llm-chat (1.1.0)
Installation
pip install --index-url llm-chat
About this package
A general CLI interface for large language models.
LLM Chat
This project is currently a CLI interface for OpenAI's GPT model API. The long term goal is to be much more general and interface with any LLM, whether that be a cloud service or a model running locally.
Usage
Installation
The package is not currently published so you will need to build it yourself. To do so you will need Poetry v1.5 or later. Once you have that installed, run the following commands:
git clone https://code.harrison.sh/paul/llm-chat.git
cd llm-chat
poetry build
This will create a wheel file in the dist
directory. You can then install it with pip
:
pip install dist/llm_chat-0.6.1-py3-none-any.whl
Note, a much better way to install this package system wide is to use pipx. This will install the package in an isolated environment and make the llm
command available on your path.
Configuration
Your OpenAI API key must be set in the OPENAI_API_KEY
environment variable. The following additional environment variables are supported:
Variable | Description |
---|---|
OPENAI_MODEL |
The model to use. Defaults to gpt-3.5-turbo . |
OPENAI_TEMPERATURE |
The temperature to use when generating text. Defaults to 0.7 . |
OPENAI_HISTORY_DIR |
The directory to store chat history in. Defaults to ~/.llm_chat . |
The settings can also be configured via command line arguments. Run llm chat --help
for more information.
Usage
To start a chat session, run the following command:
llm chat
This will start a chat session with the default settings looking something like the image below:
The CLI accepts multi-line input, so to send the input to the model press Esc + Enter
. After each message a running total cost will be displayed. To exit the chat session, send the message /q
.
There are several additional options available:
--context
allows you to provide one or more text files as context for your chat, which is sent as an initial system message at the start of the conversation. You can provide the argument multiple times to add multiple files.--name
gives your chat session a name. This is used to name the history file.
See llm chat --help
for a full description of all options and their usage.
Finally, you can load a previous chat session using the llm load
command. For example:
llm load /path/to/session.json
See llm load --help
for more information.