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ArangoDB QA chain

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This notebook shows how to use LLMs to provide a natural language interface to an ArangoDB database.

You can get a local ArangoDB instance running via the ArangoDB Docker image:

docker run -p 8529:8529 -e ARANGO_ROOT_PASSWORD= arangodb/arangodb

An alternative is to use the ArangoDB Cloud Connector package to get a temporary cloud instance running:

%%capture
!pip install python-arango # The ArangoDB Python Driver
!pip install adb-cloud-connector # The ArangoDB Cloud Instance provisioner
!pip install openai
!pip install langchain
# Instantiate ArangoDB Database
import json

from adb_cloud_connector import get_temp_credentials
from arango import ArangoClient

con = get_temp_credentials()

db = ArangoClient(hosts=con["url"]).db(
con["dbName"], con["username"], con["password"], verify=True
)

print(json.dumps(con, indent=2))
Log: requesting new credentials...
Succcess: new credentials acquired
{
"dbName": "TUT3sp29s3pjf1io0h4cfdsq",
"username": "TUTo6nkwgzkizej3kysgdyeo8",
"password": "TUT9vx0qjqt42i9bq8uik4v9",
"hostname": "tutorials.arangodb.cloud",
"port": 8529,
"url": "https://tutorials.arangodb.cloud:8529"
}
# Instantiate the ArangoDB-LangChain Graph
from langchain.graphs import ArangoGraph

graph = ArangoGraph(db)

Populating the Database​

We will rely on the Python Driver to import our GameOfThrones data into our database.

if db.has_graph("GameOfThrones"):
db.delete_graph("GameOfThrones", drop_collections=True)

db.create_graph(
"GameOfThrones",
edge_definitions=[
{
"edge_collection": "ChildOf",
"from_vertex_collections": ["Characters"],
"to_vertex_collections": ["Characters"],
},
],
)

documents = [
{
"_key": "NedStark",
"name": "Ned",
"surname": "Stark",
"alive": True,
"age": 41,
"gender": "male",
},
{
"_key": "CatelynStark",
"name": "Catelyn",
"surname": "Stark",
"alive": False,
"age": 40,
"gender": "female",
},
{
"_key": "AryaStark",
"name": "Arya",
"surname": "Stark",
"alive": True,
"age": 11,
"gender": "female",
},
{
"_key": "BranStark",
"name": "Bran",
"surname": "Stark",
"alive": True,
"age": 10,
"gender": "male",
},
]

edges = [
{"_to": "Characters/NedStark", "_from": "Characters/AryaStark"},
{"_to": "Characters/NedStark", "_from": "Characters/BranStark"},
{"_to": "Characters/CatelynStark", "_from": "Characters/AryaStark"},
{"_to": "Characters/CatelynStark", "_from": "Characters/BranStark"},
]

db.collection("Characters").import_bulk(documents)
db.collection("ChildOf").import_bulk(edges)
{'error': False,
'created': 4,
'errors': 0,
'empty': 0,
'updated': 0,
'ignored': 0,
'details': []}

Getting & Setting the ArangoDB Schema​

An initial ArangoDB Schema is generated upon instantiating the ArangoDBGraph object. Below are the schema’s getter & setter methods should you be interested in viewing or modifying the schema:

# The schema should be empty here,
# since `graph` was initialized prior to ArangoDB Data ingestion (see above).

import json

print(json.dumps(graph.schema, indent=4))
{
"Graph Schema": [],
"Collection Schema": []
}
graph.set_schema()
# We can now view the generated schema

import json

print(json.dumps(graph.schema, indent=4))
{
"Graph Schema": [
{
"graph_name": "GameOfThrones",
"edge_definitions": [
{
"edge_collection": "ChildOf",
"from_vertex_collections": [
"Characters"
],
"to_vertex_collections": [
"Characters"
]
}
]
}
],
"Collection Schema": [
{
"collection_name": "ChildOf",
"collection_type": "edge",
"edge_properties": [
{
"name": "_key",
"type": "str"
},
{
"name": "_id",
"type": "str"
},
{
"name": "_from",
"type": "str"
},
{
"name": "_to",
"type": "str"
},
{
"name": "_rev",
"type": "str"
}
],
"example_edge": {
"_key": "266218884025",
"_id": "ChildOf/266218884025",
"_from": "Characters/AryaStark",
"_to": "Characters/NedStark",
"_rev": "_gVPKGSq---"
}
},
{
"collection_name": "Characters",
"collection_type": "document",
"document_properties": [
{
"name": "_key",
"type": "str"
},
{
"name": "_id",
"type": "str"
},
{
"name": "_rev",
"type": "str"
},
{
"name": "name",
"type": "str"
},
{
"name": "surname",
"type": "str"
},
{
"name": "alive",
"type": "bool"
},
{
"name": "age",
"type": "int"
},
{
"name": "gender",
"type": "str"
}
],
"example_document": {
"_key": "NedStark",
"_id": "Characters/NedStark",
"_rev": "_gVPKGPi---",
"name": "Ned",
"surname": "Stark",
"alive": true,
"age": 41,
"gender": "male"
}
}
]
}

Querying the ArangoDB Database​

We can now use the ArangoDB Graph QA Chain to inquire about our data

import os

os.environ["OPENAI_API_KEY"] = "your-key-here"
from langchain.chains import ArangoGraphQAChain
from langchain.chat_models import ChatOpenAI

chain = ArangoGraphQAChain.from_llm(
ChatOpenAI(temperature=0), graph=graph, verbose=True
)
chain.run("Is Ned Stark alive?")


> Entering new ArangoGraphQAChain chain...
AQL Query (1):
WITH Characters
FOR character IN Characters
FILTER character.name == "Ned" AND character.surname == "Stark"
RETURN character.alive

AQL Result:
[True]

> Finished chain.
'Yes, Ned Stark is alive.'
chain.run("How old is Arya Stark?")


> Entering new ArangoGraphQAChain chain...
AQL Query (1):
WITH Characters
FOR character IN Characters
FILTER character.name == "Arya" && character.surname == "Stark"
RETURN character.age

AQL Result:
[11]

> Finished chain.
'Arya Stark is 11 years old.'
chain.run("Are Arya Stark and Ned Stark related?")


> Entering new ArangoGraphQAChain chain...
AQL Query (1):
WITH Characters, ChildOf
FOR v, e, p IN 1..1 OUTBOUND 'Characters/AryaStark' ChildOf
FILTER p.vertices[-1]._key == 'NedStark'
RETURN p

AQL Result:
[{'vertices': [{'_key': 'AryaStark', '_id': 'Characters/AryaStark', '_rev': '_gVPKGPi--B', 'name': 'Arya', 'surname': 'Stark', 'alive': True, 'age': 11, 'gender': 'female'}, {'_key': 'NedStark', '_id': 'Characters/NedStark', '_rev': '_gVPKGPi---', 'name': 'Ned', 'surname': 'Stark', 'alive': True, 'age': 41, 'gender': 'male'}], 'edges': [{'_key': '266218884025', '_id': 'ChildOf/266218884025', '_from': 'Characters/AryaStark', '_to': 'Characters/NedStark', '_rev': '_gVPKGSq---'}], 'weights': [0, 1]}]

> Finished chain.
'Yes, Arya Stark and Ned Stark are related. According to the information retrieved from the database, there is a relationship between them. Arya Stark is the child of Ned Stark.'
chain.run("Does Arya Stark have a dead parent?")


> Entering new ArangoGraphQAChain chain...
AQL Query (1):
WITH Characters, ChildOf
FOR v, e IN 1..1 OUTBOUND 'Characters/AryaStark' ChildOf
FILTER v.alive == false
RETURN e

AQL Result:
[{'_key': '266218884027', '_id': 'ChildOf/266218884027', '_from': 'Characters/AryaStark', '_to': 'Characters/CatelynStark', '_rev': '_gVPKGSu---'}]

> Finished chain.
'Yes, Arya Stark has a dead parent. The parent is Catelyn Stark.'

Chain Modifiers​

You can alter the values of the following ArangoDBGraphQAChain class variables to modify the behaviour of your chain results

# Specify the maximum number of AQL Query Results to return
chain.top_k = 10

# Specify whether or not to return the AQL Query in the output dictionary
chain.return_aql_query = True

# Specify whether or not to return the AQL JSON Result in the output dictionary
chain.return_aql_result = True

# Specify the maximum amount of AQL Generation attempts that should be made
chain.max_aql_generation_attempts = 5

# Specify a set of AQL Query Examples, which are passed to
# the AQL Generation Prompt Template to promote few-shot-learning.
# Defaults to an empty string.
chain.aql_examples = """
# Is Ned Stark alive?
RETURN DOCUMENT('Characters/NedStark').alive

# Is Arya Stark the child of Ned Stark?
FOR e IN ChildOf
FILTER e._from == "Characters/AryaStark" AND e._to == "Characters/NedStark"
RETURN e
"""
chain.run("Is Ned Stark alive?")

# chain("Is Ned Stark alive?") # Returns a dictionary with the AQL Query & AQL Result


> Entering new ArangoGraphQAChain chain...
AQL Query (1):
RETURN DOCUMENT('Characters/NedStark').alive

AQL Result:
[True]

> Finished chain.
'Yes, according to the information in the database, Ned Stark is alive.'
chain.run("Is Bran Stark the child of Ned Stark?")


> Entering new ArangoGraphQAChain chain...
AQL Query (1):
FOR e IN ChildOf
FILTER e._from == "Characters/BranStark" AND e._to == "Characters/NedStark"
RETURN e

AQL Result:
[{'_key': '266218884026', '_id': 'ChildOf/266218884026', '_from': 'Characters/BranStark', '_to': 'Characters/NedStark', '_rev': '_gVPKGSq--_'}]

> Finished chain.
'Yes, according to the information in the ArangoDB database, Bran Stark is indeed the child of Ned Stark.'