TRiP — TRansformer in Progress
A few-files, all-in-one C engine for Transformer AI models: inference, training, tokenizer creation, chat, and vision.
Built from scratch over 18 months (from March 2024 to August 2025) during my lunch breaks and weekend nights, TRiP exists just because I wanted to truly understand the transformer internals - from the matrix multiplications up.
TRiP's purpose is purely educational, for me and for anyone willing to learn about transformers. It supports Gemma 1, Llama 2, PaliGemma, and GPT-2, with full inference and training. It does not aim to track the latest model releases, and is not trying to compete with llama.cpp.
NOTE: since people are asking: here's what's AI-generated in the code:
- the json parser (with some fix)
- the safetensors checkpoint save function
- the whole jpeg-X11 management functions (I had no interest in developing them)
- the final file split (I initially wrote everything as main.c :D )
- some revisions of the comments before I made the commit
- this readme, for the most part :D
That's all, I think; the rest, it's all hand-coded by me. And it would had no sense otherwise, since the whole point in doing this was: to achieve the closest to a full-stack understanding of the transformer internals.
What TRiP supports
- Architectures: Llama2, Gemma 1.0/1.1, PaliGemma 1 (vision+language), GPT-2
- Checkpoint formats: SafeTensors (HuggingFace), Karpathy's llama2.c and gpt2 formats
- Weight types: bf16, float16, float32
- Training: full backpropagation with AdamW, cosine annealing LR, gradient clipping
- Tokenizer: BPE (SentencePiece-compatible), with vocabulary creation from scratch
- Inference: greedy, top-k, and nucleus (top-p) sampling
- Chat: interactive chat with Llama, Gemma, and TinyLlama chat templates
- Vision: multimodal inference with PaliGemma (JPEG input, X11 display)
- Memory: RAM-optimized mode via mmap for large models on limited hardware
Building
Dependencies
gcc (recommended: version 13 or higher, to get support for bfloat16; with OpenMP support)
libjpeg-dev (or libjpeg62-turbo-dev)
libx11-dev
WARNING: do NOT expect higher performance with bfloat16 or float16 on CPUs; today's CPUs are not optimized for floating point operations in such formats, and float32 always performs best. That surprised me a lot, too.
On Debian:
sudo apt install build-essential libomp-dev libjpeg62-turbo-dev libx11-dev
On Ubuntu:
sudo apt install build-essential libomp-dev libjpeg-dev libx11-dev
Windows (WSL)
TRiP runs natively under WSL (Windows Subsystem for Linux). To enable the X11 display features (vision mode, image display), install an X server on the Windows side:
Then in your WSL terminal, before running TRiP:
export DISPLAY=:0If using WSL2 (most setups), use instead:
export DISPLAY=$(cat /etc/resolv.conf | grep nameserver | awk '{print $2}'):0
X11 is only needed for vision mode. Chat, inference, and training work without it.
Compile
make
That's it. No cmake, no external frameworks, no Python. Just make.
Quick start
Chat with a Gemma model
Download a Gemma-2B-IT model from HuggingFace (safetensors format), then:
./trip --chat \
--checkpoint gemma-2b-it/model.safetensors \
--tokenizer gemma-2b-it/tokenizer.json \
--chat_scheme GEMMARun inference on a prompt
./trip --decode \
--input_text "The capital of Italy is" \
--checkpoint gemma-2b-it/model.safetensors \
--tokenizer gemma-2b-it/tokenizer.jsonOr from a text file:
./trip --decode prompt.txt \
--checkpoint gemma-2b-it/model.safetensors \
--tokenizer gemma-2b-it/tokenizer.jsonTrain a model
./trip --train \
--checkpoint my_model/model.safetensors \
--tokenizer my_model/tokenizer.json \
--train_data my_dataset.txt \
--train_config training_args.jsonVision (PaliGemma)
./trip --vision photo.jpg \
--checkpoint paligemma/model.safetensors \
--tokenizer paligemma/tokenizer.json \
--input_text "Describe this image"Build a tokenizer vocabulary from scratch
./trip --build_vocab corpus.txt --vocab_size 32000 --tokenizer my_tokenizer.json
Full CLI reference
USAGE:
./trip <ACTION> [OPTIONS...]
Actions (pick one)
| Flag | Description |
|---|---|
--decode [file] |
Run inference on a prompt (from file, --input_text, or stdin) |
--chat |
Interactive chat session |
--vision [image.jpg] |
Multimodal inference with an image |
--train |
Train the model |
--create |
Create a new model from a configuration file |
--build_vocab <data.txt> |
Build a new tokenizer vocabulary from a text corpus |
--utest |
Run unit tests |
--help |
Show help |
Model & tokenizer options
| Flag | Default | Description |
|---|---|---|
--checkpoint <path> |
default.model |
Path to model checkpoint file(s) |
--checkpoint_type <type> |
SAFETENSORS |
Format: SAFETENSORS, LLAMA2_AK, GPT2_AK |
--configuration <path> |
(auto) | Path to config.json (for SafeTensors) |
--tokenizer <path> |
default.tokenizer |
Path to tokenizer file |
--tokenizer_format <type> |
JSON_HUGGINGFACE |
Format: JSON_HUGGINGFACE, LLAMA2_AK, GPT2_AK |
--tokenizer_type <type> |
SENTENCEPIECE |
Algorithm: SENTENCEPIECE, TRIP |
Inference & sampling options
| Flag | Default | Description |
|---|---|---|
--input_text "<prompt>" |
— | Provide prompt text directly on the command line |
--system_prompt "<text>" |
— | System prompt for chat mode |
--chat_scheme <scheme> |
(none) | Chat template: LLAMA, TINY_LLAMA, GEMMA |
--chat_save_context <file> |
— | Pre-process and save chat context for faster startup |
--chat_load_context <file> |
— | Load a previously saved chat context |
--temperature <value> |
1.0 |
Sampling temperature. 0.0 = greedy (always pick the most probable token) |
--top_p <value> |
0.9 |
Nucleus sampling: sample from the smallest set of tokens whose cumulative probability exceeds this value |
--top_k <value> |
(disabled) | Top-k sampling: sample from the k most probable tokens |
--ram |
(off) | Memory-map weights instead of loading them (slower, uses less RAM) |
Training options
| Flag | Default | Description |
|---|---|---|
--train_config <path> |
training_args.json |
Path to training configuration JSON |
--train_data <path> |
training_data.txt |
Path to training data (plain text) |
File map
TRiP is organized into 7 files. Open trip.h for the complete map.
| File | Lines | What it contains |
|---|---|---|
trip.h |
~900 | The map. Every type, struct, global, and declaration. |
math.c |
~3000 | Tensor ops, each forward+backward paired side by side: matmul, softmax, layernorm, RMSnorm, RoPE, attention, FFN activations, vector arithmetic |
forward.c |
~1500 | Forward pass orchestration + token sampling |
backward.c |
~1500 | Backward pass + AdamW optimizer + gradient management |
model.c |
~5500 | Checkpoint I/O, model init, memory management, tokenizer, vision preprocessing |
utils.c |
~1000 | Logging, JSON parser, terminal I/O, JPEG/X11 image handling |
main.c |
~1900 | CLI argument parsing, chat loop, training loop, inference loop |
How it works (for the curious)
TRiP implements a transformer from first principles in C. No PyTorch, no TensorFlow, no ONNX — just linear algebra on arrays of floats.
The residual stream is the central concept: a vector that flows through the model like data on a bus. Each layer reads from it, processes it through attention and a feed-forward network, and writes back to it. The forward pass walks the layers top to bottom; the backward pass walks them bottom to top, computing gradients via the chain rule.
Every math operation (math.c) is implemented as a forward+backward pair: you can read rmsnorm() and immediately below it rmsnorm_backward(), and see exactly how the gradient flows through the same computation in reverse.
I put a lot of comments in the code, both as reminders to me, and to render TRiP basically an annotated school book about transformers.
For a deeper understanding of backpropagation, see Andrej Karpathy's lecture; TRiP would never have existed without his work.
License
CC BY-NC 4.0 — free to use, study, modify, and share for non-commercial purposes, with attribution. For commercial licensing, contact the author.






















