* llama: wire up builtin runner
This adds a new entrypoint into the ollama CLI to run the cgo built runner.
On Mac arm64, this will have GPU support, but on all other platforms it will
be the lowest common denominator CPU build. After we fully transition
to the new Go runners more tech-debt can be removed and we can stop building
the "default" runner via make and rely on the builtin always.
* build: Make target improvements
Add a few new targets and help for building locally.
This also adjusts the runner lookup to favor local builds, then
runners relative to the executable, and finally payloads.
* Support customized CPU flags for runners
This implements a simplified custom CPU flags pattern for the runners.
When built without overrides, the runner name contains the vector flag
we check for (AVX) to ensure we don't try to run on unsupported systems
and crash. If the user builds a customized set, we omit the naming
scheme and don't check for compatibility. This avoids checking
requirements at runtime, so that logic has been removed as well. This
can be used to build GPU runners with no vector flags, or CPU/GPU
runners with additional flags (e.g. AVX512) enabled.
* Use relative paths
If the user checks out the repo in a path that contains spaces, make gets
really confused so use relative paths for everything in-repo to avoid breakage.
* Remove payloads from main binary
* install: clean up prior libraries
This removes support for v0.3.6 and older versions (before the tar bundle)
and ensures we clean up prior libraries before extracting the bundle(s).
Without this change, runners and dependent libraries could leak when we
update and lead to subtle runtime errors.
* Better support for AMD multi-GPU
This resolves a number of problems related to AMD multi-GPU setups on linux.
The numeric IDs used by rocm are not the same as the numeric IDs exposed in
sysfs although the ordering is consistent. We have to count up from the first
valid gfx (major/minor/patch with non-zero values) we find starting at zero.
There are 3 different env vars for selecting GPUs, and only ROCR_VISIBLE_DEVICES
supports UUID based identification, so we should favor that one, and try
to use UUIDs if detected to avoid potential ordering bugs with numeric IDs
* ROCR_VISIBLE_DEVICES only works on linux
Use the numeric ID only HIP_VISIBLE_DEVICES on windows