home / skills / orchestra-research / ai-research-skills / gguf
This skill helps you deploy AI models efficiently on consumer hardware using GGUF quantization for flexible 2-8 bit inference.
npx playbooks add skill orchestra-research/ai-research-skills --skill ggufReview the files below or copy the command above to add this skill to your agents.
---
name: gguf-quantization
description: GGUF format and llama.cpp quantization for efficient CPU/GPU inference. Use when deploying models on consumer hardware, Apple Silicon, or when needing flexible quantization from 2-8 bit without GPU requirements.
version: 1.0.0
author: Orchestra Research
license: MIT
tags: [GGUF, Quantization, llama.cpp, CPU Inference, Apple Silicon, Model Compression, Optimization]
dependencies: [llama-cpp-python>=0.2.0]
---
# GGUF - Quantization Format for llama.cpp
The GGUF (GPT-Generated Unified Format) is the standard file format for llama.cpp, enabling efficient inference on CPUs, Apple Silicon, and GPUs with flexible quantization options.
## When to use GGUF
**Use GGUF when:**
- Deploying on consumer hardware (laptops, desktops)
- Running on Apple Silicon (M1/M2/M3) with Metal acceleration
- Need CPU inference without GPU requirements
- Want flexible quantization (Q2_K to Q8_0)
- Using local AI tools (LM Studio, Ollama, text-generation-webui)
**Key advantages:**
- **Universal hardware**: CPU, Apple Silicon, NVIDIA, AMD support
- **No Python runtime**: Pure C/C++ inference
- **Flexible quantization**: 2-8 bit with various methods (K-quants)
- **Ecosystem support**: LM Studio, Ollama, koboldcpp, and more
- **imatrix**: Importance matrix for better low-bit quality
**Use alternatives instead:**
- **AWQ/GPTQ**: Maximum accuracy with calibration on NVIDIA GPUs
- **HQQ**: Fast calibration-free quantization for HuggingFace
- **bitsandbytes**: Simple integration with transformers library
- **TensorRT-LLM**: Production NVIDIA deployment with maximum speed
## Quick start
### Installation
```bash
# Clone llama.cpp
git clone https://github.com/ggml-org/llama.cpp
cd llama.cpp
# Build (CPU)
make
# Build with CUDA (NVIDIA)
make GGML_CUDA=1
# Build with Metal (Apple Silicon)
make GGML_METAL=1
# Install Python bindings (optional)
pip install llama-cpp-python
```
### Convert model to GGUF
```bash
# Install requirements
pip install -r requirements.txt
# Convert HuggingFace model to GGUF (FP16)
python convert_hf_to_gguf.py ./path/to/model --outfile model-f16.gguf
# Or specify output type
python convert_hf_to_gguf.py ./path/to/model \
--outfile model-f16.gguf \
--outtype f16
```
### Quantize model
```bash
# Basic quantization to Q4_K_M
./llama-quantize model-f16.gguf model-q4_k_m.gguf Q4_K_M
# Quantize with importance matrix (better quality)
./llama-imatrix -m model-f16.gguf -f calibration.txt -o model.imatrix
./llama-quantize --imatrix model.imatrix model-f16.gguf model-q4_k_m.gguf Q4_K_M
```
### Run inference
```bash
# CLI inference
./llama-cli -m model-q4_k_m.gguf -p "Hello, how are you?"
# Interactive mode
./llama-cli -m model-q4_k_m.gguf --interactive
# With GPU offload
./llama-cli -m model-q4_k_m.gguf -ngl 35 -p "Hello!"
```
## Quantization types
### K-quant methods (recommended)
| Type | Bits | Size (7B) | Quality | Use Case |
|------|------|-----------|---------|----------|
| Q2_K | 2.5 | ~2.8 GB | Low | Extreme compression |
| Q3_K_S | 3.0 | ~3.0 GB | Low-Med | Memory constrained |
| Q3_K_M | 3.3 | ~3.3 GB | Medium | Balance |
| Q4_K_S | 4.0 | ~3.8 GB | Med-High | Good balance |
| Q4_K_M | 4.5 | ~4.1 GB | High | **Recommended default** |
| Q5_K_S | 5.0 | ~4.6 GB | High | Quality focused |
| Q5_K_M | 5.5 | ~4.8 GB | Very High | High quality |
| Q6_K | 6.0 | ~5.5 GB | Excellent | Near-original |
| Q8_0 | 8.0 | ~7.2 GB | Best | Maximum quality |
### Legacy methods
| Type | Description |
|------|-------------|
| Q4_0 | 4-bit, basic |
| Q4_1 | 4-bit with delta |
| Q5_0 | 5-bit, basic |
| Q5_1 | 5-bit with delta |
**Recommendation**: Use K-quant methods (Q4_K_M, Q5_K_M) for best quality/size ratio.
## Conversion workflows
### Workflow 1: HuggingFace to GGUF
```bash
# 1. Download model
huggingface-cli download meta-llama/Llama-3.1-8B --local-dir ./llama-3.1-8b
# 2. Convert to GGUF (FP16)
python convert_hf_to_gguf.py ./llama-3.1-8b \
--outfile llama-3.1-8b-f16.gguf \
--outtype f16
# 3. Quantize
./llama-quantize llama-3.1-8b-f16.gguf llama-3.1-8b-q4_k_m.gguf Q4_K_M
# 4. Test
./llama-cli -m llama-3.1-8b-q4_k_m.gguf -p "Hello!" -n 50
```
### Workflow 2: With importance matrix (better quality)
```bash
# 1. Convert to GGUF
python convert_hf_to_gguf.py ./model --outfile model-f16.gguf
# 2. Create calibration text (diverse samples)
cat > calibration.txt << 'EOF'
The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog.
Machine learning is a subset of artificial intelligence.
Python is a popular programming language.
# Add more diverse text samples...
EOF
# 3. Generate importance matrix
./llama-imatrix -m model-f16.gguf \
-f calibration.txt \
--chunk 512 \
-o model.imatrix \
-ngl 35 # GPU layers if available
# 4. Quantize with imatrix
./llama-quantize --imatrix model.imatrix \
model-f16.gguf \
model-q4_k_m.gguf \
Q4_K_M
```
### Workflow 3: Multiple quantizations
```bash
#!/bin/bash
MODEL="llama-3.1-8b-f16.gguf"
IMATRIX="llama-3.1-8b.imatrix"
# Generate imatrix once
./llama-imatrix -m $MODEL -f wiki.txt -o $IMATRIX -ngl 35
# Create multiple quantizations
for QUANT in Q4_K_M Q5_K_M Q6_K Q8_0; do
OUTPUT="llama-3.1-8b-${QUANT,,}.gguf"
./llama-quantize --imatrix $IMATRIX $MODEL $OUTPUT $QUANT
echo "Created: $OUTPUT ($(du -h $OUTPUT | cut -f1))"
done
```
## Python usage
### llama-cpp-python
```python
from llama_cpp import Llama
# Load model
llm = Llama(
model_path="./model-q4_k_m.gguf",
n_ctx=4096, # Context window
n_gpu_layers=35, # GPU offload (0 for CPU only)
n_threads=8 # CPU threads
)
# Generate
output = llm(
"What is machine learning?",
max_tokens=256,
temperature=0.7,
stop=["</s>", "\n\n"]
)
print(output["choices"][0]["text"])
```
### Chat completion
```python
from llama_cpp import Llama
llm = Llama(
model_path="./model-q4_k_m.gguf",
n_ctx=4096,
n_gpu_layers=35,
chat_format="llama-3" # Or "chatml", "mistral", etc.
)
messages = [
{"role": "system", "content": "You are a helpful assistant."},
{"role": "user", "content": "What is Python?"}
]
response = llm.create_chat_completion(
messages=messages,
max_tokens=256,
temperature=0.7
)
print(response["choices"][0]["message"]["content"])
```
### Streaming
```python
from llama_cpp import Llama
llm = Llama(model_path="./model-q4_k_m.gguf", n_gpu_layers=35)
# Stream tokens
for chunk in llm(
"Explain quantum computing:",
max_tokens=256,
stream=True
):
print(chunk["choices"][0]["text"], end="", flush=True)
```
## Server mode
### Start OpenAI-compatible server
```bash
# Start server
./llama-server -m model-q4_k_m.gguf \
--host 0.0.0.0 \
--port 8080 \
-ngl 35 \
-c 4096
# Or with Python bindings
python -m llama_cpp.server \
--model model-q4_k_m.gguf \
--n_gpu_layers 35 \
--host 0.0.0.0 \
--port 8080
```
### Use with OpenAI client
```python
from openai import OpenAI
client = OpenAI(
base_url="http://localhost:8080/v1",
api_key="not-needed"
)
response = client.chat.completions.create(
model="local-model",
messages=[{"role": "user", "content": "Hello!"}],
max_tokens=256
)
print(response.choices[0].message.content)
```
## Hardware optimization
### Apple Silicon (Metal)
```bash
# Build with Metal
make clean && make GGML_METAL=1
# Run with Metal acceleration
./llama-cli -m model.gguf -ngl 99 -p "Hello"
# Python with Metal
llm = Llama(
model_path="model.gguf",
n_gpu_layers=99, # Offload all layers
n_threads=1 # Metal handles parallelism
)
```
### NVIDIA CUDA
```bash
# Build with CUDA
make clean && make GGML_CUDA=1
# Run with CUDA
./llama-cli -m model.gguf -ngl 35 -p "Hello"
# Specify GPU
CUDA_VISIBLE_DEVICES=0 ./llama-cli -m model.gguf -ngl 35
```
### CPU optimization
```bash
# Build with AVX2/AVX512
make clean && make
# Run with optimal threads
./llama-cli -m model.gguf -t 8 -p "Hello"
# Python CPU config
llm = Llama(
model_path="model.gguf",
n_gpu_layers=0, # CPU only
n_threads=8, # Match physical cores
n_batch=512 # Batch size for prompt processing
)
```
## Integration with tools
### Ollama
```bash
# Create Modelfile
cat > Modelfile << 'EOF'
FROM ./model-q4_k_m.gguf
TEMPLATE """{{ .System }}
{{ .Prompt }}"""
PARAMETER temperature 0.7
PARAMETER num_ctx 4096
EOF
# Create Ollama model
ollama create mymodel -f Modelfile
# Run
ollama run mymodel "Hello!"
```
### LM Studio
1. Place GGUF file in `~/.cache/lm-studio/models/`
2. Open LM Studio and select the model
3. Configure context length and GPU offload
4. Start inference
### text-generation-webui
```bash
# Place in models folder
cp model-q4_k_m.gguf text-generation-webui/models/
# Start with llama.cpp loader
python server.py --model model-q4_k_m.gguf --loader llama.cpp --n-gpu-layers 35
```
## Best practices
1. **Use K-quants**: Q4_K_M offers best quality/size balance
2. **Use imatrix**: Always use importance matrix for Q4 and below
3. **GPU offload**: Offload as many layers as VRAM allows
4. **Context length**: Start with 4096, increase if needed
5. **Thread count**: Match physical CPU cores, not logical
6. **Batch size**: Increase n_batch for faster prompt processing
## Common issues
**Model loads slowly:**
```bash
# Use mmap for faster loading
./llama-cli -m model.gguf --mmap
```
**Out of memory:**
```bash
# Reduce GPU layers
./llama-cli -m model.gguf -ngl 20 # Reduce from 35
# Or use smaller quantization
./llama-quantize model-f16.gguf model-q3_k_m.gguf Q3_K_M
```
**Poor quality at low bits:**
```bash
# Always use imatrix for Q4 and below
./llama-imatrix -m model-f16.gguf -f calibration.txt -o model.imatrix
./llama-quantize --imatrix model.imatrix model-f16.gguf model-q4_k_m.gguf Q4_K_M
```
## References
- **[Advanced Usage](references/advanced-usage.md)** - Batching, speculative decoding, custom builds
- **[Troubleshooting](references/troubleshooting.md)** - Common issues, debugging, benchmarks
## Resources
- **Repository**: https://github.com/ggml-org/llama.cpp
- **Python Bindings**: https://github.com/abetlen/llama-cpp-python
- **Pre-quantized Models**: https://huggingface.co/TheBloke
- **GGUF Converter**: https://huggingface.co/spaces/ggml-org/gguf-my-repo
- **License**: MIT
This skill packages GGUF conversion and llama.cpp quantization workflows to enable efficient CPU and Apple Silicon inference with flexible 2–8 bit quantization. It guides conversion from HuggingFace formats, generation of importance matrices, and producing K-quant or legacy quantized GGUF files for local deployment. The materials focus on practical commands, Python examples, and hardware-specific optimizations for consumer and server setups.
The skill explains how to convert pretrained models to the GGUF file format and apply quantization methods (Q2_K to Q8_0 and legacy types) using llama.cpp tools. It covers optional importance-matrix calibration (imatrix) to improve low-bit quality, building llama.cpp for CPU, Metal, or CUDA, and running inference via CLI, Python bindings, or an OpenAI-compatible server. It also shows workflows for producing multiple quantizations from a single base model to trade off quality and footprint.
When should I use imatrix?
Use an importance matrix for Q4 and lower quantizations; it significantly improves token-level quality for aggressive compression.
Which quant is the recommended default?
Q4_K_M is the recommended default for a strong quality/size trade-off; use Q6_K or Q8_0 if you need near-original accuracy and have more memory.
Can I run GGUF models without a GPU?
Yes. GGUF and llama.cpp support pure CPU inference and are commonly used on consumer hardware and Apple Silicon.