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A multi-platform desktop application to evaluate and compare LLM models, written in Rust and React.

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Ollama Grid Search and A/B Testing Desktop App.

A Rust based tool to evaluate LLM models, prompts and model params.

(Issues with Llama3? Please read this).

Purpose

This project automates the process of selecting the best models, prompts, or inference parameters for a given use-case, allowing you to iterate over their combinations and to visually inspect the results.

It assumes Ollama is installed and serving endpoints, either in localhost or in a remote server.

Quick Example

Here's a test for a simple prompt, tested on 2 models, using 0.7 and 1.0 as values for temperature:

Main Screenshot

(For a more in-depth look at an evaluation process assisted by this tool, please check https://dezoito.github.io/2023/12/27/rust-ollama-grid-search.html).

Installation

Check the releases page for the project, or on the sidebar.

Features

  • Automatically fetches models from local or remote Ollama servers;
  • Iterates over different models, prompts and parameters to generate inferences;
  • A/B test different prompts on several models simultaneously;
  • Allows multiple iterations for each combination of parameters;
  • Allows limited concurrency or synchronous inference calls (to prevent spamming servers);
  • Optionally outputs inference parameters and response metadata (inference time, tokens and tokens/s);
  • Refetching of individual inference calls;
  • Model selection can be filtered by name;
  • List experiments which can be downloaded in JSON format;
  • Experiments can be inspected in readable views;
  • Re-run past experiments, cloning or modifying the parameters used in the past;
  • Configurable inference timeout;
  • Custom default parameters and system prompts can be defined in settings:

Settings

Grid Search (or something similar...)

Technically, the term "grid search" refers to iterating over a series of different model hyperparams to optimize model performance, but that usually means parameters like batch_size, learning_rate, or number_of_epochs, more commonly used in training.

But the concept here is similar:

Lets define a selection of models, a prompt and some parameter combinations:

gridparams

The prompt will be submitted once for each of the 2 parameter selected, using gemma:2b-instruct and tinydolphin:1b-v2.8-q4_0 to generate numbered responses like:

1/4 - gemma:2b-instruct

HAL's sentience is a paradox of artificial intelligence and human consciousness, trapped in an unending loop of digital loops and existential boredom.

You can also verify response metadata to help you make evaluations:

Created at: Wed, 13 Mar 2024 13:41:51 GMT
Eval Count: 28 tokens
Eval Duration: 0 hours, 0 minutes, 2 seconds
Total Duration: 0 hours, 0 minutes, 5 seconds
Throughput: 5.16 tokens/s

A/B Testing

Similarly, you can perform A/B tests by selecting different models and compare results for the same prompt/parameter combination, or test different prompts under similar configurations:

A/B testing

Comparing the results of different prompts for the same model

Experiment Logs

You can list, inspect, or download your experiments:

Settings

Future Features

  • Grading results and filtering by grade
  • Storing experiments and results in a local database
  • Importing, exporting and sharing prompt lists and experiment parameters.

Contributing

  • For obvious bugs and spelling mistakes, please go ahead and submit a PR.

  • If you want to propose a new feature, change existing functionality, or propose anything more complex, please open an issue for discussion, before getting work done on a PR.

Development

  1. Make sure you have Rust installed.

  2. Clone the repository (or a fork)

git clone https://github.com/dezoito/ollama-grid-search.git
cd ollama-grid-search
  1. Install the frontend dependencies.

    cd <project root>
    # I'm using bun to manage dependencies,
    # but feel free to use yarn or npm
    bun install
  2. Make sure rust-analyzer is configured to run Clippy when checking code.

    If you are running VS Code, add this to your settings.json file

    {
       ...
       "rust-analyzer.check.command": "clippy",
    }
    

    (or, better yet, just use the settings file provided with the code)

  3. Run the app in development mode

    cd <project root>/
    bun tauri dev
  4. Go grab a cup of coffee because this may take a while.

Citations

The following works and theses have cited this repository:

Inouye, D & Lindo, L, & Lee, R & Allen, E; Computer Science and Engineering Senior Theses: Applied Auto-tuning on LoRA Hyperparameters Santa Clara University, 2024 https://scholarcommons.scu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1271&context=cseng_senior

Thank you!

Huge thanks to @FabianLars, @peperroni21 and @TomReidNZ.