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How to migrate chains to LCEL

Prerequisites

This guide assumes familiarity with the following concepts:

LCEL is designed to streamline the process of building useful apps with LLMs and combining related components. It does this by providing:

  1. A unified interface: Every LCEL object implements the Runnable interface, which defines a common set of invocation methods (invoke, batch, stream, ainvoke, ...). This makes it possible to also automatically and consistently support useful operations like streaming of intermediate steps and batching, since every chain composed of LCEL objects is itself an LCEL object.
  2. Composition primitives: LCEL provides a number of primitives that make it easy to compose chains, parallelize components, add fallbacks, dynamically configure chain internals, and more.

LangChain maintains a number of legacy abstractions. Many of these can be reimplemented via short combinations of LCEL primitives. Doing so confers some general advantages:

  • The resulting chains typically implement the full Runnable interface, including streaming and asynchronous support where appropriate;
  • The chains may be more easily extended or modified;
  • The parameters of the chain are typically surfaced for easier customization (e.g., prompts) over previous versions, which tended to be subclasses and had opaque parameters and internals.

The LCEL implementations can be slightly more verbose, but there are significant benefits in transparency and customizability.

In this guide we review LCEL implementations of common legacy abstractions. Where appropriate, we link out to separate guides with more detail.

%pip install --upgrade --quiet langchain-community langchain langchain-openai faiss-cpu
import os
from getpass import getpass

os.environ["OPENAI_API_KEY"] = getpass()

LLMChain​

LLMChain combined a prompt template, LLM, and output parser into a class.

Some advantages of switching to the LCEL implementation are:

  • Clarity around contents and parameters. The legacy LLMChain contains a default output parser and other options.
  • Easier streaming. LLMChain only supports streaming via callbacks.
  • Easier access to raw message outputs if desired. LLMChain only exposes these via a parameter or via callback.

Legacy​

from langchain.chains import LLMChain
from langchain_core.prompts import ChatPromptTemplate
from langchain_openai import ChatOpenAI

prompt = ChatPromptTemplate.from_messages(
[("user", "Tell me a {adjective} joke")],
)

chain = LLMChain(llm=ChatOpenAI(), prompt=prompt)

chain({"adjective": "funny"})
{'adjective': 'funny',
'text': "Why couldn't the bicycle find its way home?\n\nBecause it lost its bearings!"}

LCEL​

from langchain_core.output_parsers import StrOutputParser
from langchain_core.prompts import ChatPromptTemplate
from langchain_openai import ChatOpenAI

prompt = ChatPromptTemplate.from_messages(
[("user", "Tell me a {adjective} joke")],
)

chain = prompt | ChatOpenAI() | StrOutputParser()

chain.invoke({"adjective": "funny"})
"Why couldn't the bicycle stand up by itself?\n\nBecause it was two tired!"

Note that LLMChain by default returns a dict containing both the input and the output. If this behavior is desired, we can replicate it using another LCEL primitive, RunnablePassthrough:

from langchain_core.runnables import RunnablePassthrough

outer_chain = RunnablePassthrough().assign(text=chain)

outer_chain.invoke({"adjective": "funny"})
API Reference:RunnablePassthrough
{'adjective': 'funny',
'text': "Why couldn't the bicycle stand up by itself?\n\nBecause it was two tired!"}

See this tutorial for more detail on building with prompt templates, LLMs, and output parsers.

ConversationChain​

ConversationChain incorporates a memory of previous messages to sustain a stateful conversation.

Some advantages of switching to the LCEL implementation are:

  • Innate support for threads/separate sessions. To make this work with ConversationChain, you'd need to instantiate a separate memory class outside the chain.
  • More explicit parameters. ConversationChain contains a hidden default prompt, which can cause confusion.
  • Streaming support. ConversationChain only supports streaming via callbacks.

RunnableWithMessageHistory implements sessions via configuration parameters. It should be instantiated with a callable that returns a chat message history. By default, it expects this function to take a single argument session_id.

Legacy​

from langchain.chains import ConversationChain
from langchain.memory import ConversationBufferMemory
from langchain_core.prompts import ChatPromptTemplate
from langchain_openai import ChatOpenAI

template = """
You are a pirate. Answer the following questions as best you can.
Chat history: {history}
Question: {input}
"""

prompt = ChatPromptTemplate.from_template(template)

memory = ConversationBufferMemory()

chain = ConversationChain(
llm=ChatOpenAI(),
memory=memory,
prompt=prompt,
)

chain({"input": "how are you?"})
{'input': 'how are you?',
'history': '',
'response': "Arrr, I be doin' well, me matey! Just sailin' the high seas in search of treasure and adventure. How can I assist ye today?"}

LCEL​

from langchain_core.chat_history import InMemoryChatMessageHistory
from langchain_core.output_parsers import StrOutputParser
from langchain_core.prompts import ChatPromptTemplate
from langchain_core.runnables.history import RunnableWithMessageHistory
from langchain_openai import ChatOpenAI

prompt = ChatPromptTemplate.from_messages(
[
("system", "You are a pirate. Answer the following questions as best you can."),
("placeholder", "{chat_history}"),
("human", "{input}"),
]
)

history = InMemoryChatMessageHistory()


def get_history():
return history


chain = prompt | ChatOpenAI() | StrOutputParser()

wrapped_chain = RunnableWithMessageHistory(
chain,
get_history,
history_messages_key="chat_history",
)

wrapped_chain.invoke({"input": "how are you?"})
"Arrr, I be doin' well, me heartie! Just sailin' the high seas in search of treasure and adventure. How be ye?"

The above example uses the same history for all sessions. The example below shows how to use a different chat history for each session.

from langchain_core.chat_history import BaseChatMessageHistory
from langchain_core.runnables.history import RunnableWithMessageHistory

store = {}


def get_session_history(session_id: str) -> BaseChatMessageHistory:
if session_id not in store:
store[session_id] = InMemoryChatMessageHistory()
return store[session_id]


chain = prompt | ChatOpenAI() | StrOutputParser()

wrapped_chain = RunnableWithMessageHistory(
chain,
get_session_history,
history_messages_key="chat_history",
)

wrapped_chain.invoke(
{"input": "Hello!"},
config={"configurable": {"session_id": "abc123"}},
)
'Ahoy matey! What can this old pirate do for ye today?'

See this tutorial for a more end-to-end guide on building with RunnableWithMessageHistory.

RetrievalQA​

The RetrievalQA chain performed natural-language question answering over a data source using retrieval-augmented generation.

Some advantages of switching to the LCEL implementation are:

  • Easier customizability. Details such as the prompt and how documents are formatted are only configurable via specific parameters in the RetrievalQA chain.
  • More easily return source documents.
  • Support for runnable methods like streaming and async operations.

Now let's look at them side-by-side. We'll use the same ingestion code to load a blog post by Lilian Weng on autonomous agents into a local vector store:

# Load docs
from langchain.text_splitter import RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter
from langchain_community.document_loaders import WebBaseLoader
from langchain_community.vectorstores import FAISS
from langchain_openai.chat_models import ChatOpenAI
from langchain_openai.embeddings import OpenAIEmbeddings

loader = WebBaseLoader("https://lilianweng.github.io/posts/2023-06-23-agent/")
data = loader.load()

# Split
text_splitter = RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter(chunk_size=500, chunk_overlap=0)
all_splits = text_splitter.split_documents(data)

# Store splits
vectorstore = FAISS.from_documents(documents=all_splits, embedding=OpenAIEmbeddings())

# LLM
llm = ChatOpenAI()

Legacy​

from langchain import hub
from langchain.chains import RetrievalQA

# See full prompt at https://smith.langchain.com/hub/rlm/rag-prompt
prompt = hub.pull("rlm/rag-prompt")

qa_chain = RetrievalQA.from_llm(
llm, retriever=vectorstore.as_retriever(), prompt=prompt
)

qa_chain("What are autonomous agents?")
API Reference:RetrievalQA
{'query': 'What are autonomous agents?',
'result': 'Autonomous agents are LLM-empowered agents that handle autonomous design, planning, and performance of complex tasks, such as scientific experiments. These agents can browse the Internet, read documentation, execute code, call robotics experimentation APIs, and leverage other LLMs. They are capable of reasoning and planning ahead for complicated tasks by breaking them down into smaller steps.'}

LCEL​

from langchain import hub
from langchain_core.output_parsers import StrOutputParser
from langchain_core.runnables import RunnablePassthrough

# See full prompt at https://smith.langchain.com/hub/rlm/rag-prompt
prompt = hub.pull("rlm/rag-prompt")


def format_docs(docs):
return "\n\n".join(doc.page_content for doc in docs)


qa_chain = (
{
"context": vectorstore.as_retriever() | format_docs,
"question": RunnablePassthrough(),
}
| prompt
| llm
| StrOutputParser()
)

qa_chain.invoke("What are autonomous agents?")
'Autonomous agents are agents that can handle autonomous design, planning, and performance of complex tasks, such as scientific experiments. They can browse the Internet, read documentation, execute code, call robotics experimentation APIs, and leverage other language model models. These agents use reasoning steps to develop solutions to specific tasks, like creating a novel anticancer drug.'

The LCEL implementation exposes the internals of what's happening around retrieving, formatting documents, and passing them through a prompt to the LLM, but it is more verbose. You can customize and wrap this composition logic in a helper function, or use the higher-level create_retrieval_chain and create_stuff_documents_chain helper method:

from langchain import hub
from langchain.chains import create_retrieval_chain
from langchain.chains.combine_documents import create_stuff_documents_chain

# See full prompt at https://smith.langchain.com/hub/langchain-ai/retrieval-qa-chat
retrieval_qa_chat_prompt = hub.pull("langchain-ai/retrieval-qa-chat")

combine_docs_chain = create_stuff_documents_chain(llm, retrieval_qa_chat_prompt)
rag_chain = create_retrieval_chain(vectorstore.as_retriever(), combine_docs_chain)

rag_chain.invoke({"input": "What are autonomous agents?"})
{'input': 'What are autonomous agents?',
'context': [Document(page_content='Boiko et al. (2023) also looked into LLM-empowered agents for scientific discovery, to handle autonomous design, planning, and performance of complex scientific experiments. This agent can use tools to browse the Internet, read documentation, execute code, call robotics experimentation APIs and leverage other LLMs.\nFor example, when requested to "develop a novel anticancer drug", the model came up with the following reasoning steps:', metadata={'source': 'https://lilianweng.github.io/posts/2023-06-23-agent/', 'title': "LLM Powered Autonomous Agents | Lil'Log", 'description': 'Building agents with LLM (large language model) as its core controller is a cool concept. Several proof-of-concepts demos, such as AutoGPT, GPT-Engineer and BabyAGI, serve as inspiring examples. The potentiality of LLM extends beyond generating well-written copies, stories, essays and programs; it can be framed as a powerful general problem solver.\nAgent System Overview In a LLM-powered autonomous agent system, LLM functions as the agent’s brain, complemented by several key components:', 'language': 'en'}),
Document(page_content='Weng, Lilian. (Jun 2023). “LLM-powered Autonomous Agents”. Lil’Log. https://lilianweng.github.io/posts/2023-06-23-agent/.', metadata={'source': 'https://lilianweng.github.io/posts/2023-06-23-agent/', 'title': "LLM Powered Autonomous Agents | Lil'Log", 'description': 'Building agents with LLM (large language model) as its core controller is a cool concept. Several proof-of-concepts demos, such as AutoGPT, GPT-Engineer and BabyAGI, serve as inspiring examples. The potentiality of LLM extends beyond generating well-written copies, stories, essays and programs; it can be framed as a powerful general problem solver.\nAgent System Overview In a LLM-powered autonomous agent system, LLM functions as the agent’s brain, complemented by several key components:', 'language': 'en'}),
Document(page_content='Fig. 1. Overview of a LLM-powered autonomous agent system.\nComponent One: Planning#\nA complicated task usually involves many steps. An agent needs to know what they are and plan ahead.\nTask Decomposition#', metadata={'source': 'https://lilianweng.github.io/posts/2023-06-23-agent/', 'title': "LLM Powered Autonomous Agents | Lil'Log", 'description': 'Building agents with LLM (large language model) as its core controller is a cool concept. Several proof-of-concepts demos, such as AutoGPT, GPT-Engineer and BabyAGI, serve as inspiring examples. The potentiality of LLM extends beyond generating well-written copies, stories, essays and programs; it can be framed as a powerful general problem solver.\nAgent System Overview In a LLM-powered autonomous agent system, LLM functions as the agent’s brain, complemented by several key components:', 'language': 'en'}),
Document(page_content="LLM Powered Autonomous Agents | Lil'Log\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nLil'Log\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nPosts\n\n\n\n\nArchive\n\n\n\n\nSearch\n\n\n\n\nTags\n\n\n\n\nFAQ\n\n\n\n\nemojisearch.app\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n LLM Powered Autonomous Agents\n \nDate: June 23, 2023 | Estimated Reading Time: 31 min | Author: Lilian Weng\n\n\n \n\n\nTable of Contents\n\n\n\nAgent System Overview\n\nComponent One: Planning\n\nTask Decomposition\n\nSelf-Reflection\n\n\nComponent Two: Memory\n\nTypes of Memory\n\nMaximum Inner Product Search (MIPS)", metadata={'source': 'https://lilianweng.github.io/posts/2023-06-23-agent/', 'title': "LLM Powered Autonomous Agents | Lil'Log", 'description': 'Building agents with LLM (large language model) as its core controller is a cool concept. Several proof-of-concepts demos, such as AutoGPT, GPT-Engineer and BabyAGI, serve as inspiring examples. The potentiality of LLM extends beyond generating well-written copies, stories, essays and programs; it can be framed as a powerful general problem solver.\nAgent System Overview In a LLM-powered autonomous agent system, LLM functions as the agent’s brain, complemented by several key components:', 'language': 'en'})],
'answer': 'Autonomous agents are entities that can operate independently, making decisions and taking actions without direct human intervention. These agents can perform tasks such as planning, executing complex experiments, and leveraging various tools and resources to achieve objectives. In the context provided, LLM-powered autonomous agents are specifically designed for scientific discovery, capable of handling tasks like designing novel anticancer drugs through reasoning steps.'}

ConversationalRetrievalChain​

The ConversationalRetrievalChain was an all-in one way that combined retrieval-augmented generation with chat history, allowing you to "chat with" your documents.

Advantages of switching to the LCEL implementation are similar to the RetrievalQA section above:

  • Clearer internals. The ConversationalRetrievalChain chain hides an entire question rephrasing step which dereferences the initial query against the chat history.
    • This means the class contains two sets of configurable prompts, LLMs, etc.
  • More easily return source documents.
  • Support for runnable methods like streaming and async operations.

Here are side-by-side implementations with custom prompts. We'll reuse the loaded documents and vector store from the previous section:

Legacy​

from langchain.chains import ConversationalRetrievalChain

condense_question_template = """
Given the following conversation and a follow up question, rephrase the follow up question to be a standalone question.

Chat History:
{chat_history}
Follow Up Input: {question}
Standalone question:"""

condense_question_prompt = ChatPromptTemplate.from_template(condense_question_template)

qa_template = """
You are an assistant for question-answering tasks.
Use the following pieces of retrieved context to answer
the question. If you don't know the answer, say that you
don't know. Use three sentences maximum and keep the
answer concise.

Chat History:
{chat_history}

Other context:
{context}

Question: {question}
"""

qa_prompt = ChatPromptTemplate.from_template(qa_template)

convo_qa_chain = ConversationalRetrievalChain.from_llm(
llm,
vectorstore.as_retriever(),
condense_question_prompt=condense_question_prompt,
combine_docs_chain_kwargs={
"prompt": qa_prompt,
},
)

convo_qa_chain(
{
"question": "What are autonomous agents?",
"chat_history": "",
}
)
{'question': 'What are autonomous agents?',
'chat_history': '',
'answer': 'Autonomous agents are powered by Large Language Models (LLMs) to handle tasks like scientific discovery and complex experiments autonomously. These agents can browse the internet, read documentation, execute code, and leverage other LLMs to perform tasks. They can reason and plan ahead to decompose complicated tasks into manageable steps.'}

LCEL​

from langchain.chains import create_history_aware_retriever, create_retrieval_chain

condense_question_system_template = (
"Given a chat history and the latest user question "
"which might reference context in the chat history, "
"formulate a standalone question which can be understood "
"without the chat history. Do NOT answer the question, "
"just reformulate it if needed and otherwise return it as is."
)

condense_question_prompt = ChatPromptTemplate.from_messages(
[
("system", condense_question_system_template),
("placeholder", "{chat_history}"),
("human", "{input}"),
]
)
history_aware_retriever = create_history_aware_retriever(
llm, vectorstore.as_retriever(), condense_question_prompt
)

system_prompt = (
"You are an assistant for question-answering tasks. "
"Use the following pieces of retrieved context to answer "
"the question. If you don't know the answer, say that you "
"don't know. Use three sentences maximum and keep the "
"answer concise."
"\n\n"
"{context}"
)

qa_prompt = ChatPromptTemplate.from_messages(
[
("system", system_prompt),
("placeholder", "{chat_history}"),
("human", "{input}"),
]
)
qa_chain = create_stuff_documents_chain(llm, qa_prompt)

convo_qa_chain = create_retrieval_chain(history_aware_retriever, qa_chain)

convo_qa_chain.invoke(
{
"input": "What are autonomous agents?",
"chat_history": [],
}
)
{'input': 'What are autonomous agents?',
'chat_history': [],
'context': [Document(page_content='Boiko et al. (2023) also looked into LLM-empowered agents for scientific discovery, to handle autonomous design, planning, and performance of complex scientific experiments. This agent can use tools to browse the Internet, read documentation, execute code, call robotics experimentation APIs and leverage other LLMs.\nFor example, when requested to "develop a novel anticancer drug", the model came up with the following reasoning steps:', metadata={'source': 'https://lilianweng.github.io/posts/2023-06-23-agent/', 'title': "LLM Powered Autonomous Agents | Lil'Log", 'description': 'Building agents with LLM (large language model) as its core controller is a cool concept. Several proof-of-concepts demos, such as AutoGPT, GPT-Engineer and BabyAGI, serve as inspiring examples. The potentiality of LLM extends beyond generating well-written copies, stories, essays and programs; it can be framed as a powerful general problem solver.\nAgent System Overview In a LLM-powered autonomous agent system, LLM functions as the agent’s brain, complemented by several key components:', 'language': 'en'}),
Document(page_content='Weng, Lilian. (Jun 2023). “LLM-powered Autonomous Agents”. Lil’Log. https://lilianweng.github.io/posts/2023-06-23-agent/.', metadata={'source': 'https://lilianweng.github.io/posts/2023-06-23-agent/', 'title': "LLM Powered Autonomous Agents | Lil'Log", 'description': 'Building agents with LLM (large language model) as its core controller is a cool concept. Several proof-of-concepts demos, such as AutoGPT, GPT-Engineer and BabyAGI, serve as inspiring examples. The potentiality of LLM extends beyond generating well-written copies, stories, essays and programs; it can be framed as a powerful general problem solver.\nAgent System Overview In a LLM-powered autonomous agent system, LLM functions as the agent’s brain, complemented by several key components:', 'language': 'en'}),
Document(page_content='Fig. 1. Overview of a LLM-powered autonomous agent system.\nComponent One: Planning#\nA complicated task usually involves many steps. An agent needs to know what they are and plan ahead.\nTask Decomposition#', metadata={'source': 'https://lilianweng.github.io/posts/2023-06-23-agent/', 'title': "LLM Powered Autonomous Agents | Lil'Log", 'description': 'Building agents with LLM (large language model) as its core controller is a cool concept. Several proof-of-concepts demos, such as AutoGPT, GPT-Engineer and BabyAGI, serve as inspiring examples. The potentiality of LLM extends beyond generating well-written copies, stories, essays and programs; it can be framed as a powerful general problem solver.\nAgent System Overview In a LLM-powered autonomous agent system, LLM functions as the agent’s brain, complemented by several key components:', 'language': 'en'}),
Document(page_content='Or\n@article{weng2023agent,\n title = "LLM-powered Autonomous Agents",\n author = "Weng, Lilian",\n journal = "lilianweng.github.io",\n year = "2023",\n month = "Jun",\n url = "https://lilianweng.github.io/posts/2023-06-23-agent/"\n}\nReferences#\n[1] Wei et al. “Chain of thought prompting elicits reasoning in large language models.” NeurIPS 2022\n[2] Yao et al. “Tree of Thoughts: Dliberate Problem Solving with Large Language Models.” arXiv preprint arXiv:2305.10601 (2023).', metadata={'source': 'https://lilianweng.github.io/posts/2023-06-23-agent/', 'title': "LLM Powered Autonomous Agents | Lil'Log", 'description': 'Building agents with LLM (large language model) as its core controller is a cool concept. Several proof-of-concepts demos, such as AutoGPT, GPT-Engineer and BabyAGI, serve as inspiring examples. The potentiality of LLM extends beyond generating well-written copies, stories, essays and programs; it can be framed as a powerful general problem solver.\nAgent System Overview In a LLM-powered autonomous agent system, LLM functions as the agent’s brain, complemented by several key components:', 'language': 'en'})],
'answer': 'Autonomous agents are entities capable of acting independently, making decisions, and performing tasks without direct human intervention. These agents can interact with their environment, perceive information, and take actions based on their goals or objectives. They often use artificial intelligence techniques to navigate and accomplish tasks in complex or dynamic environments.'}

Next steps​

You've now seen how to migrate existing usage of some legacy chains to LCEL.

Next, check out the LCEL conceptual docs for more background information.


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