# Add Mastodon toots loader.
Loader works either with public toots, or Mastodon app credentials. Toot
text and user info is loaded.
I've also added integration test for this new loader as it works with
public data, and a notebook with example output run now.
---------
Co-authored-by: Dev 2049 <dev.dev2049@gmail.com>
### Submit Multiple Files to the Unstructured API
Enables batching multiple files into a single Unstructured API requests.
Support for requests with multiple files was added to both
`UnstructuredAPIFileLoader` and `UnstructuredAPIFileIOLoader`. Note that
if you submit multiple files in "single" mode, the result will be
concatenated into a single document. We recommend using this feature in
"elements" mode.
### Testing
The following should load both documents, using two of the example docs
from the integration tests folder.
```python
from langchain.document_loaders import UnstructuredAPIFileLoader
file_paths = ["examples/layout-parser-paper.pdf", "examples/whatsapp_chat.txt"]
loader = UnstructuredAPIFileLoader(
file_paths=file_paths,
api_key="FAKE_API_KEY",
strategy="fast",
mode="elements",
)
docs = loader.load()
```
# Add bs4 html parser
* Some minor refactors
* Extract the bs4 html parsing code from the bs html loader
* Move some tests from integration tests to unit tests
# Fix Telegram API loader + add tests.
I was testing this integration and it was broken with next error:
```python
message_threads = loader._get_message_threads(df)
KeyError: False
```
Also, this particular loader didn't have any tests / related group in
poetry, so I added those as well.
@hwchase17 / @eyurtsev please take a look on this fix PR.
---------
Co-authored-by: Dev 2049 <dev.dev2049@gmail.com>
# ODF File Loader
Adds a data loader for handling Open Office ODT files. Requires
`unstructured>=0.6.3`.
### Testing
The following should work using the `fake.odt` example doc from the
[`unstructured` repo](https://github.com/Unstructured-IO/unstructured).
```python
from langchain.document_loaders import UnstructuredODTLoader
loader = UnstructuredODTLoader(file_path="fake.odt", mode="elements")
loader.load()
loader = UnstructuredODTLoader(file_path="fake.odt", mode="single")
loader.load()
```
Fixes#4153
If the sender of a message in a group chat isn't in your contact list,
they will appear with a ~ prefix in the exported chat. This PR adds
support for parsing such lines.
This pr makes it possible to extract more metadata from websites for
later use.
my usecase:
parsing ld+json or microdata from sites and store it as structured data
in the metadata field
# Add PDF parser implementations
This PR separates the data loading from the parsing for a number of
existing PDF loaders.
Parser tests have been designed to help encourage developers to create a
consistent interface for parsing PDFs.
This interface can be made more consistent in the future by adding
information into the initializer on desired behavior with respect to splitting by
page etc.
This code is expected to be backwards compatible -- with the exception
of a bug fix with pymupdf parser which was returning `bytes` in the page
content rather than strings.
Also changing the lazy parser method of document loader to return an
Iterator rather than Iterable over documents.
## Before submitting
<!-- If you're adding a new integration, include an integration test and
an example notebook showing its use! -->
## Who can review?
Community members can review the PR once tests pass. Tag
maintainers/contributors who might be interested:
@
<!-- For a quicker response, figure out the right person to tag with @
@hwchase17 - project lead
Tracing / Callbacks
- @agola11
Async
- @agola11
DataLoader Abstractions
- @eyurtsev
LLM/Chat Wrappers
- @hwchase17
- @agola11
Tools / Toolkits
- @vowelparrot
-->
This implements a loader of text passages in JSON format. The `jq`
syntax is used to define a schema for accessing the relevant contents
from the JSON file. This requires dependency on the `jq` package:
https://pypi.org/project/jq/.
---------
Signed-off-by: Aivin V. Solatorio <avsolatorio@gmail.com>
This PR updates the `message_line_regex` used by `WhatsAppChatLoader` to
support different date-time formats used in WhatsApp chat exports;
resolves#4153.
The new regex handles the following input formats:
```terminal
[05.05.23, 15:48:11] James: Hi here
[11/8/21, 9:41:32 AM] User name: Message 123
1/23/23, 3:19 AM - User 2: Bye!
1/23/23, 3:22_AM - User 1: And let me know if anything changes
```
Tests have been added to verify that the loader works correctly with all
formats.
This PR includes two main changes:
- Refactor the `TelegramChatLoader` and `FacebookChatLoader` classes by
removing the dependency on pandas and simplifying the message filtering
process.
- Add test cases for the `TelegramChatLoader` and `FacebookChatLoader`
classes. This test ensures that the class correctly loads and processes
the example chat data, providing better test coverage for this
functionality.
The Blockchain Document Loader's default behavior is to return 100
tokens at a time which is the Alchemy API limit. The Document Loader
exposes a startToken that can be used for pagination against the API.
This enhancement includes an optional get_all_tokens param (default:
False) which will:
- Iterate over the Alchemy API until it receives all the tokens, and
return the tokens in a single call to the loader.
- Manage all/most tokenId formats (this can be int, hex16 with zero or
all the leading zeros). There aren't constraints as to how smart
contracts can represent this value, but these three are most common.
Note that a contract with 10,000 tokens will issue 100 calls to the
Alchemy API, and could take about a minute, which is why this param will
default to False. But I've been using the doc loader with these
utilities on the side, so figured it might make sense to build them in
for others to use.
Modified Modern Treasury and Strip slightly so credentials don't have to
be passed in explicitly. Thanks @mattgmarcus for adding Modern Treasury!
---------
Co-authored-by: Matt Marcus <matt.g.marcus@gmail.com>
This PR includes some minor alignment updates, including:
- metadata object extended to support contractAddress, blockchainType,
and tokenId
- notebook doc better aligned to standard langchain format
- startToken changed from int to str to support multiple hex value types
on the Alchemy API
The updated metadata will look like the below. It's possible for a
single contractAddress to exist across multiple blockchains (e.g.
Ethereum, Polygon, etc.) so it's important to include the
blockchainType.
```
metadata = {"source": self.contract_address,
"blockchain": self.blockchainType,
"tokenId": tokenId}
```
It makes sense to use `arxiv` as another source of the documents for
downloading.
- Added the `arxiv` document_loader, based on the
`utilities/arxiv.py:ArxivAPIWrapper`
- added tests
- added an example notebook
- sorted `__all__` in `__init__.py` (otherwise it is hard to find a
class in the very long list)
This PR addresses several improvements:
- Previously it was not possible to load spaces of more than 100 pages.
The `limit` was being used both as an overall page limit *and* as a per
request pagination limit. This, in combination with the fact that
atlassian seem to use a server-side hard limit of 100 when page content
is expanded, meant it wasn't possible to download >100 pages. Now
`limit` is used *only* as a per-request pagination limit and `max_pages`
is introduced as the way to limit the total number of pages returned by
the paginator.
- Document metadata now includes `source` (the source url), making it
compatible with `RetrievalQAWithSourcesChain`.
- It is now possible to include inline and footer comments.
- It is now possible to pass `verify_ssl=False` and other parameters to
the confluence object for use cases that require it.
Fixes linting issue from #2835
Adds a loader for Slack Exports which can be a very valuable source of
knowledge to use for internal QA bots and other use cases.
```py
# Export data from your Slack Workspace first.
from langchain.document_loaders import SLackDirectoryLoader
SLACK_WORKSPACE_URL = "https://awesome.slack.com"
loader = ("Slack_Exports", SLACK_WORKSPACE_URL)
docs = loader.load()
```
Currently, the function still fails if `continue_on_failure` is set to
True, because `elements` is not set.
---------
Co-authored-by: leecjohnny <johnny-lee1255@users.noreply.github.com>
I've added a bilibili loader, bilibili is a very active video site in
China and I think we need this loader.
Example:
```python
from langchain.document_loaders.bilibili import BiliBiliLoader
loader = BiliBiliLoader(
["https://www.bilibili.com/video/BV1xt411o7Xu/",
"https://www.bilibili.com/video/av330407025/"]
)
docs = loader.load()
```
Co-authored-by: 了空 <568250549@qq.com>
Adds a new pdf loader using the existing dependency on PDFMiner.
The new loader can be helpful for chunking texts semantically into
sections as the output html content can be parsed via `BeautifulSoup` to
get more structured and rich information about font size, page numbers,
pdf headers/footers, etc. which may not be available otherwise with
other pdf loaders
Solves #2247. Noted that the only test I added checks for the
BeautifulSoup behaviour change. Happy to add a test for
`DirectoryLoader` if deemed necessary.
This `BSHTMLLoader` document_loader loads an HTML document, extracts
text and adds the page title to the returned Document's metadata. The
loader uses the already installed bs4 package to extract both text
content and the page title.
Included in this PR is an example HTML file and an integration test that
tests against this file.
---------
Co-authored-by: Daniel Chalef <daniel.chalef@private.org>
Different PDF libraries have different strengths and weaknesses. PyMuPDF
does a good job at extracting the most amount of content from the doc,
regardless of the source quality, extremely fast (especially compared to
Unstructured).
https://pymupdf.readthedocs.io/en/latest/index.html
iFixit is a wikipedia-like site that has a huge amount of open content
on how to fix things, questions/answers for common troubleshooting and
"things" related content that is more technical in nature. All content
is licensed under CC-BY-SA-NC 3.0
Adding docs from iFixit as context for user questions like "I dropped my
phone in water, what do I do?" or "My macbook pro is making a whining
noise, what's wrong with it?" can yield significantly better responses
than context free response from LLMs.