Introduction
Large Language Models have been the backbone of advancement in the AI domain. With the release of various Open source LLMs, the need for ChatBot-specific use cases has grown in demand. HuggingFace is the primary provider of Open Source LLMs, where the model parameters are available to the public, and anyone can use them for inference. On the other hand, Langchain is a robust, large language model framework that helps integrate AI seamlessly into your application with the help of a language model. By combining Langchain and HuggingFace, one can easily incorporate domain-specific ChatBots.
Learning Objectives
- Understand the need for open-source large language models and how HuggingFace is one of the most important providers.
- Explore three methods to implement Large Language Models with the help of the Langchain framework and HuggingFace open-source models.
- Learn how to implement the HuggingFace task pipeline with Langchain using T4 GPU for free.
- Learn how to implement models from HuggingFace Hub using Inference API on the CPU without downloading the model parameters.
- Implementation of LlamaCPP using gguf format Large language models format.
This article was published as a part of the Data Science Blogathon.
HuggingFace and Open Source Large Language models
HuggingFace is the cornerstone for developing AI and deep learning models. The extensive collection of open-source models in the Transformers repository by HuggingFace makes it a go-to choice for many practitioners. Publicly accessible learning parameters characterize open-source large language models, such as LLaMA, Falcon, Mistral, etc. In contrast, closed-source large language models have private learning parameters. Utilizing such models may necessitate interacting with API endpoints, as seen with GPT-4 and GPT -3.5, for instance.
This is where HuggingFace comes in handy. HuggingFace provided HuggingFace Hub, a platform with over 120k models, 20k datasets, and 50k spaces (demo AI applications).
What is Langchain?
With the advancement of Large Language Models in AI, the need for informative ChatBots is in high demand. Let’s say you founded a new Gaming company with many user manuals and shortcut documentation. You need to integrate a ChatBot like ChatGPT for this company’s data. How do we achieve this?
This is where Langchain comes in. Langchain is a robust Large Language model framework that integrates various components such as embedding, Vector Databases, LLMs, etc. Using these components, we can provide external documents to the significant language models and build AI applications seamlessly.
Installation
We need to install the required libraries to get started with different ways to use HuggingFace on Langchain.
To use Langchain components, we can directly install Langchain with the following command:
!pip install langchain
To use HuggingFace Models and embeddings, we need to install transformers and sentence transformers. In the latest update of Google Colab, you don’t need to install transformers.
!pip install transformers
!pip install sentence-transformers
!pip install bitsandbytes accelerate
To run the GenAI applications on edge, Georgi Gerganov developed LLamaCPP. LLamaCPP implements the Meta’s LLaMa architecture in efficient C/C++.
!pip install llama-cpp-python
Approach 1: HuggingFace Pipeline
The pipelines are a great and easy way to use models for inference. HuggingFace provides a pipeline wrapper class that can easily integrate tasks like text generation and summarization in just one line of code. This code line contains the calling pipeline attribute by instantiating the model, tokenizer, and task name.
We must load the Large Langauge model and relevant tokenizer to implement this. Since not everyone can access A100 or V100 GPUs, we must proceed with the Free T4 GPU. To run the large language model for inference using pipeline, we will use orca-mini 3 billion parameter LLM with quantization configuration to reduce the model size.
from langchain.llms.huggingface_pipeline import HuggingFacePipeline
import torch
from transformers import AutoModelForCausalLM, AutoTokenizer, pipeline,
from transformers import BitsAndBytesConfig
nf4_config = BitsAndBytesConfig(
load_in_4bit=True,
bnb_4bit_quant_type="nf4",
bnb_4bit_use_double_quant=True,
bnb_4bit_compute_dtype=torch.bfloat16
)
In the provided code snippet, we utilize AutoModelForCausalLM to load the model and AutoTokenizer to load the tokenizer. Once the model and tokenizer are loaded, assign the model and tokenizer to the pipeline and mention the task to be text generation. The pipeline also allows adjustment of the output sequence length by modifying max_new_tokens.
model_id = "pankajmathur/orca_mini_3b"
tokenizer = AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained(model_id)
model = AutoModelForCausalLM.from_pretrained(
model_id,
quantization_config=nf4_config
)
pipe = pipeline("text-generation",
model=model,
tokenizer=tokenizer,
max_new_tokens=512
)
Good job on running the pipeline successfully. HuggingFacePipeline wrapper class helps to integrate the Transformers model and Langchain. The code snippet below defines the prompt template for the orca model.
hf = HuggingFacePipeline(pipeline=pipe)
query = "Who is Shah Rukh Khan?"
prompt = f"""
### System:
You are an AI assistant that follows instruction extremely well.
Help as much as you can. Please be truthful and give direct answers
### User:
{query}
### Response:
"""
response = hf.predict(prompt)
print(response)
Approach 2: HuggingFace Hub using Inference API
In approach one, you might have noticed that while using the pipeline, the model and tokenization download and load the weights. This approach might be time-consuming if the length of the model is enormous. Thus, the HuggingFace Hub Inference API comes in handy. To integrate HuggingFace Hub with Langchain, one requires a HuggingFace Access Token.
Steps to get HuggingFace Access Token
- Log in to HuggingFace.co.
- Click on your profile icon at the top-right corner, then choose “Settings.”
- In the left sidebar, navigate to “Access Token.”
- Generate a new access token, assigning it the “write” role.
from langchain.llms import HuggingFaceHub
import os
from getpass import getpass
os.environ["HUGGINGFACEHUB_API_TOKEN"] = getpass("HF Token:")
Once you get your Access token, use HuggingFaceHub to integrate the Transformers model with Langchain. In this case, we use the Zephyr, a fined-tuned model on Mistral 7B.
llm = HuggingFaceHub(
repo_id="huggingfaceh4/zephyr-7b-alpha",
model_kwargs={"temperature": 0.5, "max_length": 64,"max_new_tokens":512}
)
query = "What is capital of India and UAE?"
prompt = f"""
<|system|>
You are an AI assistant that follows instruction extremely well.
Please be truthful and give direct answers
</s>
<|user|>
{query}
</s>
<|assistant|>
"""
response = llm.predict(prompt)
print(response)
Since we are using Free Inference API, there are a few limitations on using the larger language models with 13B, 34B, and 70B models.
Approach 3: LlamaCPP
LLamaCPP allows the use of models packaged as. gguf files format that runs efficiently in CPU-only and mixed CPU/GPU environments using the llama.
To use LlamaCPP, we specifically need models whose model_path ends with gguf. You can download the model from here: zephyr-7b-beta.Q4.gguf. Once this model is downloaded, you can directly upload it to your drive or any other local storage.
from langchain.llms import LlamaCpp
from google.colab import drive
drive.mount('/content/drive')
llm_cpp = LlamaCpp(
streaming = True,
model_path="/content/drive/MyDrive/LLM_Model/zephyr-7b-beta.Q4_K_M.gguf",
n_gpu_layers=2,
n_batch=512,
temperature=0.75,
top_p=1,
verbose=True,
n_ctx=4096
)
The prompt template remains the same since we are using the Zephyr model.
query = "Who is Elon Musk?"
prompt = f"""
<|system|>
You are an AI assistant that follows instruction extremely well.
Please be truthful and give direct answers
</s>
<|user|>
{query}
</s>
<|assistant|>
"""
response = llm_cpp.predict(prompt)
print(response)
Conclusion
To conclude, we successfully implemented HuggingFace open-source models with Langchain. Using these approaches, one can easily avoid paying OpenAI API credits. This guide mainly focused on using the Open Source LLMs, one major RAG pipeline component.
Key Takeaways
- Using HuggingFace’s Transformers pipeline, one can easily pick any top-performing Large Language models, Llama2 70B, Falcon 180 B, or Mistral 7B. The inference script is less than five lines of code.
- As not all can afford to use A100 or V100 GPUs, HuggingFace provides Free Inference API (Access Token) to implement a few models from HuggingFace Hub. The most preferred model in this case is the 7B model.
- LLamaCPP is used when you need to run Large Language models on the CPU. Currently, LlamaCPP is only supported with gguf model files.
- It is recommended to follow the prompt template to run the predict() method on the user query.
Reference
Frequently Asked Questions
A. There are several approaches to leveraging open-source models from transformers within Langchain. Firstly, you can utilize the Transformers Pipeline with HuggingFacePipelines. Additionally, you have the option to use HuggingFaceHub, from free inference and LlamaCPP. One optional approach is also using HuggingFaceInferenceEndpoint, which is not free.
A. Yes, the Large Language models available on the HuggingFace are open-source and accessible. They can be accessed with the Transformers framework. However, if you need to host your LLMs on the HuggingFace cloud, you must pay per hour based on the InferenceEndpoint you choose.
A. LangChain is a robust LLM framework widely used for Retrieval Augmented Generation. LangChain is compatible with various large language models, such as GPT 4, Transformers Open Source Models(LLama2, Zephyr, Mistral, Falcon), PaLM, Anyscale, and Cohere.
A. LangChain is a Large Language model that supports various components, with LLMs being one of them. But it doesn’t store or host any LLMs, whereas Transformers is a core deep-learning framework that hosts the model and provides Spaces to build code demo applications.
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By Analytics Vidhya, December 27, 2023.