👋 Hi there! Thank you for being interested in contributing to LangChain. As an open source project in a rapidly developing field, we are extremely open to contributions, whether it be in the form of a new feature, improved infra, or better documentation.
To contribute to this project, please follow a "fork and pull request" workflow. Please do not try to push directly to this repo unless you are a maintainer.
If you are not sure what to work on, we have a few suggestions:
- Look at the issues with the help wanted label. These are issues that we think are good targets for contributors. If you are interested in working on one of these, please comment on the issue so that we can assign it to you. And if you have any questions let us know, we're happy to guide you!
- At the moment our main focus is reaching parity with the Python version for features and base functionality. If you are interested in working on a specific integration or feature, please let us know and we can help you get started.
We aim to keep the same core APIs between the Python and JS versions of LangChain, where possible. As such we ask that if you have an idea for a new abstraction, please open an issue first to discuss it. This will help us make sure that the API is consistent across both versions. If you're not sure what to work on, we recommend looking at the links above first.
LangChain supports several different types of integrations with third-party providers and frameworks, including LLM providers (e.g. OpenAI), vector stores (e.g. FAISS), document loaders (e.g. Apify) persistent message history stores (e.g. Redis), and more.
We welcome such contributions, but ask that you read our dedicated integration contribution guide for specific details and patterns to consider before opening a pull request.
You can also check out the guide on extending LangChain.js in our docs.
Integrations should generally reside in the libs/langchain-community
workspace and be imported as @langchain/community/module/name
. More in-depth integrations or suites of integrations may also reside in separate packages that depend on and extend @langchain/core
. See @langchain/google-genai
for an example.
To make creating packages like this easier, we offer the create-langchain-integration
utility that will automatically scaffold a repo with support for both ESM + CJS entrypoints. You can run it like this:
$ npx create-langchain-integration
If you're interested in contributing a feature that's already in the LangChain Python repo and you'd like some help getting started, you can try pasting code snippets and classes into the LangChain Python to JS translator.
It's a chat interface wrapping a fine-tuned gpt-3.5-turbo
instance trained on prior ported features. This allows the model to innately take into account LangChain-specific code style and imports.
It's an ongoing project, and feedback on runs will be used to improve the LangSmith dataset for further fine-tuning! Try it out below:
https://langchain-translator.vercel.app/
Our issues page contains with bugs, improvements, and feature requests.
If you start working on an issue, please assign it to yourself.
If you are adding an issue, please try to keep it focused on a single modular bug/improvement/feature. If the two issues are related, or blocking, please link them rather than keep them as one single one.
We will try to keep these issues as up to date as possible, though with the rapid rate of development in this field some may get out of date. If you notice this happening, please just let us know.
Although we try to have a developer setup to make it as easy as possible for others to contribute (see below) it is possible that some pain point may arise around environment setup, linting, documentation, or other. Should that occur, please contact a maintainer! Not only do we want to help get you unblocked, but we also want to make sure that the process is smooth for future contributors.
In a similar vein, we do enforce certain linting, formatting, and documentation standards in the codebase. If you are finding these difficult (or even just annoying) to work with, feel free to contact a maintainer for help - we do not want these to get in the way of getting good code into the codebase.
As of now, LangChain has an ad hoc release process: releases are cut with high frequency by a developer and published to npm.
LangChain follows the semver versioning standard. However, as pre-1.0 software, even patch releases may contain non-backwards-compatible changes.
If your contribution has made its way into a release, we will want to give you credit on Twitter (only if you want though)! If you have a Twitter account you would like us to mention, please let us know in the PR or in another manner.
You can invoke the release flow by calling yarn release
from the package root.
There are three parameters which can be passed to this script, one required and two optional.
- Required:
--workspace <workspace name>
. eg:--workspace @langchain/core
(always appended as the first flag when runningyarn release
) - Optional:
--bump-deps
eg--bump-deps
Will find all packages in the repo which depend on this workspace and checkout a new branch, update the dep version, run yarn install, commit & push to new branch. - Optional:
--tag <tag>
eg--tag beta
Add a tag to the NPM release.
This script automatically bumps the package version, creates a new release branch with the changes, pushes the branch to GitHub, uses release-it
to automatically release to NPM, and more depending on the flags passed.
Halfway through this script, you'll be prompted to enter an NPM OTP (typically from an authenticator app). This value is not stored anywhere and is only used to authenticate the NPM release.
Full example: yarn release @langchain/core --bump-deps --tag beta
.
This project uses the following tools, which are worth getting familiar with if you plan to contribute:
- yarn (v3.4.1) - dependency management
- eslint - enforcing standard lint rules
- prettier - enforcing standard code formatting
- jest - testing code
- TypeDoc - reference doc generation from comments
- Docusaurus - static site generation for documentation
Clone this repo, then cd into it:
cd langchainjs
Next, try running the following common tasks:
Our goal is to make it as easy as possible for you to contribute to this project.
All of the below commands should be run from within a workspace directory (e.g. langchain
, libs/langchain-community
) unless otherwise noted.
cd langchain
Or, if you are working on a community integration:
cd libs/langchain-community
Prerequisite: Node version 18+ is required. Please check node version node -v
and update it if required.
To get started, you will need to install the dependencies for the project. To do so, run:
yarn
Then, you will need to switch directories into langchain-core
and build core by running:
cd ../langchain-core
yarn
yarn build
We use eslint to enforce standard lint rules. To run the linter, run:
yarn lint
We use prettier to enforce code formatting style. To run the formatter, run:
yarn format
To just check for formatting differences, without fixing them, run:
yarn format:check
In general, tests should be added within a tests/
folder alongside the modules they
are testing.
Unit tests cover modular logic that does not require calls to outside APIs.
If you add new logic, please add a unit test.
Unit tests should be called *.test.ts
.
To run only unit tests, run:
yarn test
To run a single test, run the following from within a workspace:
yarn test:single /path/to/yourtest.test.ts
This is useful for developing individual features.
Integration tests cover logic that requires making calls to outside APIs (often integration with other services).
If you add support for a new external API, please add a new integration test.
Integration tests should be called *.int.test.ts
.
Note that most integration tests require credentials or other setup. You will likely need to set up a langchain/.env
or libs/langchain-community/.env
file
like the example here.
We generally recommend only running integration tests with yarn test:single
, but if you want to run all integration tests, run:
yarn test:integration
To build the project, run:
yarn build
LangChain exposes multiple subpaths the user can import from, e.g.
import { OpenAI } from "langchain/llms/openai";
We call these subpaths "entrypoints". In general, you should create a new entrypoint if you are adding a new integration with a 3rd party library. If you're adding self-contained functionality without any external dependencies, you can add it to an existing entrypoint.
In order to declare a new entrypoint that users can import from, you
should edit the langchain/langchain.config.js
or libs/langchain-community/langchain.config.js
file. To add an
entrypoint tools
that imports from tools/index.ts
you'd add
the following to the entrypoints
key inside the config
variable:
// ...
entrypoints: {
// ...
tools: "tools/index",
},
// ...
If you're adding a new integration which requires installing a third party dependency, you must add the entrypoint to the requiresOptionalDependency
array, also located inside langchain/langchain.config.js
or libs/langchain-community/langchain.config.js
.
// ...
requiresOptionalDependency: [
// ...
"tools/index",
],
// ...
This will make sure the entrypoint is included in the published package, and in generated documentation.
- Quarto - package that converts Jupyter notebooks (
.ipynb
files) into.mdx
files for serving in Docusaurus. yarn build --filter=core_docs
- It's as simple as that! (or you can simply runyarn build
fromdocs/core_docs/
)
All notebooks are converted to .md
files and automatically gitignored. If you would like to create a non notebook doc, it must be a .mdx
file.
When adding new dependencies inside the notebook you must update the import map inside deno.json
in the root of the LangChain repo.
This is required because the notebooks use the Deno runtime, and Deno formats imports differently than Node.js.
Example:
// Import in Node:
import { z } from "zod";
// Import in Deno:
import { z } from "npm:/zod";
See examples inside deno.json
for more details.
Docs are largely autogenerated by TypeDoc from the code.
For that reason, we ask that you add good documentation to all classes and methods.
Similar to linting, we recognize documentation can be annoying. If you do not want to do it, please contact a project maintainer, and they can help you with it. We do not want this to be a blocker for good code getting contributed.
Documentation and the skeleton lives under the docs/
folder. Example code is imported from under the examples/
folder.
If you add a new major piece of functionality, it is helpful to add an example to showcase how to use it. Most of our users find examples to be the most helpful kind of documentation.
Examples can be added in the examples/src
directory, e.g.
examples/src/path/to/example
. This
example can then be invoked with yarn example path/to/example
at the top
level of the repo.
To run examples that require an environment variable, you'll need to add a .env
file under examples/.env
.
To generate and view the documentation locally, change to the project root and run yarn
to ensure dependencies get installed
in both the docs/
and examples/
workspaces:
cd ..
yarn
Then run:
yarn docs
Environment tests test whether LangChain works across different JS environments, including Node.js (both ESM and CJS), Edge environments (eg. Cloudflare Workers), and browsers (using Webpack).
To run the environment tests with Docker, run the following command from the project root:
yarn test:exports:docker