and download the contents of the
original
folder. You can also download them from the command line if youpip install huggingface-hub
:
huggingface-cli download meta-llama/Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct --include "original/*" --local-dir meta-llama/Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct
-
To use with transformers, the following pipeline snippet will download and cache the weights:
import transformers import torch model_id = "meta-llama/Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct" pipeline = transformers.pipeline( "text-generation", model="meta-llama/Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct", model_kwargs={"torch_dtype": torch.bfloat16}, device="cuda", )
You can follow the steps below to get up and running with Llama 3 models quickly. These steps will let you run quick inference locally. For more examples, see the Llama recipes repository.
-
Clone and download this repository in a conda env with PyTorch / CUDA.
-
In the top-level directory run:
pip install -e .
-
Visit the Meta Llama website and register to download the model/s.
-
Once registered, you will get an email with a URL to download the models. You will need this URL when you run the download.sh script.
-
Once you get the email, navigate to your downloaded llama repository and run the download.sh script.
- Make sure to grant execution permissions to the download.sh script
- During this process, you will be prompted to enter the URL from the email.
- Do not use the “Copy Link” option; copy the link from the email manually.
-
Once the model/s you want have been downloaded, you can run the model locally using the command below:
torchrun --nproc_per_node 1 example_chat_completion.py \
--ckpt_dir Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct/ \
--tokenizer_path Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct/tokenizer.model \
--max_seq_len 512 --max_batch_size 6
Note
- Replace
Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct/
with the path to your checkpoint directory andMeta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct/tokenizer.model
with the path to your tokenizer model. - The
–nproc_per_node
should be set to the MP value for the model you are using. - Adjust the
max_seq_len
andmax_batch_size
parameters as needed. - This example runs the example_chat_completion.py found in this repository, but you can change that to a different .py file.
Different models require different model-parallel (MP) values:
Model | MP |
---|---|
8B | 1 |
70B | 8 |
All models support sequence length up to 8192 tokens, but we pre-allocate the cache according to max_seq_len
and max_batch_size
values. So set those according to your hardware.
These models are not finetuned for chat or Q&A. They should be prompted so that the expected answer is the natural continuation of the prompt.
See example_text_completion.py
for some examples. To illustrate, see the command below to run it with the llama-3-8b model (nproc_per_node
needs to be set to the MP
value):
torchrun --nproc_per_node 1 example_text_completion.py \
--ckpt_dir Meta-Llama-3-8B/ \
--tokenizer_path Meta-Llama-3-8B/tokenizer.model \
--max_seq_len 128 --max_batch_size 4
The fine-tuned models were trained for dialogue applications. To get the expected features and performance for them, specific formatting defined in ChatFormat
needs to be followed: The prompt begins with a <|begin_of_text|>
special token, after which one or more messages follow. Each message starts with the <|start_header_id|>
tag, the role system
, user
or assistant
, and the <|end_header_id|>
tag. After a double newline \n\n
, the message's contents follow. The end of each message is marked by the <|eot_id|>
token.
You can also deploy additional classifiers to filter out inputs and outputs that are deemed unsafe. See the llama-recipes repo for an example of how to add a safety checker to the inputs and outputs of your inference code.
Examples using llama-3-8b-chat:
torchrun --nproc_per_node 1 example_chat_completion.py \
--ckpt_dir Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct/ \
--tokenizer_path Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct/tokenizer.model \
--max_seq_len 512 --max_batch_size 6
You can type questions and model chat in the console
Examples using terminal input llama-3-8b-chat:
torchrun --nproc_per_node 1 ./chat/terminal.py \
--ckpt_dir Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct/ \
--tokenizer_path Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct/tokenizer.model \
--max_seq_len 512 --max_batch_size 6
Llama 3 is a new technology that carries potential risks with use. Testing conducted to date has not — and could not — cover all scenarios. To help developers address these risks, we have created the Responsible Use Guide.
Please report any software “bug” or other problems with the models through one of the following means:
- Reporting issues with the model: https://github.com/meta-llama/llama3/issues
- Reporting risky content generated by the model: developers.facebook.com/llama_output_feedback
- Reporting bugs and security concerns: facebook.com/whitehat/info
See MODEL_CARD.md.
Our model and weights are licensed for researchers and commercial entities, upholding the principles of openness. Our mission is to empower individuals and industry through this opportunity while fostering an environment of discovery and ethical AI advancements.
See the LICENSE file, as well as our accompanying Acceptable Use Policy
For common questions, the FAQ can be found here, which will be updated over time as new questions arise.