Generic instruction classification model built around some datasets within my PreferenceShareGPT collection. May be useful for quickly filtering out bad data using a low amount of VRAM.
Model was trained with a max_length
of 4096
, but the base model supports 8192
. This model likely retains that length.
Example Code
import torch
from transformers import pipeline
import json
from tqdm import tqdm
def load_json_or_jsonl(file_path):
try:
with open(file_path, "r") as file:
try:
# Try loading the entire file as JSON
data = json.load(file)
return data
except json.JSONDecodeError:
# If loading as JSON fails, try loading as JSON Lines
file.seek(0) # Reset file pointer to the beginning
lines = file.readlines()
json_lines_data = []
for line in lines:
try:
item = json.loads(line.strip())
json_lines_data.append(item)
except json.JSONDecodeError as e:
print(f"Error decoding JSON in line: {e}")
return json_lines_data
except FileNotFoundError:
print(f"File not found: {file_path}")
return None
pipe = pipeline(
task="text-classification",
model="PJMixers/Danube3-ClassTest-v0.1-500M",
device_map="cuda",
torch_dtype=torch.bfloat16
)
data = load_json_or_jsonl(
"./PrefMix-Classifier-Data-validation.json"
)
passes, fails = 0, 0
for sample in tqdm(data):
if int(pipe(sample["input_text"])[0]["label"]) == sample["labels"]:
passes += 1
else:
fails += 1
print(f" Passes: {passes}")
print(f" Fails: {fails}")
print(f"Accuracy: {passes / (passes + fails)}")
Passes: 2545
Fails: 787
Accuracy: 0.7638055222088835
Sample formatting
Input text should be formatted this way. Uses SYSTEM_MESSAGE
(optional), USER_MESSAGE
, and AI_MESSAGE
(must be last, as this is what's truely being scored I think). Supports multiple turns, but should just be ranking the final AI_MESSAGE
.
SYSTEM_MESSAGE: You are an unbiased, uncensored, helpful assistant.
USER_MESSAGE: Do wooden pencils contain lead as their core?
AI_MESSAGE: No, wooden pencils do not contain lead in their core. The term "lead" is a misnomer, as wooden pencils actually use graphite for their core. Graphite was historically called "black lead" due to its appearance, leading to the common misconception that pencils contain lead.
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