During the import of langchain, SQLAlchemy was throeing an errror
`ImportError: cannot import name 'Mapped' from 'sqlalchemy.orm'`. This
is becaue the Mapped name was introduced in v1.4
Resolves#3664
Next PR will be to clean up CI to catch this earlier. Triaging this, it
looks like it wasn't caught because pexpect is a `poetry` dependency.
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Co-authored-by: Eugene Yurtsev <eyurtsev@gmail.com>
Alternate implementation of #3452 that relies on a generic query
constructor chain and language and then has vector store-specific
translation layer. Still refactoring and updating examples but general
structure is there and seems to work s well as #3452 on exampels
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Co-authored-by: Harrison Chase <hw.chase.17@gmail.com>
Improvements
* set default num_workers for ingestion to 0
* upgraded notebooks for avoiding dataset creation ambiguity
* added `force_delete_dataset_by_path`
* bumped deeplake to 3.3.0
* creds arg passing to deeplake object that would allow custom S3
Notes
* please double check if poetry is not messed up (thanks!)
Asks
* Would be great to create a shared slack channel for quick questions
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Co-authored-by: Davit Buniatyan <d@activeloop.ai>
Use numexpr evaluate instead of the python REPL to avoid malicious code
injection.
Tested against the (limited) math dataset and got the same score as
before.
For more permissive tools (like the REPL tool itself), other approaches
ought to be provided (some combination of Sanitizer + Restricted python
+ unprivileged-docker + ...), but for a calculator tool, only
mathematical expressions should be permitted.
See https://github.com/hwchase17/langchain/issues/814
Note to self: Always run integration tests, even on "that last minute
change you thought would be safe" :)
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Co-authored-by: Mike Lambert <mike.lambert@anthropic.com>
Add more missed imports for integration tests. Bump `pytest` to the
current latest version.
Fix `tests/integration_tests/vectorstores/test_elasticsearch.py` to
update its cassette(easy fix).
Related PR: https://github.com/hwchase17/langchain/pull/2560
Almost all integration tests have failed, but we haven't encountered any
import errors yet. Some tests failed due to lazy import issues. It
doesn't seem like a problem to resolve some of these errors in the next
PR.
I have a headache from resolving conflicts with `deeplake` and `boto3`,
so I will temporarily comment out `boto3`.
fix https://github.com/hwchase17/langchain/issues/2426
Using `pytest-vcr` in integration tests has several benefits. Firstly,
it removes the need to mock external services, as VCR records and
replays HTTP interactions on the fly. Secondly, it simplifies the
integration test setup by eliminating the need to set up and tear down
external services in some cases. Finally, it allows for more reliable
and deterministic integration tests by ensuring that HTTP interactions
are always replayed with the same response.
Overall, `pytest-vcr` is a valuable tool for simplifying integration
test setup and improving their reliability
This commit adds the `pytest-vcr` package as a dependency for
integration tests in the `pyproject.toml` file. It also introduces two
new fixtures in `tests/integration_tests/conftest.py` files for managing
cassette directories and VCR configurations.
In addition, the
`tests/integration_tests/vectorstores/test_elasticsearch.py` file has
been updated to use the `@pytest.mark.vcr` decorator for recording and
replaying HTTP interactions.
Finally, this commit removes the `documents` fixture from the
`test_elasticsearch.py` file and replaces it with a new fixture defined
in `tests/integration_tests/vectorstores/conftest.py` that yields a list
of documents to use in any other tests.
This also includes my second attempt to fix issue :
https://github.com/hwchase17/langchain/issues/2386
Maybe related https://github.com/hwchase17/langchain/issues/2484
`AgentExecutor` already has support for limiting the number of
iterations. But the amount of time taken for each iteration can vary
quite a bit, so it is difficult to place limits on the execution time.
This PR adds a new field `max_execution_time` to the `AgentExecutor`
model. When called asynchronously, the agent loop is wrapped in an
`asyncio.timeout()` context which triggers the early stopping response
if the time limit is reached. When called synchronously, the agent loop
checks for both the max_iteration limit and the time limit after each
iteration.
When used asynchronously `max_execution_time` gives really tight control
over the max time for an execution chain. When used synchronously, the
chain can unfortunately exceed max_execution_time, but it still gives
more control than trying to estimate the number of max_iterations needed
to cap the execution time.
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Co-authored-by: Zachary Jones <zjones@zetaglobal.com>