42 comments

  • giancarlostoro 9 hours ago

    Hoping the author can answer, I'm still learning about how this all works. My understanding is that inference is "using the model" so to speak. How is this faster than established inference engines specifically on Mac? Are models generic enough that if you build e.g. an inference engine focused on AMD GPUs or even Intel GPUs, would they achieve reasonable performance? I always assumed because Nvidia is king of AI that you had to suck it up, or is it just that most inference engines being used are married to Nvidia?

    I would love to understand how universal these models can become.

    • darkolorin 7 hours ago

      Basically “faster” means better performance e.g. tokens/s without loosing quality (benchmarks scores for models). So when we say faster we provide more tokens per second than llama cpp. That means we effectively utilize hardware API available (for example we wrote our own kernels) to perform better.

  • zackangelo 7 hours ago

    We also wrote our inference engine in rust for mixlayer, happy to answer any questions from those trying to do the same.

    Looks like this uses ndarray and mpsgraph (which I did not know about!), we opted to use candle instead.

  • khurs 5 hours ago

    Have you added it to HomeBrew and other package managers yet?

    Also any app deployed to PROD but developed on Mac need to be consistent i.e. work on Linux/in container.

  • floam 8 hours ago

    How does this compare to https://github.com/Anemll/Anemll?

  • homarp 12 hours ago

    Can you explain the type of quantization you support?

    would https://docs.unsloth.ai/basics/kimi-k2-how-to-run-locally be faster with mirai?

  • smpanaro 12 hours ago

    In practice, how often do the models use the ANE? It sounds like you are optimizing for speed which in my experience always favors GPU.

    • AlekseiSavin 12 hours ago

      You're right, modern edge devices are powerful enough to run small models, so the real bottleneck for a forward pass is usually memory bandwidth, which defines the upper theoretical limit for inference speed. Right now, we've figured out how to run computations in a granular way on specific processing units, but we expect the real benefits to come later when we add support for VLMs and advanced speculative decoding, where you process more than one token at a time

  • greggh 12 hours ago

    "trymirai", every time I hear the word Mirai I think of the large IOT DDoS botnet. Maybe it's just me though.

    • fnord77 9 hours ago

      I think of the goofy Toyota fuel cell car. I think a grand total of about 6 have been sold (leased) in california

  • ewuhic 13 hours ago

    >faster than llama cpp in all of the use cases

    What's your deliberate, well-thought roadmap for achieving adoption similar to llama cpp?

    • pants2 13 hours ago

      Probably getting acquired by Apple :)

    • khurs 5 hours ago

      Ollama is the leader isn't it?

      Brew stats (downloads last 30 days)

      Ollama - 28,232 Lama.cpp - 7,826

  • zdw 12 hours ago

    How does this bench compared to MLX?

    • jasonjmcghee 11 hours ago

      I use MLX in lmstudio and it doesn't have whatever issues llama cpp is showing here.

      Qwen3-0.6B at 5 t/s doesn't make any sense. Something is clearly wrong for that specific model.

  • rnxrx 12 hours ago

    I'm curious about why the performance gains mentioned were so substantial for Qwen vs Llama?

    • AlekseiSavin 12 hours ago

      it looks like llama.cpp has some performance issues with bf16

  • skybrian 12 hours ago

    What are the units on the benchmark results? I’m guessing higher is better?

  • sharifulin 13 hours ago

    Wow! Sounds super interesting

  • TheMagicHorsey 13 hours ago

    Amazing!

    How was your experience using Rust on this project? I'm considering a project in an adjacent space and I'm trying to decide between Rust, C, and Zig. Rust seems a bit burdensome with its complexity compared to C and Zig. Reminds me of C++ in its complexity (although not as bad). I find it difficult to walk through and understand a complicated Rust repository. I don't have that problem with C and Zig for the most part.

    But I'm wondering if I just need to invest more time in Rust. How was your learning curve with the language?

    • adastra22 12 hours ago

      You are confusing familiarity with intrinsic complexity. I have 20 years experience with C/C++ before switching to rust a few years ago. After the initial hurdle, it is way easier and very simple to follow.

  • dcreater 12 hours ago

    Somewhat faster on small models. Requires new format.

    Not sure what the goal is for this project? Not seeing how this presents adequate benefits to get adopted by the community

    • worldsavior 10 hours ago

      It's utilizing Apple ANE and probably other optimization tools provided by Apple's framework. Not sure if llama.cpp uses them, but if they're not then the benchmark on GitHub says it all.

    • koakuma-chan 11 hours ago

      Written in Rust is a big one for me.

  • mintflow 13 hours ago

    just curios, will it be supported on iOS, it would be great to build local llm app with this project.

  • slavasmirnov 13 hours ago

    that’s exactly we are looking for not to waste on apis. Wonder how significant trade offs are

  • nodesocket 9 hours ago

    I just spun up a AWS EC2 g6.xlarge instance to do some llm work. The GPU is NVIDIA L4 24GB and costs $0.8048/per hour. Starting to think about switching to an Apple mac2-m2.metal instance for $0.878/ per hour. Big question is the Mac instance only has 24GB of unified memory.

    • khurs 5 hours ago

      Unified memory doesn't compare to a Nvidia GPU, the latter is much better.

      Just depends on what performance level you need.

  • ednevsky 13 hours ago

    nice

  • cwlcwlcwlingg 13 hours ago

    Wondering why use Rust other than C++

    • khurs 5 hours ago

      The recommendation from the security agencies is to prefer Rust over C++ as less risk of exploits.

      Checked and Lama.cpp used C++ (obviously) and Llama uses Go.

    • adastra22 12 hours ago

      Why use C++?

      • khurs 5 hours ago

        So C++ users don't need to learn something new.

    • outworlder 9 hours ago

      Why use C++ for greenfield projects?

    • bee_rider 11 hours ago

      I wonder why they didn’t use Fortran.

    • giancarlostoro 9 hours ago

      ...or D? or Go? or Java? C#? Zig? etc they chose what they were most comfortable with. Rust is fine, it's not for everyone clearly, but those who use it produce high quality software, I would argue similar with Go, without all the unnecessary mental overhead of C or C++