cli-tool/components/skills/ai-research/optimization-gptq/SKILL.md
Post-training 4-bit quantization for LLMs with minimal accuracy loss. Use for deploying large models (70B, 405B) on consumer GPUs, when you need 4× memory reduction with <2% perplexity degradation, or for faster inference (3-4× speedup) vs FP16. Integrates with transformers and PEFT for QLoRA fine-tuning.
npx skillsauth add davila7/claude-code-templates gptqInstall this skill globally with one command. Works with Claude Code, Cursor, and Windsurf.
3 of 9 scanners reported clean
Some scanners were skipped, did not run, or reported a non-clean status. Review each row below.
Post-training quantization method that compresses LLMs to 4-bit with minimal accuracy loss using group-wise quantization.
Use GPTQ when:
Use AWQ instead when:
Use bitsandbytes instead when:
# Install AutoGPTQ
pip install auto-gptq
# With Triton (Linux only, faster)
pip install auto-gptq[triton]
# With CUDA extensions (faster)
pip install auto-gptq --no-build-isolation
# Full installation
pip install auto-gptq transformers accelerate
from transformers import AutoTokenizer
from auto_gptq import AutoGPTQForCausalLM
# Load quantized model from HuggingFace
model_name = "TheBloke/Llama-2-7B-Chat-GPTQ"
model = AutoGPTQForCausalLM.from_quantized(
model_name,
device="cuda:0",
use_triton=False # Set True on Linux for speed
)
tokenizer = AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained(model_name)
# Generate
prompt = "Explain quantum computing"
inputs = tokenizer(prompt, return_tensors="pt").to("cuda:0")
outputs = model.generate(**inputs, max_new_tokens=200)
print(tokenizer.decode(outputs[0]))
from transformers import AutoTokenizer
from auto_gptq import AutoGPTQForCausalLM, BaseQuantizeConfig
from datasets import load_dataset
# Load model
model_name = "meta-llama/Llama-2-7b-chat-hf"
tokenizer = AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained(model_name)
# Quantization config
quantize_config = BaseQuantizeConfig(
bits=4, # 4-bit quantization
group_size=128, # Group size (recommended: 128)
desc_act=False, # Activation order (False for CUDA kernel)
damp_percent=0.01 # Dampening factor
)
# Load model for quantization
model = AutoGPTQForCausalLM.from_pretrained(
model_name,
quantize_config=quantize_config
)
# Prepare calibration data
dataset = load_dataset("c4", split="train", streaming=True)
calibration_data = [
tokenizer(example["text"])["input_ids"][:512]
for example in dataset.take(128)
]
# Quantize
model.quantize(calibration_data)
# Save quantized model
model.save_quantized("llama-2-7b-gptq")
tokenizer.save_pretrained("llama-2-7b-gptq")
# Push to HuggingFace
model.push_to_hub("username/llama-2-7b-gptq")
How GPTQ works:
Group size trade-off:
| Group Size | Model Size | Accuracy | Speed | Recommendation | |------------|------------|----------|-------|----------------| | -1 (per-column) | Smallest | Best | Slowest | Research only | | 32 | Smaller | Better | Slower | High accuracy needed | | 128 | Medium | Good | Fast | Recommended default | | 256 | Larger | Lower | Faster | Speed critical | | 1024 | Largest | Lowest | Fastest | Not recommended |
Example:
Weight matrix: [1024, 4096] = 4.2M elements
Group size = 128:
- Groups: 4.2M / 128 = 32,768 groups
- Each group: own 4-bit scale + zero-point
- Result: Better granularity → better accuracy
from auto_gptq import BaseQuantizeConfig
config = BaseQuantizeConfig(
bits=4, # 4-bit quantization
group_size=128, # Standard group size
desc_act=False, # Faster CUDA kernel
damp_percent=0.01 # Dampening factor
)
Performance:
config = BaseQuantizeConfig(
bits=3, # 3-bit (more compression)
group_size=128, # Keep standard group size
desc_act=True, # Better accuracy (slower)
damp_percent=0.01
)
Trade-off:
config = BaseQuantizeConfig(
bits=4,
group_size=32, # Smaller groups (better accuracy)
desc_act=True, # Activation reordering
damp_percent=0.005 # Lower dampening
)
Trade-off:
model = AutoGPTQForCausalLM.from_quantized(
model_name,
device="cuda:0",
use_exllama=True, # Use ExLlamaV2
exllama_config={"version": 2}
)
Performance: 1.5-2× faster than Triton
# Quantize with Marlin format
config = BaseQuantizeConfig(
bits=4,
group_size=128,
desc_act=False # Required for Marlin
)
model.quantize(calibration_data, use_marlin=True)
# Load with Marlin
model = AutoGPTQForCausalLM.from_quantized(
model_name,
device="cuda:0",
use_marlin=True # 2× faster on A100/H100
)
Requirements:
model = AutoGPTQForCausalLM.from_quantized(
model_name,
device="cuda:0",
use_triton=True # Linux only
)
Performance: 1.2-1.5× faster than CUDA backend
from transformers import AutoModelForCausalLM, AutoTokenizer
# Load quantized model (transformers auto-detects GPTQ)
model = AutoModelForCausalLM.from_pretrained(
"TheBloke/Llama-2-13B-Chat-GPTQ",
device_map="auto",
trust_remote_code=False
)
tokenizer = AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained("TheBloke/Llama-2-13B-Chat-GPTQ")
# Use like any transformers model
inputs = tokenizer("Hello", return_tensors="pt").to("cuda")
outputs = model.generate(**inputs, max_new_tokens=100)
from transformers import AutoModelForCausalLM
from peft import prepare_model_for_kbit_training, LoraConfig, get_peft_model
# Load GPTQ model
model = AutoModelForCausalLM.from_pretrained(
"TheBloke/Llama-2-7B-GPTQ",
device_map="auto"
)
# Prepare for LoRA training
model = prepare_model_for_kbit_training(model)
# LoRA config
lora_config = LoraConfig(
r=16,
lora_alpha=32,
target_modules=["q_proj", "v_proj"],
lora_dropout=0.05,
bias="none",
task_type="CAUSAL_LM"
)
# Add LoRA adapters
model = get_peft_model(model, lora_config)
# Fine-tune (memory efficient!)
# 70B model trainable on single A100 80GB
| Model | FP16 | GPTQ 4-bit | Reduction | |-------|------|------------|-----------| | Llama 2-7B | 14 GB | 3.5 GB | 4× | | Llama 2-13B | 26 GB | 6.5 GB | 4× | | Llama 2-70B | 140 GB | 35 GB | 4× | | Llama 3-405B | 810 GB | 203 GB | 4× |
Enables:
| Precision | Tokens/sec | vs FP16 | |-----------|------------|---------| | FP16 | 25 tok/s | 1× | | GPTQ 4-bit (CUDA) | 85 tok/s | 3.4× | | GPTQ 4-bit (ExLlama) | 105 tok/s | 4.2× | | GPTQ 4-bit (Marlin) | 120 tok/s | 4.8× |
| Model | FP16 | GPTQ 4-bit (g=128) | Degradation | |-------|------|---------------------|-------------| | Llama 2-7B | 5.47 | 5.55 | +1.5% | | Llama 2-13B | 4.88 | 4.95 | +1.4% | | Llama 2-70B | 3.32 | 3.38 | +1.8% |
Excellent quality preservation - less than 2% degradation!
# Automatic device mapping
model = AutoGPTQForCausalLM.from_quantized(
"TheBloke/Llama-2-70B-GPTQ",
device_map="auto", # Automatically split across GPUs
max_memory={0: "40GB", 1: "40GB"} # Limit per GPU
)
# Manual device mapping
device_map = {
"model.embed_tokens": 0,
"model.layers.0-39": 0, # First 40 layers on GPU 0
"model.layers.40-79": 1, # Last 40 layers on GPU 1
"model.norm": 1,
"lm_head": 1
}
model = AutoGPTQForCausalLM.from_quantized(
model_name,
device_map=device_map
)
# Offload some layers to CPU (for very large models)
model = AutoGPTQForCausalLM.from_quantized(
"TheBloke/Llama-2-405B-GPTQ",
device_map="auto",
max_memory={
0: "80GB", # GPU 0
1: "80GB", # GPU 1
2: "80GB", # GPU 2
"cpu": "200GB" # Offload overflow to CPU
}
)
# Process multiple prompts efficiently
prompts = [
"Explain AI",
"Explain ML",
"Explain DL"
]
inputs = tokenizer(prompts, return_tensors="pt", padding=True).to("cuda")
outputs = model.generate(
**inputs,
max_new_tokens=100,
pad_token_id=tokenizer.eos_token_id
)
for i, output in enumerate(outputs):
print(f"Prompt {i}: {tokenizer.decode(output)}")
TheBloke on HuggingFace:
Search:
# Find GPTQ models on HuggingFace
https://huggingface.co/models?library=gptq
Download:
from auto_gptq import AutoGPTQForCausalLM
# Automatically downloads from HuggingFace
model = AutoGPTQForCausalLM.from_quantized(
"TheBloke/Llama-2-70B-Chat-GPTQ",
device="cuda:0"
)
tools
No-code automation democratizes workflow building. Zapier and Make (formerly Integromat) let non-developers automate business processes without writing code. But no-code doesn't mean no-complexity - these platforms have their own patterns, pitfalls, and breaking points. This skill covers when to use which platform, how to build reliable automations, and when to graduate to code-based solutions. Key insight: Zapier optimizes for simplicity and integrations (7000+ apps), Make optimizes for power
tools
Use only when the user explicitly asks to stage, commit, push, and open a GitHub pull request in one flow using the GitHub CLI (`gh`).
tools
Workflow automation is the infrastructure that makes AI agents reliable. Without durable execution, a network hiccup during a 10-step payment flow means lost money and angry customers. With it, workflows resume exactly where they left off. This skill covers the platforms (n8n, Temporal, Inngest) and patterns (sequential, parallel, orchestrator-worker) that turn brittle scripts into production-grade automation. Key insight: The platforms make different tradeoffs. n8n optimizes for accessibility
development
Trigger.dev expert for background jobs, AI workflows, and reliable async execution with excellent developer experience and TypeScript-first design. Use when: trigger.dev, trigger dev, background task, ai background job, long running task.