Azure AI Search
Azure AI Search (formerly known as Azure Cognitive Search
) is a Microsoft cloud search service that gives developers infrastructure, APIs, and tools for information retrieval of vector, keyword, and hybrid queries at scale.
AzureAISearchRetriever
is an integration module that returns documents from an unstructured query. It's based on the BaseRetriever class and it targets the 2023-11-01 stable REST API version of Azure AI Search, which means it supports vector indexing and queries.
To use this module, you need:
An Azure AI Search service. You can create one for free if you sign up for the Azure trial. A free service has lower quotas, but it's sufficient for running the code in this notebook.
An existing index with vector fields. There are several ways to create one, including using the vector store module. Or, try the Azure AI Search REST APIs.
An API key. API keys are generated when you create the search service. If you're just querying an index, you can use the query API key, otherwise use an admin API key. See Find your API keys for details.
AzureAISearchRetriever
replaces AzureCognitiveSearchRetriever
, which will soon be deprecated. We recommend switching to the newer version that's based on the most recent stable version of the search APIs.
Install packages
Use azure-documents-search package 11.4 or later.
%pip install --upgrade --quiet langchain
%pip install --upgrade --quiet langchain-openai
%pip install --upgrade --quiet azure-search-documents
%pip install --upgrade --quiet azure-identity
Import required libraries
import os
from langchain_community.retrievers import (
AzureAISearchRetriever,
)
API Reference:
Configure search settings
Set the search service name, index name, and API key as environment variables (alternatively, you can pass them as arguments to AzureAISearchRetriever
). The search index provides the searchable content.
os.environ["AZURE_AI_SEARCH_SERVICE_NAME"] = "<YOUR_SEARCH_SERVICE_NAME>"
os.environ["AZURE_AI_SEARCH_INDEX_NAME"] = "<YOUR_SEARCH_INDEX_NAME>"
os.environ["AZURE_AI_SEARCH_API_KEY"] = "<YOUR_API_KEY>"
Create the retriever
For AzureAISearchRetriever
, provide an index_name
, content_key
, and top_k
set to the number of number of results you'd like to retrieve. Setting top_k
to zero (the default) returns all results.
retriever = AzureAISearchRetriever(
content_key="content", top_k=1, index_name="langchain-vector-demo"
)
Now you can use it to retrieve documents from Azure AI Search. This is the method you would call to do so. It will return all documents relevant to the query.
retriever.invoke("here is my unstructured query string")
Example
This section demonstrates using the retriever over built-in sample data. You can skip this step if you already have a vector index on your search service.
Start by providing the endpoints and keys. Since we're creating a vector index in this step, specify a text embedding model to get a vector representation of the text. This example assumes Azure OpenAI with a deployment of text-embedding-ada-002. Because this step creates an index, be sure to use an admin API key for your search service.
import os
from langchain_community.document_loaders import DirectoryLoader, TextLoader
from langchain_community.retrievers import AzureAISearchRetriever
from langchain_community.vectorstores import AzureSearch
from langchain_openai import AzureOpenAIEmbeddings, OpenAIEmbeddings
from langchain_text_splitters import TokenTextSplitter
os.environ["AZURE_AI_SEARCH_SERVICE_NAME"] = "<YOUR_SEARCH_SERVICE_NAME>"
os.environ["AZURE_AI_SEARCH_INDEX_NAME"] = "langchain-vector-demo"
os.environ["AZURE_AI_SEARCH_API_KEY"] = "<YOUR_SEARCH_SERVICE_ADMIN_API_KEY>"
azure_endpoint: str = "<YOUR_AZURE_OPENAI_ENDPOINT>"
azure_openai_api_key: str = "<YOUR_AZURE_OPENAI_API_KEY>"
azure_openai_api_version: str = "2023-05-15"
azure_deployment: str = "text-embedding-ada-002"
API Reference:
We'll use an embedding model from Azure OpenAI to turn our documents into embeddings stored in the Azure AI Search vector store. We'll also set the index name to langchain-vector-demo
. This will create a new vector store associated with that index name.
embeddings = AzureOpenAIEmbeddings(
model=azure_deployment,
azure_endpoint=azure_endpoint,
openai_api_key=azure_openai_api_key,
)
vector_store: AzureSearch = AzureSearch(
embedding_function=embeddings.embed_query,
azure_search_endpoint=os.getenv("AZURE_AI_SEARCH_SERVICE_NAME"),
azure_search_key=os.getenv("AZURE_AI_SEARCH_API_KEY"),
index_name="langchain-vector-demo",
)
Next, we'll load data into our newly created vector store. For this example, we load the state_of_the_union.txt
file. We'll split the text in 400 token chunks with no overlap. Finally, the documents are added to our vector store as emeddings.
from langchain_community.document_loaders import TextLoader
from langchain_text_splitters import CharacterTextSplitter
loader = TextLoader("../../how_to/state_of_the_union.txt", encoding="utf-8")
documents = loader.load()
text_splitter = CharacterTextSplitter(chunk_size=400, chunk_overlap=0)
docs = text_splitter.split_documents(documents)
vector_store.add_documents(documents=docs)
API Reference:
Next, we'll create a retriever. The current index_name
variable is langchain-vector-demo
from the last step. If you skipped vector store creation, provide your index name in the parameter. In this query, the top result is returned.
retriever = AzureAISearchRetriever(
content_key="content", top_k=1, index_name="langchain-vector-demo"
)
Now we can retrieve the data that is relevant to our query from the documents we uploaded.
retriever.invoke("does the president have a plan for covid-19?")