Hub documentation
Hardware
Hardware
Tell the Hub which compute hardware you own (GPUs, CPUs, or Apple Silicon) and it will help you find models that run on your setup. It also appears on your public profile, so you can compare your setup with the community, and you can make it private any time.
Manage it any time from your Hardware settings.

Add your hardware
On your Hardware settings page, add each piece of hardware you own:
- Pick a type: GPU, CPU, or Apple Silicon.
- Choose the provider and model (for example, NVIDIA RTX 4090).
- Set the memory (VRAM, RAM, or unified memory) and the number of units you have.
Add as many items as you like. If you own several, mark one as your primary hardware so it appears first on model pages.
Your hardware is public by default. Turn off the Publicly Visible toggle to keep it private.
See which models fit your hardware
On model pages that offer GGUF or MLX files, a Hardware compatibility panel estimates whether each quantization will run on your saved hardware, so you can choose a size that fits before downloading. Pair it with Local Apps to get up and running in a couple of clicks.
Share and compare
While your hardware is public:
- A TFLOPS badge appears on your profile, summarizing your estimated total compute power.
- You can browse what the community is running and see how your setup compares across GPUs, CPUs, and Apple Silicon.
Next steps
- Use AI Models Locally — run models with your favorite local app.
- Local Agents with llama.cpp — build a coding agent on your own hardware.