https://uklkyvetsjf7qt-80.proxy.runpod.net
./build/bin/llama-server \
-m ../Ternary-Bonsai-8B-Q2_0.gguf \
-ngl 999 \
--flash-attn on \
--host 0.0.0.0 \
--port 80 \
--ctx-size 65500 \
--batch-size 512 \
--ubatch-size 512 \
--parallel 5 \
--cont-batching \
--threads 8 \
--threads-batch 8 \
--cache-type-k q8_0 \
--cache-type-v q8_0 \
--log-colors on
# llama.cpp is forked one: https://github.com/PrismML-Eng/llama.cpp.git# The server can serve 5 parallel request, with each request capped at around `13K` tokens...
# A bit of of benchmarks I did:
# 1. Input: 1001 tokens, ttfs: 0.3 second, outputs: 1618 tokens ~140t/s
# 2. Input: 9708 tokens, ttfs: 2.4 second, outputs: 2562 tokens at ~106t/s
# Vram usage was consistently at ~7GiB.
> https://huggingface.co/prism-ml/Ternary-Bonsai-8B-gguf/resol...
in my results, accuracy-wise Ternary-Bonsai-8B is on par with Qwen3.5-4B. But in accuracy-per-byte, bonsai is the clear winner:
=> Ternary-Bonsai-1.7B achieved 65.1% from 462 MiB, beating Qwen3.5-0.8B by 12 points while being ~5% smaller on disk. => Ternary-Bonsai-4B is the accuracy-per-byte winner above 1 GiB. 83.0% from only 1.1 GiB, within 2 points of Qwen3.5-4B at 40% of the weight size.
they show strong promise on edge devices and where disk space is limited. I think this lab is worth watching.
Wow, if this is true, I am extremely impressed and excited!
I wonder about kv cache how much better it is as well!
(I've been reading the MMLU-Redux questions for electrical engineering. They're very funny. Fifty years ago they might have been relevant. The references to the Intel 8085 date this to the mid-1970s. Moving coil meters were still a big thing back then. Ward-Leonard drives still drove some elevators and naval guns. This is supposed to be the hand-curated version of the questions. Where do they get this stuff? Old exams?)
[1] https://github.com/aryopg/mmlu-redux/blob/main/outputs/multi...
Why aren't they comparing to 2/3/4 bit quants?
I also have yet to see any of these at a larger scale. For example, can you try one of these at 100 billion parameters?
If you got that into a couple gigs--what could you stuff into 20 gigs?
>> What are some names like Llewelyn?
> Some names like Llewelyn are Llewelyn, Llewelyn, Llewelyn, (repeats several times), and Llewelyn.
Nonetheless, the Prism Bonsai models are impressive for their size. Where it falls apart is with knowledge. It has good prose/logic for a tiny model, and it's fast even on modest hardware, but it hallucinates a lot. Which makes sense. You can't fit the world's data in a couple of gigabytes. But, as a base model for fine-tuning for use cases where size matters, it's probably a great choice.