Skip to main content

Pinecone client and SDK

Project description

Pinecone Python Client · License CI

The official Pinecone Python client.

For more information, see the docs at https://www.pinecone.io/docs/

Documentation

Example code

Many of the brief examples shown in this README are using very small vectors to keep the documentation concise, but most real world usage will involve much larger embedding vectors. To see some more realistic examples of how this client can be used, explore some of our many Jupyter notebooks in the examples repository.

Prerequisites

The Pinecone Python client is compatible with Python 3.8 and greater.

Installation

There are two flavors of the Pinecone python client. The default client installed from PyPI as pinecone-client has a minimal set of dependencies and interacts with Pinecone via HTTP requests.

If you are aiming to maximimize performance, you can install additional gRPC dependencies to access an alternate client implementation that relies on gRPC for data operations. See the guide on tuning performance.

Installing with pip

# Install the latest version
pip3 install pinecone-client

# Install the latest version, with extra grpc dependencies
pip3 install "pinecone-client[grpc]"

# Install a specific version
pip3 install pinecone-client==3.0.0

# Install a specific version, with grpc extras
pip3 install "pinecone-client[grpc]"==3.0.0

Installing with poetry

# Install the latest version
poetry add pinecone

# Install the latest version, with grpc extras
poetry add pinecone --extras grpc

# Install a specific version
poetry add pinecone-client==3.0.0

# Install a specific version, with grpc extras
poetry add pinecone-client==3.0.0 --extras grpc

Usage

Initializing the client

Before you can use the Pinecone SDK, you must sign up for an account and find your API key in the Pinecone console dashboard at https://app.pinecone.io.

Using environment variables

The Pinecone class is your main entry point into the Pinecone python SDK. If you have set your API Key in the PINECONE_API_KEY environment variable, you can instantiate the client with no other arguments.

from pinecone import Pinecone

pc = Pinecone() # This reads the PINECONE_API_KEY env var

Using a configuration object

If you prefer to pass configuration in code, for example if you have a complex application that needs to interact with multiple different Pinecone projects, the constructor accepts a keyword argument for api_key.

If you pass configuration in this way, you can have full control over what name to use for the environment variable, sidestepping any issues that would result from two different client instances both needing to read the same PINECONE_API_KEY variable that the client implicitly checks for.

Configuration passed with keyword arguments takes precedent over environment variables.

import os
from pinecone import Pinecone

pc = Pinecone(api_key=os.environ.get('CUSTOM_VAR'))

Working with GRPC (for improved performance)

If you've followed instructions above to install with optional grpc extras, you can unlock some performance improvements by working with an alternative version of the client imported from the pinecone.grpc subpackage.

import os
from pinecone.grpc import PineconeGRPC

pc = PineconeGRPC(api_key=os.environ.get('PINECONE_API_KEY'))

# From here on, everything is identical to the REST-based client.
index = pc.Index(host='my-index-8833ca1.svc.us-east1-gcp.pinecone.io')

index.upsert(vectors=[])
index.query(vector=[...], top_key=10)

Indexes

Create Index

Create a serverless index

[!WARNING]
Serverless indexes are in public preview and are available only on AWS in the us-west-2 region. Check the current limitations and test thoroughly before using it in production.

from pinecone import Pinecone, ServerlessSpec

pc = Pinecone(api_key='<<PINECONE_API_KEY>>')
pc.create_index(
    name='my-index',
    dimension=1536,
    metric='euclidean',
    spec=ServerlessSpec(
        cloud='aws',
        region='us-west-2'
    )
)

Create a pod index

The following example creates an index without a metadata configuration. By default, Pinecone indexes all metadata.

from pinecone import Pinecone, PodSpec

pc = Pinecone(api_key='<<PINECONE_API_KEY>>')
pc.create_index(
    name="example-index", 
    dimension=1536, 
    metric="cosine", 
    spec=PodSpec(
        environment='us-west-2', 
        pod_type='p1.x1'
    )
)

Pod indexes support many optional configuration fields. For example, the following example creates an index that only indexes the "color" metadata field. Queries against this index cannot filter based on any other metadata field.

from pinecone import Pinecone, PodSpec

pc = Pinecone(api_key='<<PINECONE_API_KEY>>')

metadata_config = {
    "indexed": ["color"]
}

pc.create_index(
    "example-index-2",
    dimension=1536,
    spec=PodSpec(
        environment='us-west-2', 
        pod_type='p1.x1', 
        metadata_config=metadata_config
    )
)

List indexes

The following example returns all indexes in your project.

from pinecone import Pinecone

pc = Pinecone(api_key='<<PINECONE_API_KEY>>')
for index in pc.list_indexes():
    print(index['name'])

Describe index

The following example returns information about the index example-index.

from pinecone import Pinecone

pc = Pinecone(api_key='<<PINECONE_API_KEY>>')

index_description = pc.describe_index("example-index")

Delete an index

The following example deletes the index named example-index.

from pinecone import Pinecone

pc = Pinecone(api_key='<<PINECONE_API_KEY>>')

pc.delete_index("example-index")

Scale replicas

The following example changes the number of replicas for example-index.

from pinecone import Pinecone

pc = Pinecone(api_key='<<PINECONE_API_KEY>>')

new_number_of_replicas = 4
pc.configure_index("example-index", replicas=new_number_of_replicas)

Describe index statistics

The following example returns statistics about the index example-index.

import os
from pinecone import Pinecone

pc = Pinecone(api_key='<<PINECONE_API_KEY>>')
index = pc.Index(host=os.environ.get('INDEX_HOST'))

index_stats_response = index.describe_index_stats()

Upsert vectors

The following example upserts vectors to example-index.

import os
from pinecone import Pinecone

pc = Pinecone(api_key='<<PINECONE_API_KEY>>')
index = pc.Index(host=os.environ.get('INDEX_HOST'))

upsert_response = index.upsert(
    vectors=[
        ("vec1", [0.1, 0.2, 0.3, 0.4], {"genre": "drama"}),
        ("vec2", [0.2, 0.3, 0.4, 0.5], {"genre": "action"}),
    ],
    namespace="example-namespace"
)

Query an index

The following example queries the index example-index with metadata filtering.

import os
from pinecone import Pinecone

pc = Pinecone(api_key='<<PINECONE_API_KEY>>')

# Find your index host by calling describe_index
# through the Pinecone web console
index = pc.Index(host=os.environ.get('INDEX_HOST'))

query_response = index.query(
    namespace="example-namespace",
    vector=[0.1, 0.2, 0.3, 0.4],
    top_k=10,
    include_values=True,
    include_metadata=True,
    filter={
        "genre": {"$in": ["comedy", "documentary", "drama"]}
    }
)

Delete vectors

The following example deletes vectors by ID.

import os
from pinecone import Pinecone

pc = Pinecone(api_key='<<PINECONE_API_KEY>>')

# Find your index host by calling describe_index
# through the Pinecone web console
index = pc.Index(host=os.environ.get('INDEX_HOST'))

delete_response = index.delete(ids=["vec1", "vec2"], namespace="example-namespace")

Fetch vectors

The following example fetches vectors by ID.

import os
from pinecone import Pinecone

pc = Pinecone(api_key='<<PINECONE_API_KEY>>')

# Find your index host by calling describe_index
# through the Pinecone web console
index = pc.Index(host=os.environ.get('INDEX_HOST'))

fetch_response = index.fetch(ids=["vec1", "vec2"], namespace="example-namespace")

Update vectors

The following example updates vectors by ID.

from pinecone import Pinecone

pc = Pinecone(api_key='<<PINECONE_API_KEY>>')

# Find your index host by calling describe_index
# through the Pinecone web console
index = pc.Index(host=os.environ.get('INDEX_HOST'))

update_response = index.update(
    id="vec1",
    values=[0.1, 0.2, 0.3, 0.4],
    set_metadata={"genre": "drama"},
    namespace="example-namespace"
)

Create collection

The following example creates the collection example-collection from example-index.

from pinecone import Pinecone

pc = Pinecone(api_key='<<PINECONE_API_KEY>>')

pc.create_collection(
    name="example-collection", 
    source="example-index"
)

List collections

The following example returns a list of the collections in the current project.

from pinecone import Pinecone

pc = Pinecone(api_key='<<PINECONE_API_KEY>>')

active_collections = pc.list_collections()

Describe a collection

The following example returns a description of the collection example-collection.

from pinecone import Pinecone

pc = Pinecone(api_key='<<PINECONE_API_KEY>>')

collection_description = pc.describe_collection("example-collection")

Delete a collection

The following example deletes the collection example-collection.

from pinecone import Pinecone

pc = Pinecone(api_key='<<PINECONE_API_KEY>>')

pc.delete_collection("example-collection")

Contributing

If you'd like to make a contribution, or get setup locally to develop the Pinecone python client, please see our contributing guide

Project details


Release history Release notifications | RSS feed

Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

pinecone_client-3.0.3.tar.gz (105.8 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

pinecone_client-3.0.3-py3-none-any.whl (207.4 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 3

File details

Details for the file pinecone_client-3.0.3.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: pinecone_client-3.0.3.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 105.8 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: poetry/1.7.1 CPython/3.12.2 Linux/6.2.0-1019-azure

File hashes

Hashes for pinecone_client-3.0.3.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 2ad3ef7627edc4d9ee248d9781861c4341d6d27a15bc05f6bef53d958837d374
MD5 a590f78f608a83a0874841df35a6512d
BLAKE2b-256 698aaaf25cc89384650c9bdfb8f1e028979cfc1db35cd8624ba43e9aea7b6ee2

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file pinecone_client-3.0.3-py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

  • Download URL: pinecone_client-3.0.3-py3-none-any.whl
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 207.4 kB
  • Tags: Python 3
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: poetry/1.7.1 CPython/3.12.2 Linux/6.2.0-1019-azure

File hashes

Hashes for pinecone_client-3.0.3-py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 940c942aeb259145e1cd6d3f214ad977dbb4dc2e626b3528fb5015c64c3e6190
MD5 7bfab3853d04cf69c22cb2b91b5bd750
BLAKE2b-256 8009c57b1872a84fbb8808bca7e9abc4e0b653f53dddfa5a51219950c508c95d

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Datadog Monitoring Fastly Fastly CDN Google Google Download Analytics Microsoft Microsoft PSF Sponsor Pingdom Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Sentry Error logging StatusPage StatusPage Status page