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Atla is a platform for monitoring and improving AI agents.

Project description

Atla Insights

Atla Insights is a platform for monitoring and improving AI agents.

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Installation

pip install atla-insights

To install package-specific dependencies:

pip install "atla-insights[litellm]"

Usage

Configuration

Before using Atla Insights, you need to configure it with your authentication token:

from atla_insights import configure

# Run this command at the start of your application.
configure(token="<MY_ATLA_INSIGHTS_TOKEN>")

You can retrieve your authentication token from the Atla Insights platform.

Instrumentation

In order for spans/traces to become available in your Atla Insights dashboard, you will need to add some form of instrumentation.

As a starting point, you will want to instrument your GenAI library of choice.

See the section below to find out which frameworks & providers we currently support.

All instrumentation methods share a common interface, which allows you to do the following:

  • Session-wide (un)instrumentation: You can manually enable/disable instrumentation throughout your application.
from atla_insights import configure, instrument_my_framework, uninstrument_my_framework

configure(...)
instrument_my_framework()

# All framework code from this point onwards will be instrumented

uninstrument_my_framework()

# All framework code from this point onwards will **no longer** be instrumented
  • Instrumented contexts: All instrumentation methods also behave as context managers that automatically handle (un)instrumentation.
from atla_insights import configure, instrument_my_framework

configure()

with instrument_my_framework():
    # All framework code inside the context will be instrumented

# All framework code outside the context **not** be instrumented

Instrumentation Support

Providers

We currently support the following LLM providers:

Provider Instrumentation Function Notes
Anthropic instrument_anthropic
Google GenAI instrument_google_genai E.g., Gemini
LiteLLM instrument_litellm Supports all available models in the LiteLLM framework
OpenAI instrument_openai

⚠️ Note that, by default, instrumented LLM calls will be treated independently from one another. In order to logically group LLM calls into a trace, you will need to group them as follows:

from atla_insights import configure, instrument, instrument_litellm
from litellm import completion

configure(...)
instrument_litellm()

# The LiteLLM calls below will belong to **separate traces**
result_1 = completion(...)
result_2 = completion(...)

@instrument("My agent doing its thing")
def run_my_agent() -> None:
    # The LiteLLM calls within this function will belong to the **same trace**
    result_1 = completion(...)
    result_2 = completion(...)
    ...

Frameworks

We currently support the following frameworks:

Framework Instrumentation Function Notes
Agno instrument_agno Supported with openai, google-genai, litellm and/or anthropic models*
CrewAI instrument_crewai
LangChain instrument_langchain This includes e.g., LangGraph as well
MCP instrument_mcp Only includes context propagation. You will need to instrument the model calling the MCP server separately.
OpenAI Agents instrument_openai_agents Supported with openai, google-genai, litellm and/or anthropic models*
Smolagents instrument_smolagents Supported with openai, google-genai, litellm and/or anthropic models*

⚠️ *Note that some frameworks do not provide their own LLM interface. In these cases, you will need to instrument both the framework and the underlying LLM provider(s) as follows:

from atla_insights import configure, instrument, instrument_agno

configure(...)

# If you are using a single LLM provider (e.g., via `OpenAIChat`).
instrument_agno("openai")

# If you are using multiple LLM providers (e.g., `OpenAIChat` and `Claude`).
instrument_agno(["anthropic", "openai"])

Adding metadata

You can attach metadata to a run that provides additional information about the specs of that specific workflow. This can include various system settings, prompt versions, etc.

from atla_insights import configure

# We can define some system settings, prompt versions, etc. we'd like to keep track of.
metadata = {
    "environment": "dev",
    "prompt-version": "v1.4",
    "model": "gpt-4o-2024-08-06",
    "run-id": "my-test",
}

# Any subsequent generated traces will inherit the metadata specified here.
configure(
    token="<MY_ATLA_INSIGHTS_TOKEN>",
    metadata=metadata,
)

Tool invocations

If you want to ensure your function-based tool calls are logged correctly, you can wrap them using the @tool decorator as follows:

from atla_insights import tool

@tool
def my_tool(my_arg: str) -> str:
    return "some-output"

⚠️ Note that if you are using an instrumented framework, you do not need to manually decorate your tools in this way.

Marking trace success / failure

The logical notion of success or failure plays a prominent role in the observability of (agentic) GenAI applications.

Therefore, the atla_insights package offers the functionality to mark a trace as a success or a failure like follows:

from atla_insights import (
    configure,
    instrument,
    instrument_openai,
    mark_failure,
    mark_success,
)
from openai import OpenAI

configure(...)
instrument_openai()

client = OpenAI()

@instrument("My agent doing its thing")
def run_my_agent() -> None:
    result = client.chat.completions.create(
        model=...,
        messages=[
            {
                "role": "user",
                "content": "What is 1 + 2? Reply with only the answer, nothing else.",
            }
        ]
    )
    response = result.choices[0].message.content

    # Note that you could have any arbitrary success condition, including LLMJ-based evaluations
    if response == "3":
        mark_success()
    else:
        mark_failure()

⚠️ Note that you should use this marking functionality within an instrumented function.

Compatibility with existing observability

As atla_insights provides its own instrumentation, we should note potential interactions with our instrumentation / observability providers.

atla_insights instrumentation is generally compatible with most popular observability platforms.

E.g., the following code snippet will make tracing available in both Atla and Langfuse.

from atla_insights import configure, instrument_openai
from langfuse.openai import OpenAI

configure(...)

instrument_openai()

client = OpenAI()
client.chat.completions.create(...)

OpenTelemetry compatibility

The Atla Insights SDK is built on the OpenTelemetry standard and fully compatible with other OpenTelemetry services.

If you have an existing OpenTelemetry setup (e.g., by setting the relevant otel environment variables), Atla Insights will be additive to this setup. I.e., it will add additional logging on top of what is already getting logged.

If you do not have an existing OpenTelemetry setup, Atla Insights will initialize a new (global) tracer provider.

Next to the above, you also have the ability to add any arbitrary additional span processors by following the example below:

from atla_insights import configure
from opentelemetry.exporter.otlp.proto.http.trace_exporter import OTLPSpanExporter
from opentelemetry.sdk.trace.export import SimpleSpanProcessor

# This is the otel traces endpoint for my provider of choice.
my_otel_endpoint = "https://my-otel-provider/v1/traces"

my_span_exporter = OTLPSpanExporter(endpoint=my_otel_endpoint)
my_span_processor = SimpleSpanProcessor(my_span_exporter)

configure(
    token="<MY_ATLA_INSIGHTS_TOKEN>",
    # This will ensure traces get sent to my otel provider of choice
    additional_span_processors=[my_span_processor],
)

More examples

More specific examples can be found in the examples/ folder.

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