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# Docs: compound ecosystem and integrations **Problem statement:** We have a big overlap between the References/Integrations and Ecosystem/LongChain Ecosystem pages. It confuses users. It creates a situation when new integration is added only on one of these pages, which creates even more confusion. - removed References/Integrations page (but move all its information into the individual integration pages - in the next PR). - renamed Ecosystem/LongChain Ecosystem into Integrations/Integrations. I like the Ecosystem term. It is more generic and semantically richer than the Integration term. But it mentally overloads users. The `integration` term is more concrete. UPDATE: after discussion, the Ecosystem is the term. Ecosystem/Integrations is the page (in place of Ecosystem/LongChain Ecosystem). As a result, a user gets a single place to start with the individual integration.
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Runhouse
This page covers how to use the Runhouse ecosystem within LangChain. It is broken into three parts: installation and setup, LLMs, and Embeddings.
Installation and Setup
- Install the Python SDK with
pip install runhouse
- If you'd like to use on-demand cluster, check your cloud credentials with
sky check
Self-hosted LLMs
For a basic self-hosted LLM, you can use the SelfHostedHuggingFaceLLM
class. For more
custom LLMs, you can use the SelfHostedPipeline
parent class.
from langchain.llms import SelfHostedPipeline, SelfHostedHuggingFaceLLM
For a more detailed walkthrough of the Self-hosted LLMs, see this notebook
Self-hosted Embeddings
There are several ways to use self-hosted embeddings with LangChain via Runhouse.
For a basic self-hosted embedding from a Hugging Face Transformers model, you can use
the SelfHostedEmbedding
class.
from langchain.llms import SelfHostedPipeline, SelfHostedHuggingFaceLLM
For a more detailed walkthrough of the Self-hosted Embeddings, see this notebook