It's a turducken of crap from everyone but ngxson and Hugging Face and llama.cpp in this situation.
llama.cpp did have multimodal, I've been maintaining an integration for many moons now. (Feb 2024? Original LLaVa through Gemma 3)
However, this was not for mere mortals. It was not documented and had gotten unwieldy, to say the least.
ngxson (HF employee) did a ton of work to get gemma3 support in, and had to do it in a separate binary. They dove in and landed a refactored backbone that is presumably more maintainable and on track to be in what I think of as the real Ollama, llama.cpp's server binary.
As you well note, Ollama is Ollamaing - I joked, once, that the median llama.cpp contribution from Ollama is a driveby GitHub comment asking when a feature will land in llama-server, so it can be copy-pasted into Ollama.
It's really sort of depressing to me because I'm just one dude, it really wasn't that hard to support it (it's one of a gajillion things I have to do, I'd estimate 2 SWE-weeks at 10 YOE, 1.5 SWE-days for every model release), and it's hard to get attention for detailed work in this space with how much everyone exaggerates and rushes to PR.
EDIT: Coming back after reading the blog post, and I'm 10x as frustrated. "Support thinking / reasoning; Tool calling with streaming responses" --- this is table stakes stuff that was possible eons ago.
I don't see any sign of them doing anything specific in any of the code they link, the whole thing reads like someone carefully worked with an LLM to present a maximalist technical-sounding version of the llama.cpp stuff and frame it as if they worked with these companies and built their own thing. (note the very careful wording on this, e.g. in the footer the companies are thanked for releasing the models)
I think it's great that they have a nice UX that helps people run llama.cpp locally without compiling, but it's hard for me to think of a project I've been more by turned off by in my 37 years on this rock.
I worked on the text portion of gemma3 (as well as gemma2) for the Ollama engine, and worked directly with the Gemma team at Google on the implementation. I didn't base the implementation off of the llama.cpp implementation which was done in parallel. We did our implementation in golang, and llama.cpp did theirs in C++. There was no "copy-and-pasting" as you are implying, although I do think collaborating together on these new models would help us get them out the door faster. I am really appreciative of Georgi catching a few things we got wrong in our implementation.
For one Ollama supports interleaved sliding window attention for Gemma 3 while llama.cpp doesn't.[0] iSWA reduces kv cache size to 1/6.
Ollama is written in golang so of course they can not meaningfully contribute that back to llama.cpp.
It's impossible to meaningfully contribute to the C library you call from Go because you're calling it from Go? :)
We can see the weakness of this argument given it is unlikely any front-end is written in C, and then noting it is unlikely ~0 people contribute to llama.cpp.
They can of course meaningfully contribute new C++ code to llama.cpp, which they then could later use downstream in Go.
What they cannot meaningfully do is write Go code that solves their problems and upstream those changes to llama.cpp.
The former requires they are comfortable writing C++, something perhaps not all Go devs are.
I'd love to be able to take this into account, step back, and say "Ah yes - there is non-zero probability they are materially incapable of contributing back to their dependency" - in practice, if you're comfortable writing SWA in Go, you're going to be comfortable writing it in C++, and they are writing C++ already.
(it's also worth looking at the code linked for the model-specific impls, this isn't exactly 1000s of lines of complicated code. To wit, while they're working with Georgi...why not offer to help land it in llama.cpp?)
What nonsense is this?
Where do you imagine ggml is from?
> The llama.cpp project is the main playground for developing new features for the ggml library
-> https://github.com/ollama/ollama/tree/27da2cddc514208f4e2353...
(Hint: If you think they only write go in ollama, look at the commit history of that folder)
llama.cpp clearly does not support iSWA: https://github.com/ggml-org/llama.cpp/issues/12637
Ollama does, please try it.
Dude, they literally announced that they stopped using llama.cpp and are now using ggml directly. Whatever gotcha you think there is, exists only in your head.
I'm responding to this assertion:
> Ollama is written in golang so of course they can not meaningfully contribute that back to llama.cpp.
llama.cpp consumes GGML.
ollama consumes GGML.
If they contribute upstream changes, they are contributing to llama.cpp.
The assertions that they:
a) only write golang
b) cannot upstream changes
Are both, categorically, false.
You can argue what 'meaningfully' means if you like. You can also believe whatever you like.
However, both (a) and (b), are false. It is not a matter of dispute.
> Whatever gotcha you think there is, exists only in your head.
There is no 'gotcha'. You're projecting. My only point is that any claim that they are somehow not able to contribute upstream changes only indicates a lack of desire or competence, not a lack of the technical capacity to do so.
FWIW I don't know why you're being downvoted other than a standard from the bleachers "idk what's going on but this guy seems more negative!" -- cheers -- "a [specious argument that shades rather than illuminates] can travel halfway around the world before..."
> As you well note, Ollama is Ollamaing - I joked, once, that their median llama.cpp contribution from Ollama is asking when a feature will land in llama-server so it can be copy-pasted into Ollama.
Other than being a nice wrapper around llama.cpp, are there any meaningful improvements that they came up with that landed in llama.cpp?
I guess in this case with the introduction of libmtmd (for multi-modal support in llama.cpp) Ollama waited and did a git pull and now multi-modal + better vision support was here and no proper credit was given.
Yes, they had vision support via LLaVa models but it wasn't that great.
There's been no noteworthy contributions, I'd honestly wouldn't be surprised to hear there's 0 contributions.
Well it's even sillier than that: I didn't realize that the timeline in the llama.cpp link was humble and matched my memory: it was the test binaries that changed. i.e. the API was refactored a bit and such but its not anything new under the sun. Also the llama.cpp they have has tool and thinking support. shrugs
The tooling was called llava but that's just because it was the first model -- multimodal models are/were consistently supported ~instantly, it was just your calls into llama.cpp needed to manage that,a nd they still do! - its just there's been some cleanup so there isn't one test binary for every model.
It's sillier than that in it wasn't even "multi-modal + better vision support was here" it was "oh we should do that fr if llama.cpp is"
On a more positive note, the big contributor I appreciate in that vein is Kobold contributed a ton of Vulkan work IIUC.
And another round of applause for ochafik: idk if this gentleman from Google is doing this in his spare time or fulltime for Google, but they have done an absolutely stunning amount of work to make tool calls and thinking systematically approachable, even building a header-only Jinja parser implementation and designing a way to systematize "blessed" overrides of the rushed silly templates that are inserted into models. Really important work IMHO, tool calls are what make AI automated and having open source being able to step up here significantly means you can have legit Sonnet-like agency in Gemma 3 12B, even Phi 4 3.8B to an extent.