9 Downloads Updated 21 hours ago
ollama run OpenLLM-France/Luciole-Instruct-1.1:1B
Updated 21 hours ago
21 hours ago
ee8afab360b4 · 1.0GB ·
The Luciole-Instruct-1.1 models are fine-tuned and aligned versions of the Luciole base models found in our Luciole collection on Hugging Face, open-source, multilingual causal language models created by OpenLLM-France. The Luciole-Instruct-1.1 models were developed by LINAGORA and the OpenLLM-France consortium as a part of the OpenLLM France project, funded by BPI France through the France 2030 program.
Training of the Luciole-Instruct-1.1 models was conducted on Jean Zay in three phases: (i) a supervised fine-tuning (SFT) phase on instruction data with thinking traces, (ii) an SFT phase on instruction data without thinking traces, and (iii) a final preference alignment phase using Direct Preference Optimization (DPO). The training data covers topics in math, science, coding, general chat, RAG and translation.
Note that Luciole-Instruct-1.1 is only the first iteration of post-trained models based on our Luciole base models. Development of the Luciole models is an active, ongoing project and further iterations, including models trained on higher proportions of French data, are planned. In the spirit of open-source, we share the model weights and training recipes to facilitate research and to provide open source building blocks for other training projects.
If you are interested in contributing to the Luciole project, contact us at contact@openllm-france.fr.
Luciole-Instruct-1.1 is the result of a first phase of fine-tuning and alignment to human preferences. Efforts to improve the model are active and ongoing and the model should be thoroughly tested for target use cases before being incorporated in industrial pipelines. Training has mostly focused on instrution following, and additional training would be necessary for tasks specifically focused on code generation or mathematical problem solving. It is also susceptible to hallucinations; that is, producing false answers that result from its training on massive amounts of diverse text.
The Luciole-Instruct-1.1 models were post-trained almost entirely on English data (in contrast to their base models, which were trained on roughly 30% French data). Future post-training phases will focus specifically on increasing the proportion of French data and testing the impact that this has on model performance.
Due to their size, the Luciole-Instruct-1.1 models are limited in the information that they can memorize; their ability to produce correct answers could be improved by implementing the models in a retrieval augmented generation pipeline.
Finally, Luciole-Instruct-1.1 models were trained on sequences of 16,384 tokens (in contrast the base models, whose context windows were extended to 131,000 tokens).
The post-training data and dataset description will be published soon.
Luciole-Instruct-1.1 were trained on the chat template inspired from Qwen3-1.7B. In our chat template, we also use a default system prompt.
An example:
from transformers import AutoTokenizer
tokenizer = AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained("OpenLLM-France/Luciole-1B-Instruct-1.1")
chat = [
{
"content": "Who was Molière?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Molière was a 17th-century French playwright, actor, and comedian.",
"role": "assistant"
},
{
"content": "What are his best-known works?",
"role": "user"
}
]
print(tokenizer.apply_chat_template(chat, tokenize=False, add_generation_prompt=True))
gives the output
<|im_start|>system
You are a helpful AI assistant named Luciole, trained by LINAGORA and OpenLLM France.<|im_end|>
<|im_start|>user
Who was Molière?<|im_end|>
<|im_start|>assistant
Molière was a 17th-century French playwright, actor, and comedian.<|im_end|>
<|im_start|>user
What are his best-known works?<|im_end|>
<|im_start|>assistant
Luciole-Instruct-1.1 models were trained in three phases. The base model was first finetuned on thinking data, and then on data without thinking traces. The resulting instruct model was aligned during a final DPO finetuning phase.
| SFT with thinking | SFT without thinking | DPO without thinking | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Num training samples | 2.6M | 2.1M | 284K |
| Num epochs | 4 | 4 | 1 |
| Max learning rate | 2.0e-5 | 2.0e-5 | 1.0e-6 |
| Min learning rate | 2.0e-6 | 2.0e-6 | 0 |
| LR scheduler | cosine | cosine | linear |
| Max sequence length | 16384 | 16384 | 16384 |
| Batch size | 2048 | 2048 | 128 |
| DPO β | n/a | n/a | 5 |
For links to the interim (SFT with and without thinking), please see the models cards on Hugging Face.
Note: for best performance, please use the GGUF files released officially by OpenLLM and registered here.
Modelfile, adpating if necessary the path to the GGUF file (line starting with FROM).ollama create -f Modelfile Lucioleollama run Luciole/clear”/bye”.Useful for debug: * How to print input requests and output responses in Ollama server? * Documentation on Modelfile * Examples: Ollama model library * Llama 3 example: https://ollama.com/library/llama3.1 * Add GUI : https://docs.openwebui.com/
✍ Paper coming soon!
We gratefully acknowledge BPI France for funding the OpenLLM France project under the call “Communs numériques pour l’intelligence artificielle générative” (“Digital commons for generative artificial intelligence”) as a part of the France 2030 program.
Training of Luciole-1B-Instruct-1.1 was made possible by computing AI and storage resources by GENCI at IDRIS thanks to the project A0181016189 on the supercomputer Jean Zay’s H100 partition. We gratefully acknowledge their support.
Luciole-1B-Instruct-1.1 was created by members of LINAGORA and the OpenLLM-France community, including in alphabetical order:
Akshay Chaturvedi (LINAGORA)
Liam Duignan (CEA List)
Olivier Ferret (CEA List)
Olivier Gouvert (LINAGORA)
Émile Hazard (Opsci)
Julie Hunter (LINAGORA)
Jean-Pierre Lorré (LINAGORA)
Jérôme Louradour (LINAGORA)
Michel-Marie Maudet (LINAGORA)
Kate Thompson (LINAGORA)
Matteo Van Ypersele de Strihou (LINAGORA)
Particular thanks to the following OpenLLM France members for their valuable input: Clément Bénesse (Opsci), Christophe Cerisara (LORIA) and Gabriel Lauzzana (LORIA).
We thank the support teams from IDRIS and NVIDIA for technical guidance throughout the project.
We would also like to thank members of the Gaperon and Salamandra projects for sharing their insights with us. We also acknowledge the numerous open source actors whose resources have guided us throughout the training process, with particular thanks to Nvidia, HuggingFace and Allen AI.
Finally, we thank the entire OpenLLM-France community, whose members have helped in diverse ways.
contact@openllm-france.fr