you may totally ignore complicated gpg manuals, but you must understand how
git-cryptoperates.
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| from typing import Dict, Union | |
| from huggingface_hub import get_safetensors_metadata | |
| import argparse | |
| import sys | |
| # Example: | |
| # python get_gpu_memory.py Qwen/Qwen2.5-7B-Instruct | |
| # Dictionary mapping dtype strings to their byte sizes | |
| bytes_per_dtype: Dict[str, float] = { |
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| using System; | |
| using System.IO; | |
| using System.Net; | |
| using System.Net.Http; | |
| using System.Net.Http.Headers; | |
| using System.Text; | |
| using System.Text.Json.Serialization; | |
| using System.Threading; | |
| using System.Threading.Tasks; |
This is the follow up to a post I wrote recently called From Require.js to Webpack - Party 1 (the why) which was published in my personal blog.
In that post I talked about 3 main reasons for moving from require.js to webpack:
- Common JS support
- NPM support
- a healthy loader/plugin ecosystem.
Here I'll instead talk about some of the technical challenges that we faced during the migration. Despite the clear benefits in developer experience (DX) the setup was fairly difficult and I'd like to cover some of the challanges we faced to make the transition a bit easier.