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Google Memorystore for Redis

Google Memorystore for Redis is a fully-managed service that is powered by the Redis in-memory data store to build application caches that provide sub-millisecond data access. Extend your database application to build AI-powered experiences leveraging Memorystore for Redis's Langchain integrations.

This notebook goes over how to use Memorystore for Redis to store vector embeddings with the MemorystoreVectorStore class.

Learn more about the package on GitHub.

Open In Colab

Pre-reqs

Before You Begin

To run this notebook, you will need to do the following:

🦜🔗 Library Installation

The integration lives in its own langchain-google-memorystore-redis package, so we need to install it.

%pip install -upgrade --quiet langchain-google-memorystore-redis langchain

Colab only: Uncomment the following cell to restart the kernel or use the button to restart the kernel. For Vertex AI Workbench you can restart the terminal using the button on top.

# # Automatically restart kernel after installs so that your environment can access the new packages
# import IPython

# app = IPython.Application.instance()
# app.kernel.do_shutdown(True)

☁ Set Your Google Cloud Project

Set your Google Cloud project so that you can leverage Google Cloud resources within this notebook.

If you don't know your project ID, try the following:

# @markdown Please fill in the value below with your Google Cloud project ID and then run the cell.

PROJECT_ID = "my-project-id" # @param {type:"string"}

# Set the project id
!gcloud config set project {PROJECT_ID}

🔐 Authentication

Authenticate to Google Cloud as the IAM user logged into this notebook in order to access your Google Cloud Project.

  • If you are using Colab to run this notebook, use the cell below and continue.
  • If you are using Vertex AI Workbench, check out the setup instructions here.
from google.colab import auth

auth.authenticate_user()

Basic Usage

Initialize a Vector Index

import redis
from langchain_google_memorystore_redis import (
DistanceStrategy,
HNSWConfig,
RedisVectorStore,
)

# Connect to a Memorystore for Redis instance
redis_client = redis.from_url("redis://127.0.0.1:6379")

# Configure HNSW index with descriptive parameters
index_config = HNSWConfig(
name="my_vector_index", distance_strategy=DistanceStrategy.COSINE, vector_size=128
)

# Initialize/create the vector store index
RedisVectorStore.init_index(client=redis_client, index_config=index_config)

Prepare Documents

Text needs processing and numerical representation before interacting with a vector store. This involves:

  • Loading Text: The TextLoader obtains text data from a file (e.g., "state_of_the_union.txt").
  • Text Splitting: The CharacterTextSplitter breaks the text into smaller chunks for embedding models.
from langchain.text_splitter import CharacterTextSplitter
from langchain_community.document_loaders import TextLoader

loader = TextLoader("./state_of_the_union.txt")
documents = loader.load()
text_splitter = CharacterTextSplitter(chunk_size=1000, chunk_overlap=0)
docs = text_splitter.split_documents(documents)

Add Documents to the Vector Store

After text preparation and embedding generation, the following methods insert them into the Redis vector store.

Method 1: Classmethod for Direct Insertion

This approach combines embedding creation and insertion into a single step using the from_documents classmethod:

from langchain_community.embeddings.fake import FakeEmbeddings

embeddings = FakeEmbeddings(size=128)
redis_client = redis.from_url("redis://127.0.0.1:6379")
rvs = RedisVectorStore.from_documents(
docs, embedding=embeddings, client=redis_client, index_name="my_vector_index"
)

Method 2: Instance-Based Insertion

This approach offers flexibility when working with a new or existing RedisVectorStore:

  • [Optional] Create a RedisVectorStore Instance: Instantiate a RedisVectorStore object for customization. If you already have an instance, proceed to the next step.
  • Add Text with Metadata: Provide raw text and metadata to the instance. Embedding generation and insertion into the vector store are handled automatically.
rvs = RedisVectorStore(
client=redis_client, index_name="my_vector_index", embeddings=embeddings
)
ids = rvs.add_texts(
texts=[d.page_content for d in docs], metadatas=[d.metadata for d in docs]
)

Perform a Similarity Search (KNN)

With the vector store populated, it's possible to search for text semantically similar to a query. Here's how to use KNN (K-Nearest Neighbors) with default settings:

  • Formulate the Query: A natural language question expresses the search intent (e.g., "What did the president say about Ketanji Brown Jackson").
  • Retrieve Similar Results: The similarity_search method finds items in the vector store closest to the query in meaning.
import pprint

query = "What did the president say about Ketanji Brown Jackson"
knn_results = rvs.similarity_search(query=query)
pprint.pprint(knn_results)

Range queries provide more control by specifying a desired similarity threshold along with the query text:

  • Formulate the Query: A natural language question defines the search intent.
  • Set Similarity Threshold: The distance_threshold parameter determines how close a match must be considered relevant.
  • Retrieve Results: The similarity_search_with_score method finds items from the vector store that fall within the specified similarity threshold.
rq_results = rvs.similarity_search_with_score(query=query, distance_threshold=0.8)
pprint.pprint(rq_results)

MMR queries aim to find results that are both relevant to the query and diverse from each other, reducing redundancy in search results.

  • Formulate the Query: A natural language question defines the search intent.
  • Balance Relevance and Diversity: The lambda_mult parameter controls the trade-off between strict relevance and promoting variety in the results.
  • Retrieve MMR Results: The max_marginal_relevance_search method returns items that optimize the combination of relevance and diversity based on the lambda setting.
mmr_results = rvs.max_marginal_relevance_search(query=query, lambda_mult=0.90)
pprint.pprint(mmr_results)

Use the Vector Store as a Retriever

For seamless integration with other LangChain components, a vector store can be converted into a Retriever. This offers several advantages:

  • LangChain Compatibility: Many LangChain tools and methods are designed to directly interact with retrievers.
  • Ease of Use: The as_retriever() method converts the vector store into a format that simplifies querying.
retriever = rvs.as_retriever()
results = retriever.invoke(query)
pprint.pprint(results)

Clean up

Delete Documents from the Vector Store

Occasionally, it's necessary to remove documents (and their associated vectors) from the vector store. The delete method provides this functionality.

rvs.delete(ids)

Delete a Vector Index

There might be circumstances where the deletion of an existing vector index is necessary. Common reasons include:

  • Index Configuration Changes: If index parameters need modification, it's often required to delete and recreate the index.
  • Storage Management: Removing unused indices can help free up space within the Redis instance.

Caution: Vector index deletion is an irreversible operation. Be certain that the stored vectors and search functionality are no longer required before proceeding.

# Delete the vector index
RedisVectorStore.drop_index(client=redis_client, index_name="my_vector_index")

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