Ask questions to your documents without an internet connection, using the power of LLMs. 100% private, no data leaves your execution environment at any point. You can ingest documents and ask questions without an internet connection!
Built with Flask, LangChain, GPT4All, LlamaCpp, Chroma and SentenceTransformers.
In order to set your environment up to run the code here, first install all requirements:
pip3 install -r requirements.txt
Then, download the LLM model and place it in a directory of your choice:
- LLM: default to ggml-gpt4all-j-v1.3-groovy.bin. If you prefer a different GPT4All-J compatible model, just download it and reference it in your
.env
file.
Copy the example.env
template into .env
cp example.env .env
and edit the variables appropriately in the .env
file.
MODEL_TYPE: supports LlamaCpp or GPT4All
PERSIST_DIRECTORY: is the folder you want your vectorstore in
MODEL_PATH: Path to your GPT4All or LlamaCpp supported LLM
MODEL_N_CTX: Maximum token limit for the LLM model
MODEL_N_BATCH: Number of tokens in the prompt that are fed into the model at a time. Optimal value differs a lot depending on the model (8 works well for GPT4All, and 1024 is better for LlamaCpp)
EMBEDDINGS_MODEL_NAME: SentenceTransformers embeddings model name (see https://www.sbert.net/docs/pretrained_models.html)
TARGET_SOURCE_CHUNKS: The amount of chunks (sources) that will be used to answer a question
Note: because of the way langchain
loads the SentenceTransformers
embeddings, the first time you run the script it will require internet connection to download the embeddings model itself.
This repo uses a state of the union transcript as an example.
Put any and all your files into the source_documents
directory
The supported extensions are:
.csv
: CSV,.docx
: Word Document,.doc
: Word Document,.enex
: EverNote,.eml
: Email,.epub
: EPub,.html
: HTML File,.md
: Markdown,.msg
: Outlook Message,.odt
: Open Document Text,.pdf
: Portable Document Format (PDF),.pptx
: PowerPoint Document,.ppt
: PowerPoint Document,.txt
: Text file (UTF-8),
Run the following command to ingest all the data.
python ingest.py
Output should look like this:
Creating new vectorstore
Loading documents from source_documents
Loading new documents: 100%|██████████████████████| 1/1 [00:01<00:00, 1.73s/it]
Loaded 1 new documents from source_documents
Split into 90 chunks of text (max. 500 tokens each)
Creating embeddings. May take some minutes...
Using embedded DuckDB with persistence: data will be stored in: db
Ingestion complete! You can now run privateGPT.py to query your documents
It will create a db
folder containing the local vectorstore. Will take 20-30 seconds per document, depending on the size of the document.
You can ingest as many documents as you want, and all will be accumulated in the local embeddings database.
If you want to start from an empty database, delete the db
folder.
Note: during the ingest process no data leaves your local environment. You could ingest without an internet connection, except for the first time you run the ingest script, when the embeddings model is downloaded.
In order to ask a question, run a command like:
python privateGPT.py
A server will start on port 5000. Use curl or similar
curl "http://localhost:5000/?query=What%20is%20the%20speed%20of%20light?"
Or
Go to http://localhost:5000/?query=Your%20question%20here
Selecting the right local models and the power of LangChain
you can run the entire pipeline locally, without any data leaving your environment, and with reasonable performance.
ingest.py
usesLangChain
tools to parse the document and create embeddings locally usingHuggingFaceEmbeddings
(SentenceTransformers
). It then stores the result in a local vector database usingChroma
vector store.privateGPT.py
uses a local LLM based onGPT4All-J
orLlamaCpp
to understand questions and create answers. The context for the answers is extracted from the local vector store using a similarity search to locate the right piece of context from the docs.GPT4All-J
wrapper was introduced in LangChain 0.0.162.
To use this software, you must have Python 3.10 or later installed. Earlier versions of Python will not compile.
If you encounter an error while building a wheel during the pip install
process, you may need to install a C++ compiler on your computer.
To install a C++ compiler on Windows 10/11, follow these steps:
- Install Visual Studio 2022.
- Make sure the following components are selected:
- Universal Windows Platform development
- C++ CMake tools for Windows
- Download the MinGW installer from the MinGW website.
- Run the installer and select the
gcc
component.
When running a Mac with Intel hardware (not M1), you may run into clang: error: the clang compiler does not support '-march=native' during pip install.
If so set your archflags during pip install. eg: ARCHFLAGS="-arch x86_64" pip3 install -r requirements.txt
This is a test project to validate the feasibility of a fully private solution for question answering using LLMs and Vector embeddings. It is not production ready, and it is not meant to be used in production. The models selection is not optimized for performance, but for privacy; but it is possible to use different models and vectorstores to improve performance.