# What does this PR do?
This PR fixes some of the issues with our telemetry setup to enable logs
to be delivered to opentelemetry and jaeger. Main fixes
1) Updates the open telemetry provider to use the latest oltp exports
instead of deprected ones.
2) Adds a tracing middleware, which injects traces into each HTTP
request that the server recieves and this is going to be the root trace.
Previously, we did this in the create_dynamic_route method, which is
actually not the actual exectuion flow, but more of a config and this
causes the traces to end prematurely. Through middleware, we plugin the
trace start and end at the right location.
3) We manage our own methods to create traces and spans and this does
not fit well with Opentelemetry SDK since it does not support provide a
way to take in traces and spans that are already created. it expects us
to use the SDK to create them. For now, I have a hacky approach of just
maintaining a map from our internal telemetry objects to the open
telemetry specfic ones. This is not the ideal solution. I will explore
other ways to get around this issue. for now, to have something that
works, i am going to keep this as is.
Addresses: #509
The semantics of an Update on resources is very tricky to reason about
especially for memory banks and models. The best way to go forward here
is for the user to unregister and register a new resource. We don't have
a compelling reason to support update APIs.
Tests:
pytest -v -s llama_stack/providers/tests/memory/test_memory.py -m
"chroma" --env CHROMA_HOST=localhost --env CHROMA_PORT=8000
pytest -v -s llama_stack/providers/tests/memory/test_memory.py -m
"pgvector" --env PGVECTOR_DB=postgres --env PGVECTOR_USER=postgres --env
PGVECTOR_PASSWORD=mysecretpassword --env PGVECTOR_HOST=0.0.0.0
$CONDA_PREFIX/bin/pytest -v -s -m "ollama"
llama_stack/providers/tests/inference/test_model_registration.py
---------
Co-authored-by: Dinesh Yeduguru <dineshyv@fb.com>
This PR makes several core changes to the developer experience surrounding Llama Stack.
Background: PR #92 introduced the notion of "routing" to the Llama Stack. It introduces three object types: (1) models, (2) shields and (3) memory banks. Each of these objects can be associated with a distinct provider. So you can get model A to be inferenced locally while model B, C can be inference remotely (e.g.)
However, this had a few drawbacks:
you could not address the provider instances -- i.e., if you configured "meta-reference" with a given model, you could not assign an identifier to this instance which you could re-use later.
the above meant that you could not register a "routing_key" (e.g. model) dynamically and say "please use this existing provider I have already configured" for a new model.
the terms "routing_table" and "routing_key" were exposed directly to the user. in my view, this is way too much overhead for a new user (which almost everyone is.) people come to the stack wanting to do ML and encounter a completely unexpected term.
What this PR does: This PR structures the run config with only a single prominent key:
- providers
Providers are instances of configured provider types. Here's an example which shows two instances of the remote::tgi provider which are serving two different models.
providers:
inference:
- provider_id: foo
provider_type: remote::tgi
config: { ... }
- provider_id: bar
provider_type: remote::tgi
config: { ... }
Secondly, the PR adds dynamic registration of { models | shields | memory_banks } to the API surface. The distribution still acts like a "routing table" (as previously) except that it asks the backing providers for a listing of these objects. For example it asks a TGI or Ollama inference adapter what models it is serving. Only the models that are being actually served can be requested by the user for inference. Otherwise, the Stack server will throw an error.
When dynamically registering these objects, you can use the provider IDs shown above. Info about providers can be obtained using the Api.inspect set of endpoints (/providers, /routes, etc.)
The above examples shows the correspondence between inference providers and models registry items. Things work similarly for the safety <=> shields and memory <=> memory_banks pairs.
Registry: This PR also makes it so that Providers need to implement additional methods for registering and listing objects. For example, each Inference provider is now expected to implement the ModelsProtocolPrivate protocol (naming is not great!) which consists of two methods
register_model
list_models
The goal is to inform the provider that a certain model needs to be supported so the provider can make any relevant backend changes if needed (or throw an error if the model cannot be supported.)
There are many other cleanups included some of which are detailed in a follow-up comment.
This is yet another of those large PRs (hopefully we will have less and less of them as things mature fast). This one introduces substantial improvements and some simplifications to the stack.
Most important bits:
* Agents reference implementation now has support for session / turn persistence. The default implementation uses sqlite but there's also support for using Redis.
* We have re-architected the structure of the Stack APIs to allow for more flexible routing. The motivating use cases are:
- routing model A to ollama and model B to a remote provider like Together
- routing shield A to local impl while shield B to a remote provider like Bedrock
- routing a vector memory bank to Weaviate while routing a keyvalue memory bank to Redis
* Support for provider specific parameters to be passed from the clients. A client can pass data using `x_llamastack_provider_data` parameter which can be type-checked and provided to the Adapter implementations.