The LLM Inference API lets you run large language models (LLMs) completely on-device for Android applications, which you can use to perform a wide range of tasks, such as generating text, retrieving information in natural language form, and summarizing documents. The task provides built-in support for multiple text-to-text large language models, so you can apply the latest on-device generative AI models to your Android apps.
The task supports the following variants of Gemma: Gemma-2 2B, Gemma 2B, and Gemma 7B. Gemma is a family of lightweight, state-of-the-art open models built from the same research and technology used to create the Gemini models. It also supports the following external models: Phi-2, Falcon-RW-1B and StableLM-3B.
In addition to the supported models, users can use Google's AI Edge
Torch to export PyTorch
models into multi-signature LiteRT (tflite
) models, which are bundled with
tokenizer parameters to create Task Bundles that are compatible with the LLM
Inference API.
You can see this task in action with the MediaPipe Studio demo. For more information about the capabilities, models, and configuration options of this task, see the Overview.
Code example
This guide refers to an example of a basic text generation app for Android. You can use the app as a starting point for your own Android app, or refer to it when modifying an existing app. The example code is hosted on GitHub.
Download the code
The following instructions show you how to create a local copy of the example code using the git command line tool.
To download the example code:
- Clone the git repository using the following command:
git clone https://github.com/google-ai-edge/mediapipe-samples
- Optionally, configure your git instance to use sparse checkout, so you have
only the files for the LLM Inference API example app:
cd mediapipe git sparse-checkout init --cone git sparse-checkout set examples/llm_inference/android
After creating a local version of the example code, you can import the project into Android Studio and run the app. For instructions, see the Setup Guide for Android.
Setup
This section describes key steps for setting up your development environment and code projects specifically to use the LLM Inference API. For general information on setting up your development environment for using MediaPipe tasks, including platform version requirements, see the Setup guide for Android.
Dependencies
The LLM Inference API uses the com.google.mediapipe:tasks-genai
library. Add this
dependency to the build.gradle
file of your Android app:
dependencies {
implementation 'com.google.mediapipe:tasks-genai:0.10.14'
}
For devices with Android 12 (API 31) or higher, add the native OpenCL library
dependency. For more information, see the documentation on the
uses-native-library
tag.
Add the following uses-native-library
tags to the AndroidManifest.xml
file:
<uses-native-library android:name="libOpenCL.so" android:required="false"/>
<uses-native-library android:name="libOpenCL-car.so" android:required="false"/>
<uses-native-library android:name="libOpenCL-pixel.so" android:required="false"/>
Model
The MediaPipe LLM Inference API requires a trained text-to-text language model that is compatible with this task. After downloading a model, install the required dependencies and push the model to the Android device. If you are using a model other than Gemma, you will have to convert the model to a format compatible with MediaPipe.
For more information on available trained models for LLM Inference API, see the task overview Models section.
Download a model
Before initializing the LLM Inference API, download one of the supported models and store the file within your project directory:
- Gemma-2 2B: The latest version of Gemma family of models. Part of a family of lightweight, state-of-the-art open models built from the same research and technology used to create the Gemini models.
- Gemma 2B: Part of a family of lightweight, state-of-the-art open models built from the same research and technology used to create the Gemini models. Well-suited for a variety of text generation tasks, including question answering, summarization, and reasoning.
- Phi-2: 2.7 billion parameter Transformer model, best suited for the Question-Answer, chat, and code format.
- Falcon-RW-1B: 1 billion parameter causal decoder-only model trained on 350B tokens of RefinedWeb.
- StableLM-3B: 3 billion parameter decoder-only language model pre-trained on 1 trillion tokens of diverse English and code datasets.
In addition to the supported models, you can use Google's AI Edge
Torch to export PyTorch
models into multi-signature LiteRT (tflite
) models. For more information, see
Torch Generative converter for PyTorch models.
We recommend using Gemma-2 2B, which is available on Kaggle Models. For more information on the other available models, see the task overview Models section.
Convert model to MediaPipe format
The LLM Inference API is compatible with two categories types of models, some of which require model conversion. Use the table to identify the required steps method for your model.
Models | Conversion method | Compatible platforms | File type | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Supported models | Gemma 2B, Gemma 7B, Gemma-2 2B, Phi-2, StableLM, Falcon | MediaPipe | Android, iOS, web | .bin |
Other PyTorch models | All PyTorch LLM models | AI Edge Torch Generative library | Android, iOS | .task |
We are hosting the converted .bin
files for Gemma 2B, Gemma 7B, and Gemma-2 2B
on Kaggle. These models can be directly deployed using our LLM Inference API. To
learn how you can convert other models, see the Model
Conversion section.
Push model to the device
Push the content of the output_path folder to the Android device.
$ adb shell rm -r /data/local/tmp/llm/ # Remove any previously loaded models
$ adb shell mkdir -p /data/local/tmp/llm/
$ adb push output_path /data/local/tmp/llm/model_version.bin
Create the task
The MediaPipe LLM Inference API uses the createFromOptions()
function to set up the
task. The createFromOptions()
function accepts values for the configuration
options. For more information on configuration options, see Configuration
options.
The following code initializes the task using basic configuration options:
// Set the configuration options for the LLM Inference task
val options = LlmInferenceOptions.builder()
.setModelPath('/data/local/.../')
.setMaxTokens(1000)
.setTopK(40)
.setTemperature(0.8)
.setRandomSeed(101)
.build()
// Create an instance of the LLM Inference task
llmInference = LlmInference.createFromOptions(context, options)
Configuration options
Use the following configuration options to set up an Android app:
Option Name | Description | Value Range | Default Value |
---|---|---|---|
modelPath |
The path to where the model is stored within the project directory. | PATH | N/A |
maxTokens |
The maximum number of tokens (input tokens + output tokens) the model handles. | Integer | 512 |
topK |
The number of tokens the model considers at each step of generation. Limits predictions to the top k most-probable tokens. | Integer | 40 |
temperature |
The amount of randomness introduced during generation. A higher temperature results in more creativity in the generated text, while a lower temperature produces more predictable generation. | Float | 0.8 |
randomSeed |
The random seed used during text generation. | Integer | 0 |
loraPath |
The absolute path to the LoRA model locally on the device. Note: this is only compatible with GPU models. | PATH | N/A |
resultListener |
Sets the result listener to receive the results asynchronously. Only applicable when using the async generation method. | N/A | N/A |
errorListener |
Sets an optional error listener. | N/A | N/A |
Prepare data
The LLM Inference API accepts the following inputs:
- prompt (string): A question or prompt.
val inputPrompt = "Compose an email to remind Brett of lunch plans at noon on Saturday."
Run the task
Use the generateResponse()
method to generate a text response to the input
text provided in the previous section (inputPrompt
). This produces a single
generated response.
val result = llmInference.generateResponse(inputPrompt)
logger.atInfo().log("result: $result")
To stream the response, use the generateResponseAsync()
method.
val options = LlmInference.LlmInferenceOptions.builder()
...
.setResultListener { partialResult, done ->
logger.atInfo().log("partial result: $partialResult")
}
.build()
llmInference.generateResponseAsync(inputPrompt)
Handle and display results
The LLM Inference API returns a LlmInferenceResult
, which includes the generated
response text.
Here's a draft you can use:
Subject: Lunch on Saturday Reminder
Hi Brett,
Just a quick reminder about our lunch plans this Saturday at noon.
Let me know if that still works for you.
Looking forward to it!
Best,
[Your Name]
LoRA model customization
Mediapipe LLM inference API can be configured to support Low-Rank Adaptation (LoRA) for large language models. Utilizing fine-tuned LoRA models, developers can customize the behavior of LLMs through a cost-effective training process.
LoRA support of the LLM Inference API works for all Gemma variants and Phi-2 models for the GPU backend, with LoRA weights applicable to attention layers only. This initial implementation serves as an experimental API for future developments with plans to support more models and various types of layers in the coming updates.
Prepare LoRA models
Follow the instructions on
HuggingFace
to train a fine tuned LoRA model on your own dataset with supported model types,
Gemma or Phi-2. Gemma-2 2B, Gemma
2B and
Phi-2 models are both available on
HuggingFace in the safetensors format. Since LLM Inference API only supports
LoRA on attention layers, only specify attention layers while creating the
LoraConfig
as following:
# For Gemma
from peft import LoraConfig
config = LoraConfig(
r=LORA_RANK,
target_modules=["q_proj", "v_proj", "k_proj", "o_proj"],
)
# For Phi-2
config = LoraConfig(
r=LORA_RANK,
target_modules=["q_proj", "v_proj", "k_proj", "dense"],
)
For testing, there are publicly accessible fine-tuned LoRA models which fit LLM Inference API available on HuggingFace. For example, monsterapi/gemma-2b-lora-maths-orca-200k for Gemma-2B and lole25/phi-2-sft-ultrachat-lora for Phi-2.
After training on the prepared dataset and saving the model, you obtain an
adapter_model.safetensors
file containing the fine-tuned LoRA model weights.
The safetensors file is the LoRA checkpoint used in the model conversion.
As the next step, you need convert the model weights into a TensorFlow Lite
Flatbuffer using the MediaPipe Python Package. The ConversionConfig
should
specify the base model options as well as additional LoRA options. Notice that
since the API only supports LoRA inference with GPU, the backend must be set to
'gpu'
.
import mediapipe as mp
from mediapipe.tasks.python.genai import converter
config = converter.ConversionConfig(
# Other params related to base model
...
# Must use gpu backend for LoRA conversion
backend='gpu',
# LoRA related params
lora_ckpt=LORA_CKPT,
lora_rank=LORA_RANK,
lora_output_tflite_file=LORA_OUTPUT_TFLITE_FILE,
)
converter.convert_checkpoint(config)
The converter will output two TFLite flatbuffer files, one for the base model and the other for the LoRA model.
LoRA model inference
The Web, Android and iOS LLM Inference API are updated to support LoRA model inference.
Android supports static LoRA during initialization. To load a LoRA model, users specify the LoRA model path as well as the base LLM.// Set the configuration options for the LLM Inference task
val options = LlmInferenceOptions.builder()
.setModelPath('<path to base model>')
.setMaxTokens(1000)
.setTopK(40)
.setTemperature(0.8)
.setRandomSeed(101)
.setLoraPath('<path to LoRA model>')
.build()
// Create an instance of the LLM Inference task
llmInference = LlmInference.createFromOptions(context, options)
To run LLM inference with LoRA, use the same generateResponse()
or
generateResponseAsync()
methods as the base model.