TurboPilot is a self-hosted [copilot](https://github.com/features/copilot) clone which uses the library behind [llama.cpp](https://github.com/ggerganov/llama.cpp) to run the [6 Billion Parameter Salesforce Codegen model](https://github.com/salesforce/CodeGen) in 4GiB of RAM. It is heavily based and inspired by on the [fauxpilot](https://github.com/fauxpilot/fauxpilot) project.
***NB: This is a proof of concept right now rather than a stable tool. Autocompletion is quite slow in this version of the project. Feel free to play with it, but your mileage may vary.***
**✨ Now Supports [StableCode 3B Instruct](https://huggingface.co/stabilityai/stablecode-instruct-alpha-3b)** simply use [TheBloke's Quantized GGML models](https://huggingface.co/TheBloke/stablecode-instruct-alpha-3b-GGML) and set `-m stablecode`.
**✨ New: Refactored + Simplified**: The source code has been improved to make it easier to extend and add new models to Turbopilot. The system now supports multiple flavours of model
**✨ New: Wizardcoder, Starcoder, Santacoder support** - Turbopilot now supports state of the art local code completion models which provide more programming languages and "fill in the middle" support.
For low RAM users (4-8 GiB), I recommend [StableCode](https://huggingface.co/TheBloke/stablecode-instruct-alpha-3b-GGML) and for high power users (16+ GiB RAM, discrete GPU or apple silicon) I recomnmend [WizardCoder](https://huggingface.co/TheBloke/WizardCoder-15B-1.0-GGML/resolve/main/WizardCoder-15B-1.0.ggmlv3.q4_0.bin).
Follow [this guide](https://github.com/ravenscroftj/turbopilot/wiki/Converting-and-Quantizing-The-Models) if you want to experiment with quantizing the models yourself.
Download the [latest binary](https://github.com/ravenscroftj/turbopilot/releases) and extract it to the root project folder. If a binary is not provided for your OS or you'd prefer to build it yourself follow the [build instructions](BUILD.md)
The application should start a server on port `18080`, you can change this with the `-p` option but this is the default port that vscode-fauxpilot tries to connect to so you probably want to leave this alone unless you are sure you know what you're doing.
If you have a multi-core system you can control how many CPUs are used with the `-t` option - for example, on my AMD Ryzen 5000 which has 6 cores/12 threads I use:
**NOTE: Turbopilot 0.1.0 and newer re-quantize your codegen models old models from v0.0.5 and older. I am working on providing updated quantized codegen models**
You can also run Turbopilot from the pre-built docker image supplied [here](https://github.com/users/ravenscroftj/packages/container/package/turbopilot)
As of release v0.0.5 turbocode now supports CUDA inference. In order to run the cuda-enabled container you will need to have [nvidia-docker](https://github.com/NVIDIA/nvidia-docker) enabled, use the cuda tagged versions and pass in `--gpus=all` to docker with access to your GPU like so:
If you have a big enough GPU then setting `GPU_LAYERS` will allow turbopilot to fully offload computation onto your GPU rather than copying data backwards and forwards, dramatically speeding up inference.
Swap `ghcr.io/ravenscroftj/turbopilot:v0.1.0-cuda11` for `ghcr.io/ravenscroftj/turbopilot:v0.2.0-cuda12-0` or `ghcr.io/ravenscroftj/turbopilot:v0.2.0-cuda12-2` if you are using CUDA 12.0 or 12.2 respectively.
As of v0.0.5 a CUDA version of the linux executable is available - it requires that libcublas 11 be installed on the machine - I might build ubuntu debs at some point but for now running in docker may be more convenient if you want to use a CUDA GPU.
To use the API from VSCode, I recommend the vscode-fauxpilot plugin. Once you install it, you will need to change a few settings in your settings.json file.
Now you can enable fauxpilot with `CTRL + SHIFT + P` and select `Enable Fauxpilot`
The plugin will send API calls to the running `codegen-serve` process when you make a keystroke. It will then wait for each request to complete before sending further requests.
#### Calling the API Directly
You can make requests to `http://localhost:18080/v1/engines/codegen/completions` which will behave just like the same Copilot endpoint.
- This project would not have been possible without [Georgi Gerganov's work on GGML and llama.cpp](https://github.com/ggerganov/ggml)
- It was completely inspired by [fauxpilot](https://github.com/fauxpilot/fauxpilot) which I did experiment with for a little while but wanted to try to make the models work without a GPU
- The frontend of the project is powered by [Venthe's vscode-fauxpilot plugin](https://github.com/Venthe/vscode-fauxpilot)
- The project uses the [Salesforce Codegen](https://github.com/salesforce/CodeGen) models.
- Thanks to [Moyix](https://huggingface.co/moyix) for his work on converting the Salesforce models to run in a GPT-J architecture. Not only does this [confer some speed benefits](https://gist.github.com/moyix/7896575befbe1b99162ccfec8d135566) but it also made it much easier for me to port the models to GGML using the [existing gpt-j example code](https://github.com/ggerganov/ggml/tree/master/examples/gpt-j)