Transformers
GGUF
sparse-attention
approximate-nearest-neighbors
faiss
qwen3
long-context
conversational
Instructions to use datasysdev/ann-sparseattention with libraries, inference providers, notebooks, and local apps. Follow these links to get started.
- Libraries
- Transformers
How to use datasysdev/ann-sparseattention with Transformers:
# Load model directly from transformers import AutoModel model = AutoModel.from_pretrained("datasysdev/ann-sparseattention", dtype="auto") - llama-cpp-python
How to use datasysdev/ann-sparseattention with llama-cpp-python:
# !pip install llama-cpp-python from llama_cpp import Llama llm = Llama.from_pretrained( repo_id="datasysdev/ann-sparseattention", filename="gguf/Qwen3-4B-Instruct-2507-F16-ann-6layer-k128-v2.gguf", )
llm.create_chat_completion( messages = "No input example has been defined for this model task." )
- Notebooks
- Google Colab
- Kaggle
- Local Apps
- llama.cpp
How to use datasysdev/ann-sparseattention with llama.cpp:
Install from brew
brew install llama.cpp # Start a local OpenAI-compatible server with a web UI: llama-server -hf datasysdev/ann-sparseattention:F16 # Run inference directly in the terminal: llama-cli -hf datasysdev/ann-sparseattention:F16
Install from WinGet (Windows)
winget install llama.cpp # Start a local OpenAI-compatible server with a web UI: llama-server -hf datasysdev/ann-sparseattention:F16 # Run inference directly in the terminal: llama-cli -hf datasysdev/ann-sparseattention:F16
Use pre-built binary
# Download pre-built binary from: # https://github.com/ggerganov/llama.cpp/releases # Start a local OpenAI-compatible server with a web UI: ./llama-server -hf datasysdev/ann-sparseattention:F16 # Run inference directly in the terminal: ./llama-cli -hf datasysdev/ann-sparseattention:F16
Build from source code
git clone https://github.com/ggerganov/llama.cpp.git cd llama.cpp cmake -B build cmake --build build -j --target llama-server llama-cli # Start a local OpenAI-compatible server with a web UI: ./build/bin/llama-server -hf datasysdev/ann-sparseattention:F16 # Run inference directly in the terminal: ./build/bin/llama-cli -hf datasysdev/ann-sparseattention:F16
Use Docker
docker model run hf.co/datasysdev/ann-sparseattention:F16
- LM Studio
- Jan
- Ollama
How to use datasysdev/ann-sparseattention with Ollama:
ollama run hf.co/datasysdev/ann-sparseattention:F16
- Unsloth Studio new
How to use datasysdev/ann-sparseattention with Unsloth Studio:
Install Unsloth Studio (macOS, Linux, WSL)
curl -fsSL https://unsloth.ai/install.sh | sh # Run unsloth studio unsloth studio -H 0.0.0.0 -p 8888 # Then open http://localhost:8888 in your browser # Search for datasysdev/ann-sparseattention to start chatting
Install Unsloth Studio (Windows)
irm https://unsloth.ai/install.ps1 | iex # Run unsloth studio unsloth studio -H 0.0.0.0 -p 8888 # Then open http://localhost:8888 in your browser # Search for datasysdev/ann-sparseattention to start chatting
Using HuggingFace Spaces for Unsloth
# No setup required # Open https://huggingface.co/spaces/unsloth/studio in your browser # Search for datasysdev/ann-sparseattention to start chatting
- Pi new
How to use datasysdev/ann-sparseattention with Pi:
Start the llama.cpp server
# Install llama.cpp: brew install llama.cpp # Start a local OpenAI-compatible server: llama-server -hf datasysdev/ann-sparseattention:F16
Configure the model in Pi
# Install Pi: npm install -g @mariozechner/pi-coding-agent # Add to ~/.pi/agent/models.json: { "providers": { "llama-cpp": { "baseUrl": "http://localhost:8080/v1", "api": "openai-completions", "apiKey": "none", "models": [ { "id": "datasysdev/ann-sparseattention:F16" } ] } } }Run Pi
# Start Pi in your project directory: pi
- Hermes Agent new
How to use datasysdev/ann-sparseattention with Hermes Agent:
Start the llama.cpp server
# Install llama.cpp: brew install llama.cpp # Start a local OpenAI-compatible server: llama-server -hf datasysdev/ann-sparseattention:F16
Configure Hermes
# Install Hermes: curl -fsSL https://hermes-agent.nousresearch.com/install.sh | bash hermes setup # Point Hermes at the local server: hermes config set model.provider custom hermes config set model.base_url http://127.0.0.1:8080/v1 hermes config set model.default datasysdev/ann-sparseattention:F16
Run Hermes
hermes
- Docker Model Runner
How to use datasysdev/ann-sparseattention with Docker Model Runner:
docker model run hf.co/datasysdev/ann-sparseattention:F16
- Lemonade
How to use datasysdev/ann-sparseattention with Lemonade:
Pull the model
# Download Lemonade from https://lemonade-server.ai/ lemonade pull datasysdev/ann-sparseattention:F16
Run and chat with the model
lemonade run user.ann-sparseattention-F16
List all available models
lemonade list
Upload README.md with huggingface_hub
Browse files
README.md
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@@ -59,11 +59,26 @@ on positions 30-128 is on near-zero-weight tail and doesn't affect output.
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**ANN at K ≥ 256 produces lower perplexity than full attention** — the
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sparse-attention denoising effect. Full softmax is forced to spread small
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amounts of weight over a long tail of irrelevant keys; truncating to top-K
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and renormalizing puts the weight where it matters.
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Note: the K-sweep recall numbers (24–41%) are not directly comparable to the
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in-training `evaluate()` recall (50.9% at K=128). Same checkpoint, same K,
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**ANN at K ≥ 256 produces lower perplexity than full attention** — the
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sparse-attention denoising effect. Full softmax is forced to spread small
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amounts of weight over a long tail of irrelevant keys; truncating to top-K
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and renormalizing puts the weight where it matters.
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The novelty is not "ANN beats attention" (denoising is a property of any
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hard top-K selection over softmax, see Top-k Attention / Reformer). What's
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distinctive is that this method produces the denoised top-K at *sub-linear
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cost* via off-the-shelf FAISS HNSW, vs. computing all `O(L²)` scores first.
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Sanity checks pass: same input sequences for `ppl_full` vs `ppl_ann`,
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intact causal mask in retrieval, single-softmax renormalization with no
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wrapper leakage between iterations.
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### Deployment knobs (L = 4096)
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| Use case | K | PPL gap | Attention compute reduction |
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| Quality-improving | 256 | −0.79% | ~16× |
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| Quality-improving | 512 | −2.89% | ~8× |
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| Quality-preserving | 128 | +0.82% | ~32× |
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| Aggressive | 64 | +2.42% | ~64× |
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| Speed-only | 32 | +4.51% | ~128× |
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Note: the K-sweep recall numbers (24–41%) are not directly comparable to the
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in-training `evaluate()` recall (50.9% at K=128). Same checkpoint, same K,
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