227 lines
10 KiB
Markdown
227 lines
10 KiB
Markdown
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# Tools
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[[open-in-colab]]
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Here, we're going to see advanced tool usage.
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> [!TIP]
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> If you're new to building agents, make sure to first read the [intro to agents](../conceptual_guides/intro_agents) and the [guided tour of smolagents](../guided_tour).
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- [Tools](#tools)
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- [What is a tool, and how to build one?](#what-is-a-tool-and-how-to-build-one)
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- [Share your tool to the Hub](#share-your-tool-to-the-hub)
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- [Import a Space as a tool](#import-a-space-as-a-tool)
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- [Use LangChain tools](#use-langchain-tools)
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- [Manage your agent's toolbox](#manage-your-agents-toolbox)
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- [Use a collection of tools](#use-a-collection-of-tools)
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### What is a tool, and how to build one?
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A tool is mostly a function that an LLM can use in an agentic system.
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But to use it, the LLM will need to be given an API: name, tool description, input types and descriptions, output type.
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So it cannot be only a function. It should be a class.
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So at core, the tool is a class that wraps a function with metadata that helps the LLM understand how to use it.
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Here's how it looks:
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```python
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from smolagents import Tool
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class HFModelDownloadsTool(Tool):
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name = "model_download_counter"
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description = """
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This is a tool that returns the most downloaded model of a given task on the Hugging Face Hub.
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It returns the name of the checkpoint."""
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inputs = {
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"task": {
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"type": "string",
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"description": "the task category (such as text-classification, depth-estimation, etc)",
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}
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}
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output_type = "string"
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def forward(self, task: str):
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from huggingface_hub import list_models
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model = next(iter(list_models(filter=task, sort="downloads", direction=-1)))
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return model.id
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model_downloads_tool = HFModelDownloadsTool()
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```
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The custom tool subclasses [`Tool`] to inherit useful methods. The child class also defines:
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- An attribute `name`, which corresponds to the name of the tool itself. The name usually describes what the tool does. Since the code returns the model with the most downloads for a task, let's name it `model_download_counter`.
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- An attribute `description` is used to populate the agent's system prompt.
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- An `inputs` attribute, which is a dictionary with keys `"type"` and `"description"`. It contains information that helps the Python interpreter make educated choices about the input.
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- An `output_type` attribute, which specifies the output type. The types for both `inputs` and `output_type` should be [Pydantic formats](https://docs.pydantic.dev/latest/concepts/json_schema/#generating-json-schema), they can be either of these: [`~AUTHORIZED_TYPES`].
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- A `forward` method which contains the inference code to be executed.
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And that's all it needs to be used in an agent!
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There's another way to build a tool. In the [guided_tour](../guided_tour), we implemented a tool using the `@tool` decorator. The [`tool`] decorator is the recommended way to define simple tools, but sometimes you need more than this: using several methods in a class for more clarity, or using additional class attributes.
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In this case, you can build your tool by subclassing [`Tool`] as described above.
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### Share your tool to the Hub
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You can share your custom tool to the Hub by calling [`~Tool.push_to_hub`] on the tool. Make sure you've created a repository for it on the Hub and are using a token with read access.
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```python
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model_downloads_tool.push_to_hub("{your_username}/hf-model-downloads", token="<YOUR_HUGGINGFACEHUB_API_TOKEN>")
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```
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For the push to Hub to work, your tool will need to respect some rules:
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- All method are self-contained, e.g. use variables that come either from their args.
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- As per the above point, **all imports should be defined directky within the tool's functions**, else you will get an error when trying to call [`~Tool.save`] or [`~Tool.push_to_hub`] with your custom tool.
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- If you subclass the `__init__` method, you can give it no other argument than `self`. This is because arguments set during a specific tool instance's initialization are hard to track, which prevents from sharing them properly to the hub. And anyway, the idea of making a specific class is that you can already set class attributes for anything you need to hard-code (just set `your_variable=(...)` directly under the `class YourTool(Tool):` line). And of course you can still create a class attribute anywhere in your code by assigning stuff to `self.your_variable`.
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Once your tool is pushed to Hub, you can visualize it. [Here](https://huggingface.co/spaces/m-ric/hf-model-downloads) is the `model_downloads_tool` that I've pushed. It has a nice gradio interface.
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When diving into the tool files, you can find that all the tool's logic is under [tool.py](https://huggingface.co/spaces/m-ric/hf-model-downloads/blob/main/tool.py). That is where you can inspect a tool shared by someone else.
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Then you can load the tool with [`load_tool`] or create it with [`~Tool.from_hub`] and pass it to the `tools` parameter in your agent.
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Since running tools means running custom code, you need to make sure you trust the repository, thus we require to pass `trust_remote_code=True` to load a tool from the Hub.
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```python
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from smolagents import load_tool, CodeAgent
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model_download_tool = load_tool(
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"{your_username}/hf-model-downloads",
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trust_remote_code=True
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)
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```
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### Import a Space as a tool
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You can directly import a Space from the Hub as a tool using the [`Tool.from_space`] method!
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You only need to provide the id of the Space on the Hub, its name, and a description that will help you agent understand what the tool does. Under the hood, this will use [`gradio-client`](https://pypi.org/project/gradio-client/) library to call the Space.
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For instance, let's import the [FLUX.1-dev](https://huggingface.co/black-forest-labs/FLUX.1-dev) Space from the Hub and use it to generate an image.
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```python
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image_generation_tool = Tool.from_space(
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"black-forest-labs/FLUX.1-schnell",
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name="image_generator",
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description="Generate an image from a prompt"
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)
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image_generation_tool("A sunny beach")
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```
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And voilà, here's your image! 🏖️
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<img src="https://huggingface.co/datasets/huggingface/documentation-images/resolve/main/transformers/sunny_beach.webp">
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Then you can use this tool just like any other tool. For example, let's improve the prompt `a rabbit wearing a space suit` and generate an image of it.
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```python
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from smolagents import CodeAgent, HfApiModel
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model = HfApiModel("Qwen/Qwen2.5-Coder-32B-Instruct")
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agent = CodeAgent(tools=[image_generation_tool], model=model)
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agent.run(
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"Improve this prompt, then generate an image of it.", prompt='A rabbit wearing a space suit'
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)
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```
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```text
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=== Agent thoughts:
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improved_prompt could be "A bright blue space suit wearing rabbit, on the surface of the moon, under a bright orange sunset, with the Earth visible in the background"
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Now that I have improved the prompt, I can use the image generator tool to generate an image based on this prompt.
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>>> Agent is executing the code below:
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image = image_generator(prompt="A bright blue space suit wearing rabbit, on the surface of the moon, under a bright orange sunset, with the Earth visible in the background")
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final_answer(image)
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```
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<img src="https://huggingface.co/datasets/huggingface/documentation-images/resolve/main/transformers/rabbit_spacesuit_flux.webp">
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How cool is this? 🤩
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### Use LangChain tools
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We love Langchain and think it has a very compelling suite of tools.
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To import a tool from LangChain, use the `from_langchain()` method.
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Here is how you can use it to recreate the intro's search result using a LangChain web search tool.
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This tool will need `pip install langchain google-search-results -q` to work properly.
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```python
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from langchain.agents import load_tools
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search_tool = Tool.from_langchain(load_tools(["serpapi"])[0])
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agent = CodeAgent(tools=[search_tool], model=model)
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agent.run("How many more blocks (also denoted as layers) are in BERT base encoder compared to the encoder from the architecture proposed in Attention is All You Need?")
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```
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### Manage your agent's toolbox
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You can manage an agent's toolbox by adding or replacing a tool.
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Let's add the `model_download_tool` to an existing agent initialized with only the default toolbox.
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```python
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from smolagents import HfApiModel
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model = HfApiModel("Qwen/Qwen2.5-Coder-32B-Instruct")
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agent = CodeAgent(tools=[], model=model, add_base_tools=True)
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agent.toolbox.add_tool(model_download_tool)
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```
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Now we can leverage the new tool:
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```python
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agent.run(
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"Can you give me the name of the model that has the most downloads in the 'text-to-video' task on the Hugging Face Hub but reverse the letters?"
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)
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```
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> [!TIP]
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> Beware of not adding too many tools to an agent: this can overwhelm weaker LLM engines.
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Use the `agent.toolbox.update_tool()` method to replace an existing tool in the agent's toolbox.
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This is useful if your new tool is a one-to-one replacement of the existing tool because the agent already knows how to perform that specific task.
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Just make sure the new tool follows the same API as the replaced tool or adapt the system prompt template to ensure all examples using the replaced tool are updated.
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### Use a collection of tools
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You can leverage tool collections by using the ToolCollection object, with the slug of the collection you want to use.
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Then pass them as a list to initialize you agent, and start using them!
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```py
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from transformers import ToolCollection, CodeAgent
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image_tool_collection = ToolCollection(
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collection_slug="huggingface-tools/diffusion-tools-6630bb19a942c2306a2cdb6f",
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token="<YOUR_HUGGINGFACEHUB_API_TOKEN>"
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)
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agent = CodeAgent(tools=[*image_tool_collection.tools], model=model, add_base_tools=True)
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agent.run("Please draw me a picture of rivers and lakes.")
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```
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To speed up the start, tools are loaded only if called by the agent. |