_Thank you to the LangChain team for the great project and in advance
for your review. Let me know if I can provide any other additional
information or do things differently in the future to make your lives
easier 🙏 _
@hwchase17 please let me know if you're not the right person to review 😄
This PR enables LangChain to access the Konko API via the chat_models
API wrapper.
Konko API is a fully managed API designed to help application
developers:
1. Select the right LLM(s) for their application
2. Prototype with various open-source and proprietary LLMs
3. Move to production in-line with their security, privacy, throughput,
latency SLAs without infrastructure set-up or administration using Konko
AI's SOC 2 compliant infrastructure
_Note on integration tests:_
We added 14 integration tests. They will all fail unless you export the
right API keys. 13 will pass with a KONKO_API_KEY provided and the other
one will pass with a OPENAI_API_KEY provided. When both are provided,
all 14 integration tests pass. If you would like to test this yourself,
please let me know and I can provide some temporary keys.
### Installation and Setup
1. **First you'll need an API key**
2. **Install Konko AI's Python SDK**
1. Enable a Python3.8+ environment
`pip install konko`
3. **Set API Keys**
**Option 1:** Set Environment Variables
You can set environment variables for
1. KONKO_API_KEY (Required)
2. OPENAI_API_KEY (Optional)
In your current shell session, use the export command:
`export KONKO_API_KEY={your_KONKO_API_KEY_here}`
`export OPENAI_API_KEY={your_OPENAI_API_KEY_here} #Optional`
Alternatively, you can add the above lines directly to your shell
startup script (such as .bashrc or .bash_profile for Bash shell and
.zshrc for Zsh shell) to have them set automatically every time a new
shell session starts.
**Option 2:** Set API Keys Programmatically
If you prefer to set your API keys directly within your Python script or
Jupyter notebook, you can use the following commands:
```python
konko.set_api_key('your_KONKO_API_KEY_here')
konko.set_openai_api_key('your_OPENAI_API_KEY_here') # Optional
```
### Calling a model
Find a model on the [[Konko Introduction
page](https://docs.konko.ai/docs#available-models)](https://docs.konko.ai/docs#available-models)
For example, for this [[LLama 2
model](https://docs.konko.ai/docs/meta-llama-2-13b-chat)](https://docs.konko.ai/docs/meta-llama-2-13b-chat).
The model id would be: `"meta-llama/Llama-2-13b-chat-hf"`
Another way to find the list of models running on the Konko instance is
through this
[[endpoint](https://docs.konko.ai/reference/listmodels)](https://docs.konko.ai/reference/listmodels).
From here, we can initialize our model:
```python
chat_instance = ChatKonko(max_tokens=10, model = 'meta-llama/Llama-2-13b-chat-hf')
```
And run it:
```python
msg = HumanMessage(content="Hi")
chat_response = chat_instance([msg])
```
## Description
Adds Supabase Vector as a self-querying retriever.
- Designed to be backwards compatible with existing `filter` logic on
`SupabaseVectorStore`.
- Adds new filter `postgrest_filter` to `SupabaseVectorStore`
`similarity_search()` methods
- Supports entire PostgREST [filter query
language](https://postgrest.org/en/stable/references/api/tables_views.html#read)
(used by self-querying retriever, but also works as an escape hatch for
more query control)
- `SupabaseVectorTranslator` converts Langchain filter into the above
PostgREST query
- Adds Jupyter Notebook for the self-querying retriever
- Adds tests
## Tag maintainer
@hwchase17
## Twitter handle
[@ggrdson](https://twitter.com/ggrdson)
- Description: Fixing Colab broken link and comment correction to align
with the code that uses Warren Buffet for wiki query
- Issue: None open
- Dependencies: none
- Tag maintainer: n/a
- Twitter handle: Not a PR change but: kcocco
### Description
Add multiple language support to Anonymizer
PII detection in Microsoft Presidio relies on several components - in
addition to the usual pattern matching (e.g. using regex), the analyser
uses a model for Named Entity Recognition (NER) to extract entities such
as:
- `PERSON`
- `LOCATION`
- `DATE_TIME`
- `NRP`
- `ORGANIZATION`
[[Source]](https://github.com/microsoft/presidio/blob/main/presidio-analyzer/presidio_analyzer/predefined_recognizers/spacy_recognizer.py)
To handle NER in specific languages, we utilize unique models from the
`spaCy` library, recognized for its extensive selection covering
multiple languages and sizes. However, it's not restrictive, allowing
for integration of alternative frameworks such as
[Stanza](https://microsoft.github.io/presidio/analyzer/nlp_engines/spacy_stanza/)
or
[transformers](https://microsoft.github.io/presidio/analyzer/nlp_engines/transformers/)
when necessary.
### Future works
- **automatic language detection** - instead of passing the language as
a parameter in `anonymizer.anonymize`, we could detect the language/s
beforehand and then use the corresponding NER model. We have discussed
this internally and @mateusz-wosinski-ds will look into a standalone
language detection tool/chain for LangChain 😄
### Twitter handle
@deepsense_ai / @MaksOpp
### Tag maintainer
@baskaryan @hwchase17 @hinthornw
- Description: Adding support for self-querying to Vectara integration
- Issue: per customer request
- Tag maintainer: @rlancemartin @baskaryan
- Twitter handle: @ofermend
Also updated some documentation, added self-query testing, and a demo
notebook with self-query example.
### Description
The feature for pseudonymizing data with ability to retrieve original
text (deanonymization) has been implemented. In order to protect private
data, such as when querying external APIs (OpenAI), it is worth
pseudonymizing sensitive data to maintain full privacy. But then, after
the model response, it would be good to have the data in the original
form.
I implemented the `PresidioReversibleAnonymizer`, which consists of two
parts:
1. anonymization - it works the same way as `PresidioAnonymizer`, plus
the object itself stores a mapping of made-up values to original ones,
for example:
```
{
"PERSON": {
"<anonymized>": "<original>",
"John Doe": "Slim Shady"
},
"PHONE_NUMBER": {
"111-111-1111": "555-555-5555"
}
...
}
```
2. deanonymization - using the mapping described above, it matches fake
data with original data and then substitutes it.
Between anonymization and deanonymization user can perform different
operations, for example, passing the output to LLM.
### Future works
- **instance anonymization** - at this point, each occurrence of PII is
treated as a separate entity and separately anonymized. Therefore, two
occurrences of the name John Doe in the text will be changed to two
different names. It is therefore worth introducing support for full
instance detection, so that repeated occurrences are treated as a single
object.
- **better matching and substitution of fake values for real ones** -
currently the strategy is based on matching full strings and then
substituting them. Due to the indeterminism of language models, it may
happen that the value in the answer is slightly changed (e.g. *John Doe*
-> *John* or *Main St, New York* -> *New York*) and such a substitution
is then no longer possible. Therefore, it is worth adjusting the
matching for your needs.
- **Q&A with anonymization** - when I'm done writing all the
functionality, I thought it would be a cool resource in documentation to
write a notebook about retrieval from documents using anonymization. An
iterative process, adding new recognizers to fit the data, lessons
learned and what to look out for
### Twitter handle
@deepsense_ai / @MaksOpp
---------
Co-authored-by: MaksOpp <maks.operlejn@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Bagatur <baskaryan@gmail.com>
Squashed from #7454 with updated features
We have separated the `SQLDatabseChain` from `VectorSQLDatabseChain` and
put everything into `experimental/`.
Below is the original PR message from #7454.
-------
We have been working on features to fill up the gap among SQL, vector
search and LLM applications. Some inspiring works like self-query
retrievers for VectorStores (for example
[Weaviate](https://python.langchain.com/en/latest/modules/indexes/retrievers/examples/weaviate_self_query.html)
and
[others](https://python.langchain.com/en/latest/modules/indexes/retrievers/examples/self_query.html))
really turn those vector search databases into a powerful knowledge
base! 🚀🚀
We are thinking if we can merge all in one, like SQL and vector search
and LLMChains, making this SQL vector database memory as the only source
of your data. Here are some benefits we can think of for now, maybe you
have more 👀:
With ALL data you have: since you store all your pasta in the database,
you don't need to worry about the foreign keys or links between names
from other data source.
Flexible data structure: Even if you have changed your schema, for
example added a table, the LLM will know how to JOIN those tables and
use those as filters.
SQL compatibility: We found that vector databases that supports SQL in
the marketplace have similar interfaces, which means you can change your
backend with no pain, just change the name of the distance function in
your DB solution and you are ready to go!
### Issue resolved:
- [Feature Proposal: VectorSearch enabled
SQLChain?](https://github.com/hwchase17/langchain/issues/5122)
### Change made in this PR:
- An improved schema handling that ignore `types.NullType` columns
- A SQL output Parser interface in `SQLDatabaseChain` to enable Vector
SQL capability and further more
- A Retriever based on `SQLDatabaseChain` to retrieve data from the
database for RetrievalQAChains and many others
- Allow `SQLDatabaseChain` to retrieve data in python native format
- Includes PR #6737
- Vector SQL Output Parser for `SQLDatabaseChain` and
`SQLDatabaseChainRetriever`
- Prompts that can implement text to VectorSQL
- Corresponding unit-tests and notebook
### Twitter handle:
- @MyScaleDB
### Tag Maintainer:
Prompts / General: @hwchase17, @baskaryan
DataLoaders / VectorStores / Retrievers: @rlancemartin, @eyurtsev
### Dependencies:
No dependency added
# Description
This pull request allows to use the
[NucliaDB](https://docs.nuclia.dev/docs/docs/nucliadb/intro) as a vector
store in LangChain.
It works with both a [local NucliaDB
instance](https://docs.nuclia.dev/docs/docs/nucliadb/deploy/basics) or
with [Nuclia Cloud](https://nuclia.cloud).
# Dependencies
It requires an up-to-date version of the `nuclia` Python package.
@rlancemartin, @eyurtsev, @hinthornw, please review it when you have a
moment :)
Note: our Twitter handler is `@NucliaAI`
- Description: Updated Additional Resources section of documentation and
added to YouTube videos with excellent playlist of Langchain content
from Sam Witteveen
- Issue: None -- updating documentation
- Dependencies: None
- Tag maintainer: @baskaryan
Follow-up PR for https://github.com/langchain-ai/langchain/pull/10047,
simply adding a notebook quickstart example for the vector store with
SQLite, using the class SQLiteVSS.
Maintainer tag @baskaryan
Co-authored-by: Philippe Oger <philippe.oger@adevinta.com>
Changes in:
- `create_sql_agent` function so that user can easily add custom tools
as complement for the toolkit.
- updating **sql use case** notebook to showcase 2 examples of extra
tools.
Motivation for these changes is having the possibility of including
domain expert knowledge to the agent, which improves accuracy and
reduces time/tokens.
---------
Co-authored-by: Manuel Soria <manuel.soria@greyscaleai.com>
Co-authored-by: Bagatur <baskaryan@gmail.com>
- Implemented the MilvusTranslator for self-querying using Milvus vector
store
- Made unit tests to test its functionality
- Documented the Milvus self-querying
- Description: this PR adds the possibility to configure boto3 in the S3
loaders. Any named argument you add will be used to create the Boto3
session. This is useful when the AWS credentials can't be passed as env
variables or can't be read from the credentials file.
- Issue: N/A
- Dependencies: N/A
- Tag maintainer: ?
- Twitter handle: cbornet_
---------
Co-authored-by: Bagatur <baskaryan@gmail.com>
Various improvements to the Model I/O section of the documentation
- Changed "Chat Model" to "chat model" in a few spots for internal
consistency
- Minor spelling & grammar fixes to improve readability & comprehension
Hi,
I noticed a typo in the local_llms.ipynb file and fixed it. The word
challenge is without 'a' in the original file.
@baskaryan , @eyurtsev
Thanks.
Co-authored-by: Fliprise <fliprise@Fliprises-MacBook-Pro.local>
Various miscellaneous fixes to most pages in the 'Retrievers' section of
the documentation:
- "VectorStore" and "vectorstore" changed to "vector store" for
consistency
- Various spelling, grammar, and formatting improvements for readability
Co-authored-by: Harrison Chase <hw.chase.17@gmail.com>
Enhance SerpApi response which potential to have more relevant output.
<img width="345" alt="Screenshot 2023-09-01 at 8 26 13 AM"
src="https://github.com/langchain-ai/langchain/assets/10222402/80ff684d-e02e-4143-b218-5c1b102cbf75">
Query: What is the weather in Pomfret?
**Before:**
> I should look up the current weather conditions.
...
Final Answer: The current weather in Pomfret is 73°F with 1% chance of
precipitation and winds at 10 mph.
**After:**
> I should look up the current weather conditions.
...
Final Answer: The current weather in Pomfret is 62°F, 1% precipitation,
61% humidity, and 4 mph wind.
---
Query: Top team in english premier league?
**Before:**
> I need to find out which team is currently at the top of the English
Premier League
...
Final Answer: Liverpool FC is currently at the top of the English
Premier League.
**After:**
> I need to find out which team is currently at the top of the English
Premier League
...
Final Answer: Man City is currently at the top of the English Premier
League.
---
Query: Top team in english premier league?
**Before:**
> I need to find out which team is currently at the top of the English
Premier League
...
Final Answer: Liverpool FC is currently at the top of the English
Premier League.
**After:**
> I need to find out which team is currently at the top of the English
Premier League
...
Final Answer: Man City is currently at the top of the English Premier
League.
---
Query: Any upcoming events in Paris?
**Before:**
> I should look for events in Paris
Action: Search
...
Final Answer: Upcoming events in Paris this month include Whit Sunday &
Whit Monday (French National Holiday), Makeup in Paris, Paris Jazz
Festival, Fete de la Musique, and Salon International de la Maison de.
**After:**
> I should look for events in Paris
Action: Search
...
Final Answer: Upcoming events in Paris include Elektric Park 2023, The
Aces, and BEING AS AN OCEAN.
### Description
There is a really nice class for saving chat messages into a database -
SQLChatMessageHistory.
It leverages SqlAlchemy to be compatible with any supported database (in
contrast with PostgresChatMessageHistory, which is basically the same
but is limited to Postgres).
However, the class is not really customizable in terms of what you can
store. I can imagine a lot of use cases, when one will need to save a
message date, along with some additional metadata.
To solve this, I propose to extract the converting logic from
BaseMessage to SQLAlchemy model (and vice versa) into a separate class -
message converter. So instead of rewriting the whole
SQLChatMessageHistory class, a user will only need to write a custom
model and a simple mapping class, and pass its instance as a parameter.
I also noticed that there is no documentation on this class, so I added
that too, with an example of custom message converter.
### Issue
N/A
### Dependencies
N/A
### Tag maintainer
Not yet
### Twitter handle
N/A
Description: new chain for logical fallacy removal from model output in
chain and docs
Issue: n/a see above
Dependencies: none
Tag maintainer: @hinthornw in past from my end but not sure who that
would be for maintenance of chains
Twitter handle: no twitter feel free to call out my git user if shout
out j-space-b
Note: created documentation in docs/extras
---------
Co-authored-by: Jon Bennion <jb@Jons-MacBook-Pro.local>
Co-authored-by: Harrison Chase <hw.chase.17@gmail.com>
- Description: Adds two optional parameters to the
DynamoDBChatMessageHistory class to enable users to pass in a name for
their PrimaryKey, or a Key object itself to enable the use of composite
keys, a common DynamoDB paradigm.
[AWS DynamoDB Key
docs](https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/database/choosing-the-right-dynamodb-partition-key/)
- Issue: N/A
- Dependencies: N/A
- Twitter handle: N/A
---------
Co-authored-by: Josh White <josh@ctrlstack.com>
Co-authored-by: Bagatur <baskaryan@gmail.com>
## Description
This PR introduces a minor change to the TitanTakeoff integration.
Instead of specifying a port on localhost, this PR will allow users to
specify a baseURL instead. This will allow users to use the integration
if they have TitanTakeoff deployed externally (not on localhost). This
removes the hardcoded reference to localhost "http://localhost:{port}".
### Info about Titan Takeoff
Titan Takeoff is an inference server created by
[TitanML](https://www.titanml.co/) that allows you to deploy large
language models locally on your hardware in a single command. Most
generative model architectures are included, such as Falcon, Llama 2,
GPT2, T5 and many more.
Read more about Titan Takeoff here:
-
[Blog](https://medium.com/@TitanML/introducing-titan-takeoff-6c30e55a8e1e)
- [Docs](https://docs.titanml.co/docs/titan-takeoff/getting-started)
### Dependencies
No new dependencies are introduced. However, users will need to install
the titan-iris package in their local environment and start the Titan
Takeoff inferencing server in order to use the Titan Takeoff
integration.
Thanks for your help and please let me know if you have any questions.
cc: @hwchase17 @baskaryan
---------
Co-authored-by: Harrison Chase <hw.chase.17@gmail.com>
The current document has not mentioned that splits larger than chunk
size would happen. I update the related document and explain why it
happens and how to solve it.
related issue #1349#3838#2140
- Description: Added example of running Q&A over structured data using
the `Airbyte` loaders and `pandas`
- Dependencies: any dependencies required for this change,
- Tag maintainer: @hwchase17
- Twitter handle: @pelaseyed
Hi,
this PR contains loader / parser for Azure Document intelligence which
is a ML-based service to ingest arbitrary PDFs / images, even if
scanned. The loader generates Documents by pages of the original
document. This is my first contribution to LangChain.
Unfortunately I could not find the correct place for test cases. Happy
to add one if you can point me to the location, but as this is a
cloud-based service, a test would require network access and credentials
- so might be of limited help.
Dependencies: The needed dependency was already part of pyproject.toml,
no change.
Twitter: feel free to mention @LarsAC on the announcement
Fixed navbar:
- renamed several files, so ToC is sorted correctly
- made ToC items consistent: formatted several Titles
- added several links
- reformatted several docs to a consistent format
- renamed several files (removed `_example` suffix)
- added renamed files to the `docs/docs_skeleton/vercel.json`
This notebook was mistakenly placed in the `toolkits` folder and appears
within `Agents & Toolkits` menu. But it should be in `Tools`.
Moved example into `tools/`; updated title to consistent format.
This PR follows the **Eden AI (LLM + embeddings) integration**. #8633
We added an optional parameter to choose different AI models for
providers (like 'text-bison' for provider 'google', 'text-davinci-003'
for provider 'openai', etc.).
Usage:
```python
llm = EdenAI(
feature="text",
provider="google",
params={
"model": "text-bison", # new
"temperature": 0.2,
"max_tokens": 250,
},
)
```
You can also change the provider + model after initialization
```python
llm = EdenAI(
feature="text",
provider="google",
params={
"temperature": 0.2,
"max_tokens": 250,
},
)
prompt = """
hi
"""
llm(prompt, providers='openai', model='text-davinci-003') # change provider & model
```
The jupyter notebook as been updated with an example well.
Ping: @hwchase17, @baskaryan
---------
Co-authored-by: RedhaWassim <rwasssim@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: sam <melaine.samy@gmail.com>
This fixes the exampe import line in the general "cassandra" doc page
mdx file. (it was erroneously a copy of the chat message history import
statement found below).
Description: updated the prompt name in a sequential chain example so
that it is not overwritten by the same prompt name in the next chain
(this is a sequential chain example)
Issue: n/a
Dependencies: none
Tag maintainer: not known
Twitter handle: not on twitter, feel free to use my git username for
anything
Hi there!
I'm excited to open this PR to add support for using 'Tencent Cloud
VectorDB' as a vector store.
Tencent Cloud VectorDB is a fully-managed, self-developed,
enterprise-level distributed database service designed for storing,
retrieving, and analyzing multi-dimensional vector data. The database
supports multiple index types and similarity calculation methods, with a
single index supporting vector scales up to 1 billion and capable of
handling millions of QPS with millisecond-level query latency. Tencent
Cloud VectorDB not only provides external knowledge bases for large
models to improve their accuracy, but also has wide applications in AI
fields such as recommendation systems, NLP services, computer vision,
and intelligent customer service.
The PR includes:
Implementation of Vectorstore.
I have read your [contributing
guidelines](72b7d76d79/.github/CONTRIBUTING.md).
And I have passed the tests below
make format
make lint
make coverage
make test
- Description: A change in the documentation example for Azure Cognitive
Vector Search with Scoring Profile so the example works as written
- Issue: #10015
- Dependencies: None
- Tag maintainer: @baskaryan @ruoccofabrizio
- Twitter handle: @poshporcupine
### Description
The feature for anonymizing data has been implemented. In order to
protect private data, such as when querying external APIs (OpenAI), it
is worth pseudonymizing sensitive data to maintain full privacy.
Anonynization consists of two steps:
1. **Identification:** Identify all data fields that contain personally
identifiable information (PII).
2. **Replacement**: Replace all PIIs with pseudo values or codes that do
not reveal any personal information about the individual but can be used
for reference. We're not using regular encryption, because the language
model won't be able to understand the meaning or context of the
encrypted data.
We use *Microsoft Presidio* together with *Faker* framework for
anonymization purposes because of the wide range of functionalities they
provide. The full implementation is available in `PresidioAnonymizer`.
### Future works
- **deanonymization** - add the ability to reverse anonymization. For
example, the workflow could look like this: `anonymize -> LLMChain ->
deanonymize`. By doing this, we will retain anonymity in requests to,
for example, OpenAI, and then be able restore the original data.
- **instance anonymization** - at this point, each occurrence of PII is
treated as a separate entity and separately anonymized. Therefore, two
occurrences of the name John Doe in the text will be changed to two
different names. It is therefore worth introducing support for full
instance detection, so that repeated occurrences are treated as a single
object.
### Twitter handle
@deepsense_ai / @MaksOpp
---------
Co-authored-by: MaksOpp <maks.operlejn@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Bagatur <baskaryan@gmail.com>
- Description: this PR adds `s3_object_key` and `s3_bucket` to the doc
metadata when loading an S3 file. This is particularly useful when using
`S3DirectoryLoader` to remove the files from the dir once they have been
processed (getting the object keys from the metadata `source` field
seems brittle)
- Dependencies: N/A
- Tag maintainer: ?
- Twitter handle: _cbornet
---------
Co-authored-by: Eugene Yurtsev <eyurtsev@gmail.com>
Adds support for [llmonitor](https://llmonitor.com) callbacks.
It enables:
- Requests tracking / logging / analytics
- Error debugging
- Cost analytics
- User tracking
Let me know if anythings neds to be changed for merge.
Thank you!
The [Memory](https://python.langchain.com/docs/modules/memory/) menu is
clogged with unnecessary wording.
I've made it more concise by simplifying titles of the example
notebooks.
As results, menu is shorter and better for comprehend.
The [Memory
Types](https://python.langchain.com/docs/modules/memory/types/) menu is
clogged with unnecessary wording.
I've made it more concise by simplifying titles of the example
notebooks.
As results, menu is shorter and better for comprehend.
- Description: the implementation for similarity_search_with_score did
not actually include a score or logic to filter. Now fixed.
- Tag maintainer: @rlancemartin
- Twitter handle: @ofermend
# Description
This PR adds additional documentation on how to use Azure Active
Directory to authenticate to an OpenAI service within Azure. This method
of authentication allows organizations with more complex security
requirements to use Azure OpenAI.
# Issue
N/A
# Dependencies
N/A
# Twitter
https://twitter.com/CamAHutchison
Neo4j has added vector index integration just recently. To allow both
ingestion and integrating it as vector RAG applications, I wrapped it as
a vector store as the implementation is completely different from
`GraphCypherQAChain`. Here, we are not generating any Cypher statements
at query time, we are simply doing the vector similarity search using
the new vector index as if we were dealing with a vector database.
---------
Co-authored-by: Bagatur <baskaryan@gmail.com>
Update google drive doc loader and retriever notebooks. Show how to use with langchain-googledrive package.
---------
Co-authored-by: Bagatur <baskaryan@gmail.com>
Fixed title for the `extras/integrations/llms/llm_caching.ipynb`.
Existing title breaks the sorted order of items in the navbar.
Updated some formatting.
* Added links to the AI Network
* Made title consistent to other tool kits
* Added `integrations/providers/` integration card page
* **No changes** in the example code!
- Fixed a broken link in the `integrations/providers/infino.mdx`
- Fixed a title in the `integration/collbacks/infino.ipynb` example
- Updated text format in this example.
## Description
The following PR enables the [grammar-based
sampling](https://github.com/ggerganov/llama.cpp/tree/master/grammars)
in llama-cpp LLM.
In short, loading file with formal grammar definition will constrain
model outputs. For instance, one can force the model to generate valid
JSON or generate only python lists.
In the follow-up PR we will add:
* docs with some description why it is cool and how it works
* maybe some code sample for some task such as in llama repo
---------
Co-authored-by: Lance Martin <lance@langchain.dev>
Co-authored-by: Bagatur <baskaryan@gmail.com>
### Description
The previous Redis implementation did not allow for the user to specify
the index configuration (i.e. changing the underlying algorithm) or add
additional metadata to use for querying (i.e. hybrid or "filtered"
search).
This PR introduces the ability to specify custom index attributes and
metadata attributes as well as use that metadata in filtered queries.
Overall, more structure was introduced to the Redis implementation that
should allow for easier maintainability moving forward.
# New Features
The following features are now available with the Redis integration into
Langchain
## Index schema generation
The schema for the index will now be automatically generated if not
specified by the user. For example, the data above has the multiple
metadata categories. The the following example
```python
from langchain.embeddings import OpenAIEmbeddings
from langchain.vectorstores.redis import Redis
embeddings = OpenAIEmbeddings()
rds, keys = Redis.from_texts_return_keys(
texts,
embeddings,
metadatas=metadata,
redis_url="redis://localhost:6379",
index_name="users"
)
```
Loading the data in through this and the other ``from_documents`` and
``from_texts`` methods will now generate index schema in Redis like the
following.
view index schema with the ``redisvl`` tool. [link](redisvl.com)
```bash
$ rvl index info -i users
```
Index Information:
| Index Name | Storage Type | Prefixes | Index Options | Indexing |
|--------------|----------------|---------------|-----------------|------------|
| users | HASH | ['doc:users'] | [] | 0 |
Index Fields:
| Name | Attribute | Type | Field Option | Option Value |
|----------------|----------------|---------|----------------|----------------|
| user | user | TEXT | WEIGHT | 1 |
| job | job | TEXT | WEIGHT | 1 |
| credit_score | credit_score | TEXT | WEIGHT | 1 |
| content | content | TEXT | WEIGHT | 1 |
| age | age | NUMERIC | | |
| content_vector | content_vector | VECTOR | | |
### Custom Metadata specification
The metadata schema generation has the following rules
1. All text fields are indexed as text fields.
2. All numeric fields are index as numeric fields.
If you would like to have a text field as a tag field, users can specify
overrides like the following for the example data
```python
# this can also be a path to a yaml file
index_schema = {
"text": [{"name": "user"}, {"name": "job"}],
"tag": [{"name": "credit_score"}],
"numeric": [{"name": "age"}],
}
rds, keys = Redis.from_texts_return_keys(
texts,
embeddings,
metadatas=metadata,
redis_url="redis://localhost:6379",
index_name="users"
)
```
This will change the index specification to
Index Information:
| Index Name | Storage Type | Prefixes | Index Options | Indexing |
|--------------|----------------|----------------|-----------------|------------|
| users2 | HASH | ['doc:users2'] | [] | 0 |
Index Fields:
| Name | Attribute | Type | Field Option | Option Value |
|----------------|----------------|---------|----------------|----------------|
| user | user | TEXT | WEIGHT | 1 |
| job | job | TEXT | WEIGHT | 1 |
| content | content | TEXT | WEIGHT | 1 |
| credit_score | credit_score | TAG | SEPARATOR | , |
| age | age | NUMERIC | | |
| content_vector | content_vector | VECTOR | | |
and throw a warning to the user (log output) that the generated schema
does not match the specified schema.
```text
index_schema does not match generated schema from metadata.
index_schema: {'text': [{'name': 'user'}, {'name': 'job'}], 'tag': [{'name': 'credit_score'}], 'numeric': [{'name': 'age'}]}
generated_schema: {'text': [{'name': 'user'}, {'name': 'job'}, {'name': 'credit_score'}], 'numeric': [{'name': 'age'}]}
```
As long as this is on purpose, this is fine.
The schema can be defined as a yaml file or a dictionary
```yaml
text:
- name: user
- name: job
tag:
- name: credit_score
numeric:
- name: age
```
and you pass in a path like
```python
rds, keys = Redis.from_texts_return_keys(
texts,
embeddings,
metadatas=metadata,
redis_url="redis://localhost:6379",
index_name="users3",
index_schema=Path("sample1.yml").resolve()
)
```
Which will create the same schema as defined in the dictionary example
Index Information:
| Index Name | Storage Type | Prefixes | Index Options | Indexing |
|--------------|----------------|----------------|-----------------|------------|
| users3 | HASH | ['doc:users3'] | [] | 0 |
Index Fields:
| Name | Attribute | Type | Field Option | Option Value |
|----------------|----------------|---------|----------------|----------------|
| user | user | TEXT | WEIGHT | 1 |
| job | job | TEXT | WEIGHT | 1 |
| content | content | TEXT | WEIGHT | 1 |
| credit_score | credit_score | TAG | SEPARATOR | , |
| age | age | NUMERIC | | |
| content_vector | content_vector | VECTOR | | |
### Custom Vector Indexing Schema
Users with large use cases may want to change how they formulate the
vector index created by Langchain
To utilize all the features of Redis for vector database use cases like
this, you can now do the following to pass in index attribute modifiers
like changing the indexing algorithm to HNSW.
```python
vector_schema = {
"algorithm": "HNSW"
}
rds, keys = Redis.from_texts_return_keys(
texts,
embeddings,
metadatas=metadata,
redis_url="redis://localhost:6379",
index_name="users3",
vector_schema=vector_schema
)
```
A more complex example may look like
```python
vector_schema = {
"algorithm": "HNSW",
"ef_construction": 200,
"ef_runtime": 20
}
rds, keys = Redis.from_texts_return_keys(
texts,
embeddings,
metadatas=metadata,
redis_url="redis://localhost:6379",
index_name="users3",
vector_schema=vector_schema
)
```
All names correspond to the arguments you would set if using Redis-py or
RedisVL. (put in doc link later)
### Better Querying
Both vector queries and Range (limit) queries are now available and
metadata is returned by default. The outputs are shown.
```python
>>> query = "foo"
>>> results = rds.similarity_search(query, k=1)
>>> print(results)
[Document(page_content='foo', metadata={'user': 'derrick', 'job': 'doctor', 'credit_score': 'low', 'age': '14', 'id': 'doc:users:657a47d7db8b447e88598b83da879b9d', 'score': '7.15255737305e-07'})]
>>> results = rds.similarity_search_with_score(query, k=1, return_metadata=False)
>>> print(results) # no metadata, but with scores
[(Document(page_content='foo', metadata={}), 7.15255737305e-07)]
>>> results = rds.similarity_search_limit_score(query, k=6, score_threshold=0.0001)
>>> print(len(results)) # range query (only above threshold even if k is higher)
4
```
### Custom metadata filtering
A big advantage of Redis in this space is being able to do filtering on
data stored alongside the vector itself. With the example above, the
following is now possible in langchain. The equivalence operators are
overridden to describe a new expression language that mimic that of
[redisvl](redisvl.com). This allows for arbitrarily long sequences of
filters that resemble SQL commands that can be used directly with vector
queries and range queries.
There are two interfaces by which to do so and both are shown.
```python
>>> from langchain.vectorstores.redis import RedisFilter, RedisNum, RedisText
>>> age_filter = RedisFilter.num("age") > 18
>>> age_filter = RedisNum("age") > 18 # equivalent
>>> results = rds.similarity_search(query, filter=age_filter)
>>> print(len(results))
3
>>> job_filter = RedisFilter.text("job") == "engineer"
>>> job_filter = RedisText("job") == "engineer" # equivalent
>>> results = rds.similarity_search(query, filter=job_filter)
>>> print(len(results))
2
# fuzzy match text search
>>> job_filter = RedisFilter.text("job") % "eng*"
>>> results = rds.similarity_search(query, filter=job_filter)
>>> print(len(results))
2
# combined filters (AND)
>>> combined = age_filter & job_filter
>>> results = rds.similarity_search(query, filter=combined)
>>> print(len(results))
1
# combined filters (OR)
>>> combined = age_filter | job_filter
>>> results = rds.similarity_search(query, filter=combined)
>>> print(len(results))
4
```
All the above filter results can be checked against the data above.
### Other
- Issue: #3967
- Dependencies: No added dependencies
- Tag maintainer: @hwchase17 @baskaryan @rlancemartin
- Twitter handle: @sampartee
---------
Co-authored-by: Naresh Rangan <naresh.rangan0@walmart.com>
Co-authored-by: Bagatur <baskaryan@gmail.com>
This PR implements a custom chain that wraps Amazon Comprehend API
calls. The custom chain is aimed to be used with LLM chains to provide
moderation capability that let’s you detect and redact PII, Toxic and
Intent content in the LLM prompt, or the LLM response. The
implementation accepts a configuration object to control what checks
will be performed on a LLM prompt and can be used in a variety of setups
using the LangChain expression language to not only detect the
configured info in chains, but also other constructs such as a
retriever.
The included sample notebook goes over the different configuration
options and how to use it with other chains.
### Usage sample
```python
from langchain_experimental.comprehend_moderation import BaseModerationActions, BaseModerationFilters
moderation_config = {
"filters":[
BaseModerationFilters.PII,
BaseModerationFilters.TOXICITY,
BaseModerationFilters.INTENT
],
"pii":{
"action": BaseModerationActions.ALLOW,
"threshold":0.5,
"labels":["SSN"],
"mask_character": "X"
},
"toxicity":{
"action": BaseModerationActions.STOP,
"threshold":0.5
},
"intent":{
"action": BaseModerationActions.STOP,
"threshold":0.5
}
}
comp_moderation_with_config = AmazonComprehendModerationChain(
moderation_config=moderation_config, #specify the configuration
client=comprehend_client, #optionally pass the Boto3 Client
verbose=True
)
template = """Question: {question}
Answer:"""
prompt = PromptTemplate(template=template, input_variables=["question"])
responses = [
"Final Answer: A credit card number looks like 1289-2321-1123-2387. A fake SSN number looks like 323-22-9980. John Doe's phone number is (999)253-9876.",
"Final Answer: This is a really shitty way of constructing a birdhouse. This is fucking insane to think that any birds would actually create their motherfucking nests here."
]
llm = FakeListLLM(responses=responses)
llm_chain = LLMChain(prompt=prompt, llm=llm)
chain = (
prompt
| comp_moderation_with_config
| {llm_chain.input_keys[0]: lambda x: x['output'] }
| llm_chain
| { "input": lambda x: x['text'] }
| comp_moderation_with_config
)
response = chain.invoke({"question": "A sample SSN number looks like this 123-456-7890. Can you give me some more samples?"})
print(response['output'])
```
### Output
```
> Entering new AmazonComprehendModerationChain chain...
Running AmazonComprehendModerationChain...
Running pii validation...
Found PII content..stopping..
The prompt contains PII entities and cannot be processed
```
---------
Co-authored-by: Piyush Jain <piyushjain@duck.com>
Co-authored-by: Anjan Biswas <anjanavb@amazon.com>
Co-authored-by: Jha <nikjha@amazon.com>
Co-authored-by: Bagatur <baskaryan@gmail.com>
This adds Xata as a memory store also to the python version of
LangChain, similar to the [one for
LangChain.js](https://github.com/hwchase17/langchainjs/pull/2217).
I have added a Jupyter Notebook with a simple and a more complex example
using an agent.
To run the integration test, you need to execute something like:
```
XATA_API_KEY='xau_...' XATA_DB_URL="https://demo-uni3q8.eu-west-1.xata.sh/db/langchain" poetry run pytest tests/integration_tests/memory/test_xata.py
```
Where `langchain` is the database you create in Xata.
Still working out interface/notebooks + need discord data dump to test
out things other than copy+paste
Update:
- Going to remove the 'user_id' arg in the loaders themselves and just
standardize on putting the "sender" arg in the extra kwargs. Then can
provide a utility function to map these to ai and human messages
- Going to move the discord one into just a notebook since I don't have
a good dump to test on and copy+paste maybe isn't the greatest thing to
support in v0
- Need to do more testing on slack since it seems the dump only includes
channels and NOT 1 on 1 convos
-
---------
Co-authored-by: Harrison Chase <hw.chase.17@gmail.com>
The Graph Chains are different in the way that it uses two LLMChains
instead of one like the retrievalQA chains. Therefore, sometimes you
want to use different LLM to generate the database query and to generate
the final answer.
This feature would make it more convenient to use different LLMs in the
same chain.
I have also renamed the Graph DB QA Chain to Neo4j DB QA Chain in the
documentation only as it is used only for Neo4j. The naming was
ambigious as it was the first graphQA chain added and wasn't sure how do
you want to spin it.
Updated design of the "API Reference" text
Here is an example of the current format:
![image](https://github.com/langchain-ai/langchain/assets/2256422/8727f2ba-1b69-497f-aa07-07f939b6da3b)
It changed to
`langchain.retrievers.ElasticSearchBM25Retriever` format. The same
format as it is in the API Reference Toc.
It also resembles code:
`from langchain.retrievers import ElasticSearchBM25Retriever` (namespace
THEN class_name)
Current format is
`ElasticSearchBM25Retriever from langchain.retrievers` (class_name THEN
namespace)
This change is in line with other formats and improves readability.
@baskaryan
Uses the shorter import path
`from langchain.document_loaders import` instead of the full path
`from langchain.document_loaders.assemblyai`
Applies those changes to the docs and the unit test.
See #9667 that adds this new loader.
Note: There are no changes in the file names!
- The group name on the main navbar changed: `Agent toolkits` -> `Agents
& Toolkits`. Examples here are the mix of the Agent and Toolkit examples
because Agents and Toolkits in examples are always used together.
- Titles changed: removed "Agent" and "Toolkit" suffixes. The reason is
the same.
- Formatting: mostly cleaning the header structure, so it could be
better on the right-side navbar.
Main navbar is looking much cleaner now.
This PR adds a new document loader `AssemblyAIAudioTranscriptLoader`
that allows to transcribe audio files with the [AssemblyAI
API](https://www.assemblyai.com) and loads the transcribed text into
documents.
- Add new document_loader with class `AssemblyAIAudioTranscriptLoader`
- Add optional dependency `assemblyai`
- Add unit tests (using a Mock client)
- Add docs notebook
This is the equivalent to the JS integration already available in
LangChain.js. See the [LangChain JS docs AssemblyAI
page](https://js.langchain.com/docs/modules/data_connection/document_loaders/integrations/web_loaders/assemblyai_audio_transcription).
At its simplest, you can use the loader to get a transcript back from an
audio file like this:
```python
from langchain.document_loaders.assemblyai import AssemblyAIAudioTranscriptLoader
loader = AssemblyAIAudioTranscriptLoader(file_path="./testfile.mp3")
docs = loader.load()
```
To use it, it needs the `assemblyai` python package installed, and the
environment variable `ASSEMBLYAI_API_KEY` set with your API key.
Alternatively, the API key can also be passed as an argument.
Twitter handles to shout out if so kindly 🙇
[@AssemblyAI](https://twitter.com/AssemblyAI) and
[@patloeber](https://twitter.com/patloeber)
---------
Co-authored-by: Bagatur <22008038+baskaryan@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Eugene Yurtsev <eyurtsev@gmail.com>
Improve internal consistency in LangChain documentation
- Change occurrences of eg and eg. to e.g.
- Fix headers containing unnecessary capital letters.
- Change instances of "few shot" to "few-shot".
- Add periods to end of sentences where missing.
- Minor spelling and grammar fixes.
This PR introduces a persistence layer to help with indexing workflows
into
vectostores.
The indexing code helps users to:
1. Avoid writing duplicated content into the vectostore
2. Avoid over-writing content if it's unchanged
Importantly, this keeps on working even if the content being written is
derived
via a set of transformations from some source content (e.g., indexing
children
documents that were derived from parent documents by chunking.)
The two main components are:
1. Persistence layer that keeps track of which keys were updated and
when.
Keeping track of the timestamp of updates, allows to clean up old
content
safely, and with minimal complexity.
2. HashedDocument which is used to hash the contents (including
metadata) of
the documents. We rely on the hashes for identifying duplicates.
The indexing code works with **ANY** document loader. To add
transformations
to the documents, users for now can add a custom document loader
that composes an existing loader together with document transformers.
---------
Co-authored-by: Bagatur <baskaryan@gmail.com>
The Docugami loader was not returning the source metadata key. This was
triggering this exception when used with retrievers, per
https://github.com/langchain-ai/langchain/blob/master/libs/langchain/langchain/schema/prompt_template.py#L193C1-L195C41
The fix is simple and just updates the metadata key name for the
document each chunk is sourced from, from "name" to "source" as
expected.
I tested by running the python notebook that has an end to end scenario
in it.
Tagging DataLoader maintainers @rlancemartin @eyurtsev
This pull request corrects the URL links in the Async API documentation
to align with the updated project layout. The links had not been updated
despite the changes in layout.
Not obvious what the error is when you cannot index. This pr adds the
ability to log the first errors reason, to help the user diagnose the
issue.
Also added some more documentation for when you want to use the
vectorstore with an embedding model deployed in elasticsearch.
Credit: @elastic and @phoey1
<!-- Thank you for contributing to LangChain!
Replace this comment with:
- Description: Added the capability to handles structured data from
google enterprise search,
- Issue: Retriever failed when underline search engine was integrated
with structured data,
- Dependencies: google-api-core
- Tag maintainer: @jarokaz
- Twitter handle: anifort
Please make sure you're PR is passing linting and testing before
submitting. Run `make format`, `make lint` and `make test` to check this
locally.
If you're adding a new integration, please include:
1. a test for the integration, preferably unit tests that do not rely on
network access,
2. an example notebook showing its use.
Maintainer responsibilities:
- General / Misc / if you don't know who to tag: @baskaryan
- DataLoaders / VectorStores / Retrievers: @rlancemartin, @eyurtsev
- Models / Prompts: @hwchase17, @baskaryan
- Memory: @hwchase17
- Agents / Tools / Toolkits: @hinthornw
- Tracing / Callbacks: @agola11
- Async: @agola11
If no one reviews your PR within a few days, feel free to @-mention the
same people again.
See contribution guidelines for more information on how to write/run
tests, lint, etc:
https://github.com/hwchase17/langchain/blob/master/.github/CONTRIBUTING.md
-->
---------
Co-authored-by: Christos Aniftos <aniftos@google.com>
Co-authored-by: Holt Skinner <13262395+holtskinner@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Eugene Yurtsev <eyurtsev@gmail.com>
# Description
This PR introduces a new toolkit for interacting with the AINetwork
blockchain. The toolkit provides a set of tools for performing various
operations on the AINetwork blockchain, such as transferring AIN,
reading and writing values to the blockchain database, managing apps,
setting rules and owners.
# Dependencies
[ain-py](https://github.com/ainblockchain/ain-py) >= 1.0.2
# Misc
The example notebook
(langchain/docs/extras/integrations/toolkits/ainetwork.ipynb) is in the
PR
---------
Co-authored-by: kriii <kriii@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Bagatur <baskaryan@gmail.com>
Description: Link an example of deploying a Langchain app to an AzureML
online endpoint to the deployments documentation page.
Co-authored-by: Vanessa Arndorfer <vaarndor@microsoft.com>
### Description
Polars is a DataFrame interface on top of an OLAP Query Engine
implemented in Rust.
Polars is faster to read than pandas, so I'm looking forward to seeing
it added to the document loader.
### Dependencies
polars (https://pola-rs.github.io/polars-book/user-guide/)
---------
Co-authored-by: Bagatur <baskaryan@gmail.com>
Add PromptGuard integration
-------
There are two approaches to integrate PromptGuard with a LangChain
application.
1. PromptGuardLLMWrapper
2. functions that can be used in LangChain expression.
-----
- Dependencies
`promptguard` python package, which is a runtime requirement if you'd
try out the demo.
- @baskaryan @hwchase17 Thanks for the ideas and suggestions along the
development process.
---------
Co-authored-by: Bagatur <baskaryan@gmail.com>
- Description: added graph_memgraph_qa.ipynb which shows how to use LLMs
to provide a natural language interface to a Memgraph database using
[MemgraphGraph](https://github.com/langchain-ai/langchain/pull/8591)
class.
- Dependencies: given that the notebook utilizes the MemgraphGraph
class, it relies on both this class and several Python packages that are
installed in the notebook using pip (langchain, openai, neo4j,
gqlalchemy). The notebook is dependent on having a functional Memgraph
instance running, as it requires this instance to establish a
connection.
- Improved docs
- Improved performance in multiple ways through batching, threading,
etc.
- fixed error message
- Added support for metadata filtering during similarity search.
@baskaryan PTAL
[Epsilla](https://github.com/epsilla-cloud/vectordb) vectordb is an
open-source vector database that leverages the advanced academic
parallel graph traversal techniques for vector indexing.
This PR adds basic integration with
[pyepsilla](https://github.com/epsilla-cloud/epsilla-python-client)(Epsilla
vectordb python client) as a vectorstore.
---------
Co-authored-by: Bagatur <baskaryan@gmail.com>