langchain/templates/rag-mongo
Jonathan Algar a74f3a4979
Batch update of alt text and title attributes for images in md/mdx files across repo (#15357)
**Description:** Batch update of alt text and title attributes for
images in `md` & `mdx` files across the repo using
[alttexter](https://github.com/jonathanalgar/alttexter)/[alttexter-ghclient](https://github.com/jonathanalgar/alttexter-ghclient)
(built using LangChain/LangSmith).

**Limitation:** cannot update `ipynb` files because of [this
issue](https://github.com/langchain-ai/langchain/pull/15357#issuecomment-1885037250).
Can revisit when Docusaurus is bumped to v3.

I checked all the generated alt texts and titles and didn't find any
technical inaccuracies. That's not to say they're _perfect_, but a lot
better than what's there currently.


[Deployed](https://langchain-819yf1tbk-langchain.vercel.app/docs/modules/model_io/)
image example:


![chrome_yZQ7BF2GTj](https://github.com/langchain-ai/langchain/assets/93204286/43a9a4d4-70fd-41c4-8978-b6240ff63ffa)

You can see LangSmith traces for all the calls out to the LLM in the PRs
merged into this one:

* https://github.com/jonathanalgar/langchain/pull/6
* https://github.com/jonathanalgar/langchain/pull/4
* https://github.com/jonathanalgar/langchain/pull/3

I didn't add the following files to the PR as the images already have OK
alt texts:

*
27dca2d92f/docs/docs/integrations/providers/argilla.mdx (L3)
*
27dca2d92f/docs/docs/integrations/providers/apify.mdx (L11)

---------

Co-authored-by: github-actions <github-actions@github.com>
2024-01-12 14:37:48 -08:00
..
_images update mongo template (#12838) 2023-11-03 10:31:53 -07:00
rag_mongo templates: fix deps (#15439) 2024-01-03 13:28:05 -08:00
tests
ingest.py docs, experimental[patch], langchain[patch], community[patch]: update storage imports (#15429) 2024-01-02 16:47:11 -05:00
LICENSE
poetry.lock templates: 0.1 bump (#15648) 2024-01-06 18:31:46 -08:00
pyproject.toml templates: 0.1 bump (#15648) 2024-01-06 18:31:46 -08:00
rag_mongo.ipynb
README.md Batch update of alt text and title attributes for images in md/mdx files across repo (#15357) 2024-01-12 14:37:48 -08:00

rag-mongo

This template performs RAG using MongoDB and OpenAI.

Environment Setup

You should export two environment variables, one being your MongoDB URI, the other being your OpenAI API KEY. If you do not have a MongoDB URI, see the Setup Mongo section at the bottom for instructions on how to do so.

export MONGO_URI=...
export OPENAI_API_KEY=...

Usage

To use this package, you should first have the LangChain CLI installed:

pip install -U langchain-cli

To create a new LangChain project and install this as the only package, you can do:

langchain app new my-app --package rag-mongo

If you want to add this to an existing project, you can just run:

langchain app add rag-mongo

And add the following code to your server.py file:

from rag_mongo import chain as rag_mongo_chain

add_routes(app, rag_mongo_chain, path="/rag-mongo")

If you want to set up an ingestion pipeline, you can add the following code to your server.py file:

from rag_mongo import ingest as rag_mongo_ingest

add_routes(app, rag_mongo_ingest, path="/rag-mongo-ingest")

(Optional) Let's now configure LangSmith. LangSmith will help us trace, monitor and debug LangChain applications. LangSmith is currently in private beta, you can sign up here. If you don't have access, you can skip this section

export LANGCHAIN_TRACING_V2=true
export LANGCHAIN_API_KEY=<your-api-key>
export LANGCHAIN_PROJECT=<your-project>  # if not specified, defaults to "default"

If you DO NOT already have a Mongo Search Index you want to connect to, see MongoDB Setup section below before proceeding.

If you DO have a MongoDB Search index you want to connect to, edit the connection details in rag_mongo/chain.py

If you are inside this directory, then you can spin up a LangServe instance directly by:

langchain serve

This will start the FastAPI app with a server is running locally at http://localhost:8000

We can see all templates at http://127.0.0.1:8000/docs We can access the playground at http://127.0.0.1:8000/rag-mongo/playground

We can access the template from code with:

from langserve.client import RemoteRunnable

runnable = RemoteRunnable("http://localhost:8000/rag-mongo")

For additional context, please refer to this notebook.

MongoDB Setup

Use this step if you need to setup your MongoDB account and ingest data. We will first follow the standard MongoDB Atlas setup instructions here.

  1. Create an account (if not already done)
  2. Create a new project (if not already done)
  3. Locate your MongoDB URI.

This can be done by going to the deployement overview page and connecting to you database

Screenshot highlighting the 'Connect' button in MongoDB Atlas.

We then look at the drivers available

Screenshot showing the MongoDB Atlas drivers section for connecting to the database.

Among which we will see our URI listed

Screenshot displaying an example of a MongoDB URI in the connection instructions.

Let's then set that as an environment variable locally:

export MONGO_URI=...
  1. Let's also set an environment variable for OpenAI (which we will use as an LLM)
export OPENAI_API_KEY=...
  1. Let's now ingest some data! We can do that by moving into this directory and running the code in ingest.py, eg:
python ingest.py

Note that you can (and should!) change this to ingest data of your choice

  1. We now need to set up a vector index on our data.

We can first connect to the cluster where our database lives

Screenshot of the MongoDB Atlas interface showing the cluster overview with a 'Connect' button.

We can then navigate to where all our collections are listed

Screenshot of the MongoDB Atlas interface showing the collections overview within a database.

We can then find the collection we want and look at the search indexes for that collection

Screenshot showing the search indexes section in MongoDB Atlas for a specific collection.

That should likely be empty, and we want to create a new one:

Screenshot highlighting the 'Create Index' button in MongoDB Atlas.

We will use the JSON editor to create it

Screenshot showing the JSON Editor option for creating a search index in MongoDB Atlas.

And we will paste the following JSON in:

 {
   "mappings": {
     "dynamic": true,
     "fields": {
       "embedding": {
         "dimensions": 1536,
         "similarity": "cosine",
         "type": "knnVector"
       }
     }
   }
 }

Screenshot of the JSON configuration for a search index in MongoDB Atlas.

From there, hit "Next" and then "Create Search Index". It will take a little bit but you should then have an index over your data!