Kyma Companion provides in-app context-sensitive help and general assistance to Kyma users.
Required software:
- Python 3.12.*
- Poetry
- Redis server
We use Poetry to manage dependencies in the project. Here's a quick guide on how to add, remove, and update dependencies using Poetry.
To install all the dependencies listed in the pyproject.toml
file, use the following command:
poetry install
To update a specific dependency to its latest version, use the poetry update
command followed by the name of the package:
poetry update {package_name}
To add a new dependency to your project, use the poetry add
command followed by the name of the package you want to add:
poetry add {package_name}
Or, with an exact version:
poetry add {package_name}@{version}
To remove a dependency from your project, you can use the poetry remove
command followed by the name of the package:
poetry remove {package_name}
To create a virtual environment for the project, navigate to the project's root directory and run the following command:
poetry install
This creates a new virtual environment and installs the project's dependencies.
To use the virtual environment, follow this procedure.
[!NOTE] Run these commands in the root directory of your project, where the
pyproject.toml
file is located.
-
Use
poetry shell
to start a new shell session with the virtual environment activated:```bash poetry shell ```
Now, you can run Python and any installed packages in this shell. They will use the virtual environment.
-
Use
poetry run
to execute a command. -
Use the
deactivate
command to exit the virtual environment.
If you are a PyCharm user and want to use the virtual environment created by Poetry, follow the configuration guides.
Poe the Poet is a task runner that simplifies running common tasks in a Python project.
To have the command available as poetry poe <command>
(as seen in the following examples), install poe as a plugin to Poetry:
poetry self add 'poethepoet[poetry_plugin]'
If you don't install this plugin, you must run poe as a script within the Poetry environment using poetry run poe <command>
.
Before running the application, you must provide the Redis server. It stores the conversation with a large language model (LLM). Therefore, provide REDIS_URL as an environment variable.
For details on how to create a Redis server, read Create Redis.
For example, REDIS_URL="redis://{host or ip}:6379"
You can execute the Kyma Companion locally using the FastAPI framework with the following command:
poetry run fastapi dev src/main.py --port 8000
Or, with a poe task:
$ poetry poe run-local
It is recommended to run Kyma Companion with Poetry because it activates and uses its virtual environment if not activated yet.
[!NOTE] You cannot run it with Python directly.
Because the companion uses the FastAPI framework, read the following documentation on how to debug the application with the respective IDE:
For local development, you can configure LLMs by modifying the config/config.json
file.
To use a configuration file from a different location, set the CONFIG_PATH
environment variable to the path of your desired JSON configuration file.
To execute linting, formatting, and type checking using Ruff, Black, and mypy, respectively use the following command:
poetry poe codecheck
To fix linting and formatting issues, use the following command:
poetry poe codefix
Mypy does not support fixing issues automatically.
It is recommended to execute the Ruff linting check with the poe lint task with the following command:
poetry poe lint
Alternatively, you can also do it with ruff check
directly, where Ruff may have a different version in a different virtual environment.
Linting errors can be fixed with the following command, which applies only the safe fixes by default:
poetry poe lint-fix
Warning
Use the command with caution, as it may change the code in an unexpected way.
To execute the Black formatting check with the poe format task, use the following command:
poetry poe format
You can fix formatting erros with the following command:
poetry poe format-fix
To execute type checking with mypy, use the following command:
poetry poe typecheck
Mypy does not support fixing issues automatically.
The tests written in the pytest framework can be executed with the following command:
poetry poe test
Or, with the following command:
poetry run pytest tests
For details about integration tests, read the Integration Tests README file.
For details about blackbox tests, read the Blackbox Tests README file.
Release testing and release creation are two separate processes. For details about release testing, read the Contributor README file.
See the Contributing Rules.
See the Code of Conduct document.
See the license file.