Modal
This page covers how to use the Modal ecosystem within LangChain. It is broken into two parts: installation and setup, and then references to specific Modal wrappers.
Installation and Setup
- Install with
pip install modal-client
- Run
modal token new
Define your Modal Functions and Webhooks
You must include a prompt. There is a rigid response structure.
class Item(BaseModel):
prompt: str
@stub.webhook(method="POST")
def my_webhook(item: Item):
return {"prompt": my_function.call(item.prompt)}
An example with GPT2:
from pydantic import BaseModel
import modal
stub = modal.Stub("example-get-started")
volume = modal.SharedVolume().persist("gpt2_model_vol")
CACHE_PATH = "/root/model_cache"
@stub.function(
gpu="any",
image=modal.Image.debian_slim().pip_install(
"tokenizers", "transformers", "torch", "accelerate"
),
shared_volumes={CACHE_PATH: volume},
retries=3,
)
def run_gpt2(text: str):
from transformers import GPT2Tokenizer, GPT2LMHeadModel
tokenizer = GPT2Tokenizer.from_pretrained('gpt2')
model = GPT2LMHeadModel.from_pretrained('gpt2')
encoded_input = tokenizer(text, return_tensors='pt').input_ids
output = model.generate(encoded_input, max_length=50, do_sample=True)
return tokenizer.decode(output[0], skip_special_tokens=True)
class Item(BaseModel):
prompt: str
@stub.webhook(method="POST")
def get_text(item: Item):
return {"prompt": run_gpt2.call(item.prompt)}
Wrappers
LLM
There exists an Modal LLM wrapper, which you can access with
from langchain.llms import Modal