* FIX: don't show share conversation incorrectly
- ai_persona_name can be null vs undefined leading to button showing up where it should not
- do not allow sharing of conversations where user is sending PMs to self
* remove erroneous code
* avoid query
Persona users are still bots, but we were not properly accounting
for it and share icon was not showing up.
This depends on a core change that adds .topic to transformed posts
1. Personas are now optionally mentionable, meaning that you can mention them either from public topics or PMs
- Mentioning from PMs helps "switch" persona mid conversation, meaning if you want to look up sites setting you can invoke the site setting bot, or if you want to generate an image you can invoke dall e
- Mentioning outside of PMs allows you to inject a bot reply in a topic trivially
- We also add the support for max_context_posts this allow you to limit the amount of context you feed in, which can help control costs
2. Add support for a "random picker" tool that can be used to pick random numbers
3. Clean up routing ai_personas -> ai-personas
4. Add Max Context Posts so users can control how much history a persona can consume (this is important for mentionable personas)
Co-authored-by: Martin Brennan <martin@discourse.org>
* UX: Validations to Llm-backed features (except AI Bot)
This change is part of an ongoing effort to prevent enabling a broken feature due to lack of configuration. We also want to explicit which provider we are going to use. For example, Claude models are available through AWS Bedrock and Anthropic, but the configuration differs.
Validations are:
* You must choose a model before enabling the feature.
* You must turn off the feature before setting the model to blank.
* You must configure each model settings before being able to select it.
* Add provider name to summarization options
* vLLM can technically support same models as HF
* Check we can talk to the selected model
* Check for Bedrock instead of anthropic as a site could have both creds setup
We're updating core to change TL based access settings to be group based. This requires some updates of tests to work correctly. (The existing test setup gives false positives.)
* DEV: AI bot migration to the Llm pattern.
We added tool and conversation context support to the Llm service in discourse-ai#366, meaning we met all the conditions to migrate this module.
This PR migrates to the new pattern, meaning adding a new bot now requires minimal effort as long as the service supports it. On top of this, we introduce the concept of a "Playground" to separate the PM-specific bits from the completion, allowing us to use the bot in other contexts like chat in the future. Commands are called tools, and we simplified all the placeholder logic to perform updates in a single place, making the flow more one-wayish.
* Followup fixes based on testing
* Cleanup unused inference code
* FIX: text-based tools could be in the middle of a sentence
* GPT-4-turbo support
* Use new LLM API
* FEATURE: allow easy sharing of bot conversations
* Lean on new core API i
* Added system spec for copy functionality
* Update assets/javascripts/initializers/ai-bot-replies.js
Co-authored-by: Alan Guo Xiang Tan <gxtan1990@gmail.com>
* discourse later insted of setTimeout
* Update spec/system/ai_bot/share_spec.rb
Co-authored-by: Alan Guo Xiang Tan <gxtan1990@gmail.com>
* feedback from review
just check the whole payload
* remove uneeded code
* fix spec
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Co-authored-by: Alan Guo Xiang Tan <gxtan1990@gmail.com>
Previous to this change we relied on explicit loading for a files in Discourse AI.
This had a few downsides:
- Busywork whenever you add a file (an extra require relative)
- We were not keeping to conventions internally ... some places were OpenAI others are OpenAi
- Autoloader did not work which lead to lots of full application broken reloads when developing.
This moves all of DiscourseAI into a Zeitwerk compatible structure.
It also leaves some minimal amount of manual loading (automation - which is loading into an existing namespace that may or may not be there)
To avoid needing /lib/discourse_ai/... we mount a namespace thus we are able to keep /lib pointed at ::DiscourseAi
Various files were renamed to get around zeitwerk rules and minimize usage of custom inflections
Though we can get custom inflections to work it is not worth it, will require a Discourse core patch which means we create a hard dependency.
We must ensure we can isolate titles, and the models sometimes ignore the example we give them.
Additionally, anons can generate HyDE posts, so we need to check if user is nil when attempting to log requests.
* FIX: no selected persona should pick first prioritized one
Previously we were looking at `.personaId` but there is only an
id attribute so it failed
* FEATURE: new DALL-E-3 persona
This persona generates images using DALL-E-3 API and is enabled
by default
Keep in mind that we are still waiting on seeds/gen_id so we can
not retain style consistently between turns.
This will change as soon as a new Open AI API provides the missing
parameters
Co-authored-by: Martin Brennan <martin@discourse.org>
People tend to keep to 1 persona when working with the bot,
this adds local browser memory for the last persona you interacted
with so you do not need to select it over and over again.
This is per browser, not per user memory.
Also... clean up tests so they do not need to require stubs which
were breaking the build
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Co-authored-by: Martin Brennan <martin@discourse.org>
Introduces a UI to manage customizable personas (admin only feature)
Part of the change was some extensive internal refactoring:
- AIBot now has a persona set in the constructor, once set it never changes
- Command now takes in bot as a constructor param, so it has the correct persona and is not generating AIBot objects on the fly
- Added a .prettierignore file, due to the way ALE is configured in nvim it is a pre-req for prettier to work
- Adds a bunch of validations on the AIPersona model, system personas (artist/creative etc...) are all seeded. We now ensure
- name uniqueness, and only allow certain properties to be touched for system personas.
- (JS note) the client side design takes advantage of nested routes, the parent route for personas gets all the personas via this.store.findAll("ai-persona") then child routes simply reach into this model to find a particular persona.
- (JS note) data is sideloaded into the ai-persona model the meta property supplied from the controller, resultSetMeta
- This removes ai_bot_enabled_personas and ai_bot_enabled_chat_commands, both should be controlled from the UI on a per persona basis
- Fixes a long standing bug in token accounting ... we were doing to_json.length instead of to_json.to_s.length
- Amended it so {commands} are always inserted at the end unconditionally, no need to add it to the template of the system message as it just confuses things
- Adds a concept of required_commands to stock personas, these are commands that must be configured for this stock persona to show up.
- Refactored tests so we stop requiring inference_stubs, it was very confusing to need it, added to plugin.rb for now which at least is clearer
- Migrates the persona selector to gjs
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Co-authored-by: Joffrey JAFFEUX <j.jaffeux@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Martin Brennan <martin@discourse.org>
Adds an AI Helper function when selecting text while viewing a topic.
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Co-authored-by: Keegan George <kgeorge13@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Roman Rizzi <roman@discourse.org>
Previous to this change we relied on client side settings to
determine if an end user has access to the ai bot.
This meant that if a user was not aware they are a member of a
group (as it is with restricted visibility ones) they would not
see the bot button.
All checking has now moved to the server side, and tests were
added to cover.