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Robust (structured) text generation.
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pip install outlines
First time here? Go to our setup guide
- 🤖 Multiple model integrations: OpenAI, transformers, llama.cpp, exllama2, mamba
- 🖍️ Simple and powerful prompting primitives based on the Jinja templating engine
- 🚄 Multiple choices, type constraints and dynamic stopping
- ⚡ Fast regex-structured generation
- 🔥 Fast JSON generation following a JSON schema or a Pydantic model
- 📝 Grammar-structured generation
- 🐍 Interleave completions with loops, conditionals, and custom Python functions
- 💾 Caching of generations
- 🗂️ Batch inference
- 🎲 Sample with the greedy, multinomial and beam search algorithms (and more to come!)
- 🚀 Serve with vLLM, with official Docker image,
outlinesdev/outlines!
Outlines 〰 has new releases and features coming every week. Make sure to ⭐ star and 👀 watch this repository, follow @dottxtai to stay up to date!
The first step towards reliability of systems that include large language models is to ensure that there is a well-defined interface between their output and user-defined code. Outlines provides ways to control the generation of language models to make their output more predictable.
You can reduce the completion to a choice between multiple possibilities:
import outlines model = outlines.models.transformers("mistralai/Mistral-7B-Instruct-v0.2") prompt = """You are a sentiment-labelling assistant. Is the following review positive or negative? Review: This restaurant is just awesome! """ generator = outlines.generate.choice(model, ["Positive", "Negative"]) answer = generator(prompt)
You can instruct the model to only return integers or floats:
import outlines model = outlines.models.transformers("WizardLM/WizardMath-7B-V1.1") prompt = "<s>result of 9 + 9 = 18</s><s>result of 1 + 2 = " answer = outlines.generate.format(model, int)(prompt) print(answer) # 3 prompt = "sqrt(2)=" generator = outlines.generate.format(model, float) answer = generator(prompt, max_tokens=10) print(answer) # 1.41421356
Outlines also comes with fast regex-structured generation. In fact, the choice and
format functions above all use regex-structured generation under the
hood:
import outlines model = outlines.models.transformers("mistralai/Mistral-7B-Instruct-v0.2") prompt = "What is the IP address of the Google DNS servers? " generator = outlines.generate.text(model) unstructured = generator(prompt, max_tokens=30) generator = outlines.generate.regex( model, r"((25[0-5]|2[0-4]\d|[01]?\d\d?)\.){3}(25[0-5]|2[0-4]\d|[01]?\d\d?)", ) structured = generator(prompt, max_tokens=30) print(unstructured) # What is the IP address of the Google DNS servers? # # Passive DNS servers are at DNS servers that are private. # In other words, both IP servers are private. The database # does not contain Chelsea Manning print(structured) # What is the IP address of the Google DNS servers? # 2.2.6.1
Unlike other libraries, regex-structured generation in Outlines is almost as fast as non-structured generation.
Outlines 〰 allows to guide the generation process so the output is guaranteed to follow a JSON schema or Pydantic model:
from enum import Enum from pydantic import BaseModel, constr import outlines import torch class Weapon(str, Enum): sword = "sword" axe = "axe" mace = "mace" spear = "spear" bow = "bow" crossbow = "crossbow" class Armor(str, Enum): leather = "leather" chainmail = "chainmail" plate = "plate" class Character(BaseModel): name: constr(max_length=10) age: int armor: Armor weapon: Weapon strength: int model = outlines.models.transformers("mistralai/Mistral-7B-Instruct-v0.2") # Construct structured sequence generator generator = outlines.generate.json(model, Character) # Draw a sample rng = torch.Generator(device="cuda") rng.manual_seed(789001) character = generator("Give me a character description", rng=rng) print(repr(character)) # Character(name='Anderson', age=28, armor=<Armor.chainmail: 'chainmail'>, weapon=<Weapon.sword: 'sword'>, strength=8) character = generator("Give me an interesting character description", rng=rng) print(repr(character)) # Character(name='Vivian Thr', age=44, armor=<Armor.plate: 'plate'>, weapon=<Weapon.crossbow: 'crossbow'>, strength=125)
The method works with union types, optional types, arrays, nested schemas, etc. Some field constraints are not supported yet, but everything else should work.
Sometimes you just want to be able to pass a JSON Schema instead of a Pydantic model. We've got you covered:
import outlines schema = '''{ "title": "Character", "type": "object", "properties": { "name": { "title": "Name", "maxLength": 10, "type": "string" }, "age": { "title": "Age", "type": "integer" }, "armor": {"$ref": "#/definitions/Armor"}, "weapon": {"$ref": "#/definitions/Weapon"}, "strength": { "title": "Strength", "type": "integer" } }, "required": ["name", "age", "armor", "weapon", "strength"], "definitions": { "Armor": { "title": "Armor", "description": "An enumeration.", "enum": ["leather", "chainmail", "plate"], "type": "string" }, "Weapon": { "title": "Weapon", "description": "An enumeration.", "enum": ["sword", "axe", "mace", "spear", "bow", "crossbow"], "type": "string" } } }''' model = outlines.models.transformers("mistralai/Mistral-7B-Instruct-v0.2") generator = outlines.generate.json(model, schema) character = generator("Give me a character description")
Formal grammars rule the world, and Outlines makes them rule LLMs too. You can pass any context-free grammar in the EBNF format and Outlines will generate an output that is valid to this grammar:
import outlines arithmetic_grammar = """ ?start: expression ?expression: term (("+" | "-") term)* ?term: factor (("*" | "/") factor)* ?factor: NUMBER | "-" factor | "(" expression ")" %import common.NUMBER """ model = outlines.models.transformers("WizardLM/WizardMath-7B-V1.1") generator = outlines.generate.cfg(model, arithmetic_grammar) sequence = generator("Alice had 4 apples and Bob ate 2. Write an expression for Alice's apples:") print(sequence) # (8-2)
This was a very simple grammar, and you can use outlines.generate.cfg to generate syntactically valid Python, SQL, and much more than this. Any kind of structured text, really. All you have to do is search for "X EBNF grammar" on the web, and take a look at the Outlines grammars module.
Outlines can infer the structure of the output from the signature of a function. The result is a dictionary, and can be passed directly to the function using the usual dictionary expansion syntax **:
import outlines def add(a: int, b: int): return a + b model = outlines.models.transformers("WizardLM/WizardMath-7B-V1.1") generator = outlines.generate.json(model, add) result = generator("Return json with two integers named a and b respectively. a is odd and b even.") print(add(**result)) # 3
A great advantage of passing functions directly to specify the structure is that the structure of the LLM will change with the function's definition. No need to change the code at several places!
Building prompts can get messy. Outlines makes it easier to write and manage prompts by encapsulating templates inside "template functions".
These functions make it possible to neatly separate the prompt logic from the general program logic; they can be imported from other modules and libraries.
Template functions require no superfluous abstraction, they use the Jinja2 templating engine to help build complex prompts in a concise manner:
import outlines examples = [ ("The food was disgusting", "Negative"), ("We had a fantastic night", "Positive"), ("Recommended", "Positive"), ("The waiter was rude", "Negative") ] @outlines.prompt def labelling(to_label, examples): """You are a sentiment-labelling assistant. {% for example in examples %} {{ example[0] }} // {{ example[1] }} {% endfor %} {{ to_label }} // """ model = outlines.models.transformers("mistralai/Mistral-7B-Instruct-v0.2") prompt = labelling("Just awesome", examples) answer = outlines.generate.text(model)(prompt, max_tokens=100)
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