The Liminal SDK for Python
Project description
Liminal Python SDK
The Liminal SDK for Python provides a clean, straightforward, asyncio
-based interface
for interacting with the Liminal API.
Installation
pip install liminal-sdk-python
Python Versions
liminal
is currently supported on:
- Python 3.11
- Python 3.12
Quickstart
Presuming the use of Microsoft Entra ID as your auth provider, instantiating a Liminal API object is easy:
import asyncio
from liminal import Client
from liminal.endpoints.auth import MicrosoftAuthProvider
async def main() -> None:
"""Create the aiohttp session and run the example."""
# Create an auth provider to authenticate the user:
microsoft_auth_provider = MicrosoftAuthProvider("<TENANT_ID>", "<CLIENT_ID>")
# Create the liminal SDK instance:
liminal = Client(microsoft_auth_provider, "<LIMINAL_API_SERVER_URL>")
asyncio.run(main())
You can see several examples of how to use this API object via the examples
folder in this repo.
Initial Authentication
Liminal supports the concept of authenticating via various auth providers. Currently, the following auth providers are supported:
- Microsoft Entra ID
Microsoft Entra ID
Liminal authenticates with Microsoft Entra ID via an OAuth 2.0 Device Authorization Grant. This flow requires you to start your app, retrieve a device code from the logs produced by this SDK, and provide that code to Microsoft via a web browser. Once you complete the login process, the SDK will be authenticated for use with your Liminal instance.
Finding your Entra ID Tenant and Client IDs
- Log into your Azure portal.
- Navigate to
Microsoft Entra ID
. - Click on
App registrations
. - Either create a new app registration or select an existing one.
- In the
Overview
of the registration, look for theApplication (client) ID
andDirectory (tenant) ID
values.
Authenticating Against Entra ID
With a client ID and tenant ID, you can create a Liminal client object and authenticate it:
import asyncio
from liminal import Client
from liminal.endpoints.auth import MicrosoftAuthProvider
async def main() -> None:
"""Create the aiohttp session and run the example."""
# Create an auth provider to authenticate the user:
microsoft_auth_provider = MicrosoftAuthProvider("<TENANT_ID>", "<CLIENT_ID>")
# Create the liminal SDK instance and authenticate it:
liminal = Client(microsoft_auth_provider, "<LIMINAL_API_SERVER_URL>")
await liminal.authenticate_from_auth_provider()
asyncio.run(main())
In your application logs, you will see a message that looks like this:
INFO:liminal:To sign in, use a web browser to open the page
https://microsoft.com/devicelogin and enter the code XXXXXXXXX to authenticate.
Leaving your application running, open a browser at that URL and input the code as instructed. Once you successfully complete authentication via Entra ID, your Liminal client object will automatically authenticate with your Liminal API server.
Ongoing Authentication
After the initial authentication with your auth provider, the Liminal client object will internally store access and refresh tokens to ensure the ongoing ability to communicate with your Liminal API server. The client object will automatically handle using the stored refresh token to request new access tokens as appropriate.
Manually Interacting with the Refresh Token
The Liminal client object provides a add_refresh_token_callback
method to manually
interact with refresh tokens as they are generated. This is useful in situations where
you want to retrieve that token and do something else with (store it in a database, for
example). Every time a new refresh token is generated by the client object, the
registered callbacks will be called.
Refresh token callbacks are methods that take a single str
parameter (denoting the
refresh token). These callbacks are not expected to return any value. Lastly, when
calling add_refresh_token_callback
, the returned method allows you to cancel the
callback at any time.
import asyncio
from liminal import Client
from liminal.endpoints.auth import MicrosoftAuthProvider
async def main() -> None:
"""Create the aiohttp session and run the example."""
# Create an auth provider to authenticate the user:
microsoft_auth_provider = MicrosoftAuthProvider("<TENANT_ID>", "<CLIENT_ID>")
# Create the liminal SDK instance and authenticate it:
liminal = Client(microsoft_auth_provider, "<LIMINAL_API_SERVER_URL>")
await liminal.authenticate_from_auth_provider()
def do_something_with_refresh_token(refresh_token: str) -> None:
"""Do something with the refresh token."""
pass
# Register the refresh token callback:
remove_callback = liminal.add_refresh_token_callback(
do_something_with_refresh_token
)
# Later, if you want to remove the callback:
remove_callback()
asyncio.run(main())
Getting Model Instances
Every LLM instance connected in the Liminal admin dashboard is referred to as a "model instance." The SDK provides several methods to interact with model instances:
import asyncio
from liminal import Client
from liminal.endpoints.auth import MicrosoftAuthProvider
async def main() -> None:
# Assuming you have an authenticated `liminal` object:
# Get all available model instances:
model_instances = await liminal.llm.get_available_model_instances()
# >>> [ModelInstance(...), ModelInstance(...)]
# Get a specific model instance (if it exists):
model_instance = await liminal.llm.get_model_instance("My Model")
# >>> ModelInstance(...)
asyncio.run(main())
Managing Threads
Threads are conversations with an LLM instance:
import asyncio
from liminal import Client
from liminal.endpoints.auth import MicrosoftAuthProvider
async def main() -> None:
# Assuming you have an authenticated `liminal` object:
# Get all available threads:
threads = await liminal.thread.get_available()
# >>> [Thread(...), Thread(...)]
# Get a specific thread by ID:
thread = await liminal.thread.get_by_id(123)
# >>> Thread(...)
# Some operations require a model instance:
model_instance = await liminal.llm.get_model_instance("My Model")
# Create a new thread:
thread = await liminal.thread.create(model_instance.id, "New Thread")
# >>> Thread(...)
# Get the "de-identified" (containing sensitive data) context history for a thread:
thread = await liminal.thread.get_deidentified_context_history(model_instance.id)
# >>> [DeidentifiedToken(...), DeidentifiedToken(...), DeidentifiedToken(...)]
asyncio.run(main())
Submitting Prompts
Submitting prompts is easy:
import asyncio
from liminal import Client
from liminal.endpoints.auth import MicrosoftAuthProvider
async def main() -> None:
# Assuming you have an authenticated `liminal` object:
# Prompt operations require a thread:
thread = await liminal.thread.get_by_id(123)
# >>> Thread(...)
# Analayze a prompt for sensitive info:
findings = await liminal.prompt.analyze(thread.id)
# >>> AnalyzeResponse(...)
# Cleanse input text by applying the policies defined in the Liminal admin
# dashboard. You can optionally provide existing analysis finidings; if not
# provided, analyze is # called automatically):
cleansed = await liminal.prompt.cleanse(
thread.id, "Here is a sensitive prompt", findings=findings
)
# >>> CleanseResponse(...)
# Submit a prompt to an LLM, cleansing it in the process (once again, providing optional
# findings):
response = await liminal.prompt.submit(
thread.id, "Here is a sensitive prompt", findings=findings
)
# >>> ProcessResponse(...)
# Rehydrate a response with sensitive data:
hydrated = await liminal.prompt.hydrate(
thread.id, "Here is a response to rehdyrate"
)
# >>> HydrateResponse(...)
asyncio.run(main())
Running Examples
You can see examples of how to use this SDK via the examples
folder in
this repo. Each example follows a similar "call" format by asking for inputs via
environment variables; for example:
LIMINAL_API_SERVER_URL=https://api.DOMAIN.liminal.ai \
CLIENT_ID=xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx \
TENANT_ID=xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx \
MODEL_INSTANCE_NAME=model-instance-name \
python3 examples/quickstart_with_microsoft.py
Contributing
Thanks to all of our contributors so far!
- Check for open features/bugs or initiate a discussion on one.
- Fork the repository.
- (optional, but highly recommended) Create a virtual environment:
python3 -m venv .venv
- (optional, but highly recommended) Enter the virtual environment:
source ./.venv/bin/activate
- Install the dev environment:
script/setup
- Code your new feature or bug fix on a new branch.
- Write tests that cover your new functionality.
- Run tests and ensure 100% code coverage:
poetry run pytest --cov liminal tests
- Update
README.md
with any new documentation. - Submit a pull request!
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