It shouldn't install any packages itself. Just print out a message about the missing packages and your guess of the command to install them, then exit. That way users can run the command themselves if it's appropriate or add the packages to their container build or whatever. People set up machines in a lot of different ways, and automatically installing things is going to mess that up.
Hmmm I'm worried people will really not get on how to install / compile / use the terminal hmmm hence I thought permissions were like a compromise solution
- Determine the command that has to be run by the algorithm above.
This does most of the work a user would have to figure out what has to be installed on their system.
- Ask whether to run the command automatically.
This allows the “software should never install dependencies by itself” crowd to say no and figure out further steps, while allowing people who just want it to work to get on with their task as quickly as possible (who do you think there are more of?).
I think it would be fine to print out the command and force the user to run it themselves, but it would bring little material gain at the cost of some of your users’ peace (“oh no it failed, what is it this time ...”).
Don't listen to this crowd, these are "technical folks". Most of your audience will fail to figure it out. You can provide an option that llama.cpp is missing and give them an option where you auto install it or they can install it themselves and do manual configuration. I personally won't tho.
Who do you think the audience is here if not technical. We are in a discussion about a model that requires over 250gb of ram to run. I don't know a non-technical person with more than 32gb.
I think most of the people like this in the ML world are extreme specialists (e.g.: bioinformaticians, statisticians, linguists, data scientists) who are "technical" in some ways but aren't really "computer people". They're power users in a sense but they're also prone to strange bouts of computing insanity and/or helplessness.
95% of users probably won't be using Linux. Most of those who are will have no problem installing dependencies. There are too many distributions and ways of setting them up for automated package manager use to be the right thing to do. I have never seen a Python package even try.