langchain/libs/partners/ibm
Charlie Marsh fd94aa8366
partner[patch]: Upgrade to Ruff v0.4.2 (#21108)
## Summary

No new diagnostics (given that the set of enabled rules hasn't changed),
but gains access to our new parser (much faster) and reduced false
positives all around.
2024-04-30 15:06:42 -04:00
..
langchain_ibm patch: remove usage of llm, chat model __call__ (#20788) 2024-04-24 19:39:23 -04:00
scripts ibm: added partners package langchain_ibm, added llm (#16512) 2024-02-14 12:12:19 -08:00
tests ibm: Add support for Embedding Models (#20647) 2024-04-19 20:56:24 +00:00
.gitignore ibm: added partners package langchain_ibm, added llm (#16512) 2024-02-14 12:12:19 -08:00
LICENSE ibm: added partners package langchain_ibm, added llm (#16512) 2024-02-14 12:12:19 -08:00
Makefile ibm: added partners package langchain_ibm, added llm (#16512) 2024-02-14 12:12:19 -08:00
poetry.lock ibm: Add support for Embedding Models (#20647) 2024-04-19 20:56:24 +00:00
pyproject.toml partner[patch]: Upgrade to Ruff v0.4.2 (#21108) 2024-04-30 15:06:42 -04:00
README.md langchain_ibm[patch] update docstring, dependencies, tests (#18386) 2024-03-01 21:01:53 +00:00

langchain-ibm

This package provides the integration between LangChain and IBM watsonx.ai through the ibm-watsonx-ai SDK.

Installation

To use the langchain-ibm package, follow these installation steps:

pip install langchain-ibm

Usage

Setting up

To use IBM's models, you must have an IBM Cloud user API key. Here's how to obtain and set up your API key:

  1. Obtain an API Key: For more details on how to create and manage an API key, refer to IBM's documentation.
  2. Set the API Key as an Environment Variable: For security reasons, it's recommended to not hard-code your API key directly in your scripts. Instead, set it up as an environment variable. You can use the following code to prompt for the API key and set it as an environment variable:
import os
from getpass import getpass

watsonx_api_key = getpass()
os.environ["WATSONX_APIKEY"] = watsonx_api_key

In alternative, you can set the environment variable in your terminal.

  • Linux/macOS: Open your terminal and execute the following command:

    export WATSONX_APIKEY='your_ibm_api_key'
    

    To make this environment variable persistent across terminal sessions, add the above line to your ~/.bashrc, ~/.bash_profile, or ~/.zshrc file.

  • Windows: For Command Prompt, use:

    set WATSONX_APIKEY=your_ibm_api_key
    

Loading the model

You might need to adjust model parameters for different models or tasks. For more details on the parameters, refer to IBM's documentation.

parameters = {
    "decoding_method": "sample",
    "max_new_tokens": 100,
    "min_new_tokens": 1,
    "temperature": 0.5,
    "top_k": 50,
    "top_p": 1,
}

Initialize the WatsonxLLM class with the previously set parameters.

from langchain_ibm import WatsonxLLM

watsonx_llm = WatsonxLLM(
    model_id="PASTE THE CHOSEN MODEL_ID HERE",
    url="PASTE YOUR URL HERE",
    project_id="PASTE YOUR PROJECT_ID HERE",
    params=parameters,
)

Note:

  • You must provide a project_id or space_id. For more information refer to IBM's documentation.
  • Depending on the region of your provisioned service instance, use one of the urls described here.
  • You need to specify the model you want to use for inferencing through model_id. You can find the list of available models here.

Alternatively you can use Cloud Pak for Data credentials. For more details, refer to IBM's documentation.

watsonx_llm = WatsonxLLM(
    model_id="ibm/granite-13b-instruct-v2",
    url="PASTE YOUR URL HERE",
    username="PASTE YOUR USERNAME HERE",
    password="PASTE YOUR PASSWORD HERE",
    instance_id="openshift",
    version="4.8",
    project_id="PASTE YOUR PROJECT_ID HERE",
    params=parameters,
)

Create a Chain

Create PromptTemplate objects which will be responsible for creating a random question.

from langchain.prompts import PromptTemplate

template = "Generate a random question about {topic}: Question: "
prompt = PromptTemplate.from_template(template)

Provide a topic and run the LLMChain.

from langchain.chains import LLMChain

llm_chain = LLMChain(prompt=prompt, llm=watsonx_llm)
response = llm_chain.invoke("dog")
print(response)

Calling the Model Directly

To obtain completions, you can call the model directly using a string prompt.

# Calling a single prompt

response = watsonx_llm.invoke("Who is man's best friend?")
print(response)
# Calling multiple prompts

response = watsonx_llm.generate(
    [
        "The fastest dog in the world?",
        "Describe your chosen dog breed",
    ]
)
print(response)

Streaming the Model output

You can stream the model output.

for chunk in watsonx_llm.stream(
    "Describe your favorite breed of dog and why it is your favorite."
):
    print(chunk, end="")