Restructures LLM config page so it is far clearer.
Also corrects bugs around adding LLMs and having LLMs not editable post addition
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Co-authored-by: Sam Saffron <sam.saffron@gmail.com>
Often it is helpful to have the summary box open while composing a reply to the topic. However, the summary box currently gets closed each time you click outside the box. In this PR we add `closeOnClickOutside: false` attribute to the `DMenu` options for summary box to prevent that from occurring.
Previously we had some hardcoded markup with scss making a loading indicator wave. This code was being duplicated and used in both semantic search and summarization. We want to add the indicator wave to the AI helper diff modal as well and have the text flashing instead of the loading spinner. To ensure we do not repeat ourselves, in this PR we turn the summary indicator wave into a reusable template only component called: `AiIndicatorWave`. We then apply the usage of that component to semantic search, summarization, and the composer helper modal.
The `DiffModal` is triggered after selecting an option in the composer helper menu. After selecting an option, we should close the composer helper menu and only show the diff modal. On mobile, there was an edge-case where `this.args.close()` for was causing the closing of both the `DiffModal` and the `AiComposerHelperMenu`. This PR resolves that by ensuring the menu is closed _first_ asynchronously, followed by opening the relevant modal.
Previously we had moved the AI helper from the options menu to a selection menu that appears when selecting text in the composer. This had the benefit of making the AI helper a more discoverable feature. Now that some time has passed and the AI helper is more recognized, we will be moving it back to the composer toolbar.
This is better because:
- It consistent with other behavior and ways of accessing tools in the composer
- It has an improved mobile experience
- It reduces unnecessary code and keeps things easier to migrate when we have composer V2.
- It allows for easily triggering AI helper for all content by clicking the button instead of having to select everything.
This improves the site setting search so it performs a somewhat
fuzzy match.
Previously it did not handle seperators such as "space" and a
term such as "min_post_length" would not find "min_first_post_length"
A more liberal search algorithm makes it easier to the AI to
navigate settings.
* Minor fix, {{and parameter.enum parameter.enum.length}} is non
obviously broken.
If parameter.enum is a tracked array it will return the object
cause embers and helper implementation.
This corrects an issue where enum keeps on selecting itself by
mistake.
Previously there was too much work proofreading text, new implementation
provides a single shortcut and easy way of proofreading text.
Co-authored-by: Martin Brennan <martin@discourse.org>
`withEventValue` is not needed here, because the `onChange` event comes from ace, not a normal DOM event. But even with that fix, it seems AceEditor doesn't yet work well with the DDAU pattern. On every keypress, the editor re-renders and puts the cursor back at the beginning.
For now, this commit removes the `@onChange` hook, so we go back to relying on the two-way binding of `@content`.
Followup to a5a39dd2ee
* FEATURE: LLM Triage support for systemless models.
This change adds support for OSS models without support for system messages. LlmTriage's system message field is no longer mandatory. We now send the post contents in a separate user message.
* Models using Ollama can also disable system prompts
When navigating between topic we were not correctly resetting
internal state for summarization. This leads to a situation where
incorrect summaries can be displayed to users and wrong summaries
can be displayed.
Additionally our controller for grabbing summaries was always
streaming results via message bus, which could be delayed when
sidekiq is overloaded. We now will return the cached summary
right away if it is available direct from REST endpoint.
Creating a new model, either manually or from presets, doesn't initialize the `provider_params` object, meaning their custom params won't persist.
Additionally, this change adds some validations for Bedrock params, which are mandatory, and a clear message when a completion fails because we cannot build the URL.
- Validate fields to reduce the chance of breaking features by a misconfigured model.
- Fixed a bug where the URL might get deleted during an update.
- Display a warning when a model is currently in use.
* DEV: Remove old code now that features rely on LlmModels.
* Hide old settings and migrate persona llm overrides
* Remove shadowing special URL + seeding code. Use srv:// prefix instead.
This allows summary to use the new LLM models and migrates of API key based model selection
Claude 3.5 etc... all work now.
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Co-authored-by: Roman Rizzi <rizziromanalejandro@gmail.com>
Follow up to b863ddc94b
Ruby:
* Validate `summary` (the column is `not null`)
* Fix `name` validation (the column has `max_length` 100)
* Fix table annotations
* Accept missing `parameter` attributes (`required, `enum`, `enum_values`)
JS:
* Use native classes
* Don't use ember's array extensions
* Add explicit service injections
* Correct class names
* Use `||=` operator
* Use `store` service to create records
* Remove unused service injections
* Extract consts
* Group actions together
* Use `async`/`await`
* Use `withEventValue`
* Sort html attributes
* Use DButtons `@label` arg
* Use `input` elements instead of Ember's `Input` component (same w/ textarea)
* Remove `btn-default` class (automatically applied by DButton)
* Don't mix `I18n.t` and `i18n` in the same template
* Don't track props that aren't used in a template
* Correct invalid `target.value` code
* Remove unused/invalid `this.parameter`/`onChange` code
* Whitespace
* Use the new service import `inject as service` -> `service`
* Use `Object.entries()`
* Add missing i18n strings
* Fix an error in `addEnumValue` (calling `pushObject` on `undefined`)
* Use `TrackedArray`/`TrackedObject`
* Transform tool `parameters` keys (`enumValues` -> `enum_values`)
Introduces custom AI tools functionality.
1. Why it was added:
The PR adds the ability to create, manage, and use custom AI tools within the Discourse AI system. This feature allows for more flexibility and extensibility in the AI capabilities of the platform.
2. What it does:
- Introduces a new `AiTool` model for storing custom AI tools
- Adds CRUD (Create, Read, Update, Delete) operations for AI tools
- Implements a tool runner system for executing custom tool scripts
- Integrates custom tools with existing AI personas
- Provides a user interface for managing custom tools in the admin panel
3. Possible use cases:
- Creating custom tools for specific tasks or integrations (stock quotes, currency conversion etc...)
- Allowing administrators to add new functionalities to AI assistants without modifying core code
- Implementing domain-specific tools for particular communities or industries
4. Code structure:
The PR introduces several new files and modifies existing ones:
a. Models:
- `app/models/ai_tool.rb`: Defines the AiTool model
- `app/serializers/ai_custom_tool_serializer.rb`: Serializer for AI tools
b. Controllers:
- `app/controllers/discourse_ai/admin/ai_tools_controller.rb`: Handles CRUD operations for AI tools
c. Views and Components:
- New Ember.js components for tool management in the admin interface
- Updates to existing AI persona management components to support custom tools
d. Core functionality:
- `lib/ai_bot/tool_runner.rb`: Implements the custom tool execution system
- `lib/ai_bot/tools/custom.rb`: Defines the custom tool class
e. Routes and configurations:
- Updates to route configurations to include new AI tool management pages
f. Migrations:
- `db/migrate/20240618080148_create_ai_tools.rb`: Creates the ai_tools table
g. Tests:
- New test files for AI tool functionality and integration
The PR integrates the custom tools system with the existing AI persona framework, allowing personas to use both built-in and custom tools. It also includes safety measures such as timeouts and HTTP request limits to prevent misuse of custom tools.
Overall, this PR significantly enhances the flexibility and extensibility of the Discourse AI system by allowing administrators to create and manage custom AI tools tailored to their specific needs.
Co-authored-by: Martin Brennan <martin@discourse.org>
Previously, we stored request parameters like the OpenAI organization and Bedrock's access key and region as site settings. This change stores them in the `llm_models` table instead, letting us drop more settings while also becoming more flexible.