Build a RAG-based QnA application using Llama3 models from SageMaker JumpStart | Amazon Web Services

Build a RAG-based QnA application using Llama3 models from SageMaker JumpStart | Amazon Web Services


Organizations generate vast amounts of data that is proprietary to them, and it’s critical to get insights out of the data for better business outcomes. Generative AI and foundation models (FMs) play an important role in creating applications using an organization’s data that improve customer experiences and employee productivity.

The FMs are typically pretrained on a large corpus of data that’s openly available on the internet. They perform well at natural language understanding tasks such as summarization, text generation, and question answering on a broad variety of topics. However, they can sometimes hallucinate or produce inaccurate responses when answering questions that they haven’t been trained on. To prevent incorrect responses and improve response accuracy, a technique called Retrieval Augmented Generation (RAG) is used to provide models with contextual data.

In this post, we provide a step-by-step guide for creating an enterprise ready RAG application such as a question answering bot. We use the Llama3-8B FM for text generation and the BGE Large EN v1.5 text embedding model for generating embeddings from Amazon SageMaker JumpStart. We also showcase how you can use FAISS as an embeddings store and packages such as LangChain for interfacing with the components and run inferences within a SageMaker Studio notebook.

SageMaker JumpStart

SageMaker JumpStart is a powerful feature within the Amazon SageMaker ML platform that provides ML practitioners a comprehensive hub of publicly available and proprietary foundation models.

Llama 3 overview

Llama 3 (developed by Meta) comes in two parameter sizes—8B and 70B with 8K context length—that can support a broad range of use cases with improvements in reasoning, code generation, and instruction following. Llama 3 uses a decoder-only transformer architecture and new tokenizer that provides improved model performance with 128K size. In addition, Meta improved post-training procedures that substantially reduced false refusal rates, improved alignment, and increased diversity in model responses.

BGE Large overview

The embedding model BGE Large stands for BAAI general embedding large. It’s developed by BAAI and is designed to enhance retrieval capabilities within large language models (LLMs). The model supports three retrieval methods:

  • Dense retrieval (BGE-M3)
  • Lexical retrieval (LLM Embedder)
  • Multi-vector retrieval (BGE Embedding Reranker).

You can use the BGE embedding model to retrieve relevant documents and then use the BGE reranker to obtain final results.

On Hugging Face, the Massive Text Embedding Benchmark (MTEB) is provided as a leaderboard for diverse text embedding tasks. It currently provides 129 benchmarking datasets across 8 different tasks on 113 languages. The top text embedding models from the MTEB leaderboard are made available from SageMaker JumpStart, including BGE Large.

For more details about this model, see the official Hugging Face mode card page.

RAG overview

Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG) is a technique that enables the integration of external knowledge sources with FM. RAG involves three main steps: retrieval, augmentation, and generation.

First, relevant content is retrieved from an external knowledge base based on the user’s query. Next, this retrieved information is combined or augmented with the user’s original input, creating an augmented prompt. Finally, the FM processes this augmented prompt, which includes both the query and the retrieved contextual information, and generates a response tailored to the specific context, incorporating the relevant knowledge from the external source.

Solution overview

You will construct a RAG QnA system on a SageMaker notebook using the Llama3-8B model and BGE Large embedding model. The following diagram illustrates the step-by-step architecture of this solution, which is described in the following sections.

Implementing this solution takes three high level steps: Deploying models, data processing and vectorization, and running inferences.

To demonstrate this solution, a sample notebook is available in the GitHub repo.

The notebook is powered by an ml.t3.medium instance to demonstrate deploying the model as an API endpoint using an SDK through SageMaker JumpStart. You can use these model endpoints to explore, experiment, and optimize for comparing advanced RAG application techniques using LangChain. We also illustrate the integration of the FAISS embeddings store into the RAG workflow, highlighting its role in storing and retrieving embeddings to enhance the application’s performance.

We will also discuss how you can use LangChain to create effective and more efficient RAG applications. LangChain is a Python library designed to build applications with LLMs. It provides a modular and flexible framework for combining LLMs with other components, such as knowledge bases, retrieval systems, and other AI tools, to create powerful and customizable applications.

After everything is set up, when a user interacts with the QnA application, the flow is as follows:

  1. The user sends a query using the QnA application.
  2. The application sends the user query to the vector database to find similar documents.
  3. The documents returned as a context are captured by the QnA application.
  4. The QnA application submits a request to the SageMaker JumpStart model endpoint with the user query and context returned from the vector database.
  5. The endpoint sends the request to the SageMaker JumpStart model.
  6. The LLM processes the request and generates an appropriate response.
  7. The response is captured by the QnA application and displayed to the user.

Prerequisites

To implement this solution, you need the following:

  • An AWS account with privileges to create AWS Identity and Access Management (IAM) roles and policies. For more information, see Overview of access management: Permissions and policies.
  • Basic familiarity with SageMaker and AWS services that support LLMs.
  • The Jupyter Notebooks needs ml.t3.medium.
  • You need access to accelerated instances (GPUs) for hosting the LLMs. This solution needs access to a minimum of the following instance sizes:
    • ml.g5.12xlarge for endpoint use when deploying the BGE Large En v1.5 text embedding model
    • ml.g5.2xlarge for endpoint use when deploying the Llama-3-8B model endpoint

To increase your quota, refer to Requesting a quota increase.

Prompt template for Llama3

While both Llama 2 and Llama 3 are powerful language models that are optimized for dialogue-based tasks, their prompting formats differ significantly in how they handle multi-turn conversations, specify roles, and mark message boundaries, reflecting distinct design choices and trade-offs.

Llama 3 prompting format: Llama 3 employs a structured format designed for multi-turn conversations involving different roles (system, user, and assistant). It uses dedicated tokens to explicitly mark roles, message boundaries, and the end of the prompt:

  • Placeholder tokens: {{user_message}} and {{assistant_message}}
  • Role marking: <|start_header_id|>{role}<|end_header_id|>
  • Message boundaries: <|eot_id|> signals end of a message within a turn.
  • Prompt End Marker: <|start_header_id|>assistant<|end_header_id|> signals start of assistant’s response.

Llama 2 prompting format: Llama 2 uses a more compact representation with different tokens for handling conversations:

  • User message enclosure: [INST][/INST]
  • Start and end of sequence: <s></s>
  • System message enclosure: <<SYS>><</SYS>>
  • Message separation: <s></s> separates user messages and model responses.

Key differences:

  • Role specification: Llama 3 uses a more explicit approach with dedicated tokens, while Llama 2 relies on enclosing tags.
  • Message boundary marking: Llama 3 uses <|eot_id|>, Llama 2 uses <s></s>.
  • Prompt end marker: Llama 3 uses <|start_header_id|>assistant<|end_header_id|>, Llama 2 uses [/INST] and </s>.

The choice depends on the use case and integration requirements. Llama 3’s format is more structured and role-aware and is better suited for conversational AI applications with complex multi-turn conversations. Llama 2’s format, while more compact, might be less explicit in handling roles and message boundaries.

Implement the solution

To implement the solution, you’ll use the following steps:

  • Set up a SageMaker Studio notebook
  • Deploy models on Amazon SageMaker JumpStart
  • Set up Llama3-8b and BGE Large En v1.5 models with LangChain
  • Prepare data and generate embeddings
    • Load documents of different kind and generate embeddings to create a vector store
  • Retrieve documents to the question using the following approaches from LangChain
    • Regular Retrieval Chain
    • Parent Document Retriever Chain
  • Prepare a prompt that goes as input to the LLM and presents an answer in a human friendly manner

Set up a SageMaker Studio notebook

To follow the code in this post:

  1. Open SageMaker Studio and clone the following GitHub repository.
  2. Open the notebook RAG-recipes/llama3-rag-langchain-smjs.ipynb and choose the PyTorch 2.0.0 Python 3.10 GPU Optimized image, Python 3 kernel, and ml.t3.medium as the instance type.
  3. If this is your first time using SageMaker Studio notebooks, see Create or Open an Amazon SageMaker Studio Notebook.

To set up the development environment, you need to install the necessary Python libraries, as demonstrated in the following code. The example notebook provided includes these commands:

%%writefile requirements.txt
langchain==0.1.14
pypdf==4.1.0
faiss-cpu==1.8.0
boto3==1.34.58
sqlalchemy==2.0.29

After the libraries are written in requirement.txt, install all the libraries:

!pip install -U -r requirements.txt --quiet

Deploy pretrained models

After you’ve imported the required libraries, you can deploy the Llama 3 8B Instruct LLM model on SageMaker JumpStart using the SageMaker SDK:

  1. Import the JumpStartModel class from the SageMaker JumpStart library
    from sagemaker.jumpstart.model import JumpStartModel

  2. Specify the model ID for the HuggingFace Llama 3 8b Instruct LLM model, and deploy the model.
    model_id = "meta-textgeneration-llama-3-8b-instruct"
    accept_eula = True
    model = JumpStartModel(model_id=model_id)
    predictor = model.deploy(accept_eula=accept_eula)

  3. Specify the model ID for the HuggingFace BGE Large EN embedding model and deploy the model.
    model_id = "huggingface-sentencesimilarity-bge-large-en-v1-5"
    text_embedding_model = JumpStartModel(model_id=model_id)
    embedding_predictor = text_embedding_model.deploy()

Set up models with LangChain

For this step, you’ll use the following code to set up models.

import json
import sagemaker
 
from langchain_core.prompts import PromptTemplate
from langchain_community.llms import SagemakerEndpoint
from langchain_community.embeddings import SagemakerEndpointEmbeddings
from langchain_community.llms.sagemaker_endpoint import LLMContentHandler
from langchain_community.embeddings.sagemaker_endpoint import EmbeddingsContentHandler

  1. Replace the endpoint names in the below code snippet with the endpoint names that are deployed in your environment. You can get the endpoint names from predictors created in the previous section or view the endpoints created by going to SageMaker Studio, left navigation deployments → endpoints and replace the values for llm_endpoint_name and embedding_endpoint_name.
    sess = sagemaker.session.Session()  # sagemaker session for interacting with different AWS APIs
    region = sess._region_name
    llm_endpoint_name = "meta-textgeneration-llama-3-8b-instruct-XXXX"
    embedding_endpoint_name = "hf-sentencesimilarity-bge-large-en-v1-XXXXX"

  2. Transform input and output data to process API calls for Llama 3 8B Instruct on Amazon SageMaker.
    from typing import Dict
     
    class Llama38BContentHandler(LLMContentHandler):
        content_type = "application/json"
        accepts = "application/json"
     
        def transform_input(self, prompt: str, model_kwargs: dict) -> bytes:
            payload = {
                "inputs": prompt,
                "parameters": {
                    "max_new_tokens": 1000,
                    "top_p": 0.9,
                    "temperature": 0.6,
                    "stop": ["<|eot_id|>"],
                },
            }
            input_str = json.dumps(
                payload,
            )
            #print(input_str)
            return input_str.encode("utf-8")
     
        def transform_output(self, output: bytes) -> str:
            response_json = json.loads(output.read().decode("utf-8"))
            #print(response_json)
            content = response_json["generated_text"].strip()
            return content 

  3. Instantiate the LLM with SageMaker and LangChain
    # Instantiate the content handler for Llama3-8B
    llama_content_handler = Llama38BContentHandler()
     
    # Setup for using the Llama3-8B model with SageMaker Endpoint
    llm = SagemakerEndpoint(
         endpoint_name=llm_endpoint_name,
         region_name=region,
         model_kwargs={"max_new_tokens": 1024, "top_p": 0.9, "temperature": 0.7},
         content_handler=llama_content_handler
     )

  4. Transform input and output data to process API calls for BGE Large En on SageMaker
    from typing import List
     
    class BGEContentHandlerV15(EmbeddingsContentHandler):
        content_type = "application/json"
        accepts = "application/json"
     
        def transform_input(self, text_inputs: List[str], model_kwargs: dict) -> bytes:
            """
            Transforms the input into bytes that can be consumed by SageMaker endpoint.
            Args:
                text_inputs (list[str]): A list of input text strings to be processed.
                model_kwargs (Dict): Additional keyword arguments to be passed to the endpoint.
                   Possible keys and their descriptions:
                   - mode (str): Inference method. Valid modes are 'embedding', 'nn_corpus', and 'nn_train_data'.
                   - corpus (str): Corpus for Nearest Neighbor. Required when mode is 'nn_corpus'.
                   - top_k (int): Top K for Nearest Neighbor. Required when mode is 'nn_corpus'.
                   - queries (list[str]): Queries for Nearest Neighbor. Required when mode is 'nn_corpus' or 'nn_train_data'.
            Returns:
                The transformed bytes input.
            """
            input_str = json.dumps(
                {
                    "text_inputs": text_inputs,
                    **model_kwargs
                }
            )
            return input_str.encode("utf-8")
     
        def transform_output(self, output: bytes) -> List[List[float]]:
            """
            Transforms the bytes output from the endpoint into a list of embeddings.
            Args:
                output: The bytes output from SageMaker endpoint.
            Returns:
                The transformed output - list of embeddings
            Note:
                The length of the outer list is the number of input strings.
                The length of the inner lists is the embedding dimension.
            """
            response_json = json.loads(output.read().decode("utf-8"))
            return response_json["embedding"]

  5. Instantiate the embedding model with SageMaker and LangChain
    bge_content_handler = BGEContentHandlerV15()
    sagemaker_embeddings = SagemakerEndpointEmbeddings(
        endpoint_name=embedding_endpoint_name,
        region_name=region,
        model_kwargs={"mode": "embedding"},
        content_handler=bge_content_handler,
    )

Prepare data and generate embeddings

In this example, you will use several years of Amazon’s Annual Reports (SEC filings) for investors as a text corpus to perform QnA on.

  1. Start by using the following code to download the PDF documents from the provided URLs and create a list of metadata for each downloaded document.
    !mkdir -p ./data
    
    from urllib.request import urlretrieve
    urls = [
    'https://d18rn0p25nwr6d.cloudfront.net/CIK-0001018724/c7c14359-36fa-40c3-b3ca-5bf7f3fa0b96.pdf',
    'https://d18rn0p25nwr6d.cloudfront.net/CIK-0001018724/d2fde7ee-05f7-419d-9ce8-186de4c96e25.pdf',
    'https://d18rn0p25nwr6d.cloudfront.net/CIK-0001018724/f965e5c3-fded-45d3-bbdb-f750f156dcc9.pdf',
    'https://d18rn0p25nwr6d.cloudfront.net/CIK-0001018724/336d8745-ea82-40a5-9acc-1a89df23d0f3.pdf'
    ]
    
    filenames = [
    'AMZN-2024-10-K-Annual-Report.pdf',
    'AMZN-2023-10-K-Annual-Report.pdf',
    'AMZN-2022-10-K-Annual-Report.pdf',
    'AMZN-2021-10-K-Annual-Report.pdf'
    ]
    
    metadata = [
    dict(year=2024, source=filenames[0]),
    dict(year=2023, source=filenames[1]),
    dict(year=2022, source=filenames[2]),
    dict(year=2021, source=filenames[3])]
    
    data_root = "./data/"
    
    for idx, url in enumerate(urls):
    file_path = data_root + filenames[idx]
    urlretrieve(url, file_path)

    If you look at the Amazon 10-Ks, the first four pages are all the very similar and might skew the responses if they are kept in the embeddings. This will cause repetition, take longer to generate embeddings, and might skew your results.

  2. In the next step, you will take the downloaded data, trim the 10-K (first four pages) and overwrite them as processed files.
    from pypdf import PdfReader, PdfWriter
    import glob
    
    local_pdfs = glob.glob(data_root + '*.pdf')
    
    # Iterate over each PDF file
    for idx, local_pdf in enumerate(local_pdfs):
    pdf_reader = PdfReader(local_pdf)
    pdf_writer = PdfWriter()
    
    if idx == 0:
    # Keep the first 4 pages for the first document
    for pagenum in range(len(pdf_reader.pages)):
    page = pdf_reader.pages[pagenum]
    pdf_writer.add_page(page)
    else:
    # Remove the first 4 pages for other documents
    for pagenum in range(4, len(pdf_reader.pages)):
    page = pdf_reader.pages[pagenum]
    pdf_writer.add_page(page)
    
    # Write the modified content to a new file
    with open(local_pdf, 'wb') as new_file:
    new_file.seek(0)
    pdf_writer.write(new_file)
    new_file.truncate()

  3. After downloading, you can load the documents with the help of DirectoryLoader from PyPDF available under LangChain and splitting them into smaller chunks. Note: The retrieved document or text should be large enough to contain enough information to answer a question; but small enough to fit into the LLM prompt. Also, the embedding model has a limit on the length of input tokens of 512 tokens, which translates to approximately 2,000 characters. For this use-case, you are creating chunks of approximately 1,000 characters with an overlap of 100 characters using RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter.
    import numpy as np
    from langchain_community.document_loaders import PyPDFLoader
    from langchain.text_splitter import RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter
    
    documents = []
    
    for idx, file in enumerate(filenames):
    loader = PyPDFLoader(data_root + file)
    document = loader.load()
    for document_fragment in document:
    document_fragment.metadata = metadata[idx]
    
    documents += document
    
    # - in our testing Character split works better with this PDF data set
    text_splitter = RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter(
    # Set a really small chunk size, just to show.
    chunk_size=1000,
    chunk_overlap=100,
    )
    
    docs = text_splitter.split_documents(documents)
    print(docs[100])

  4. Before you proceed, look at some of the statistics regarding the document preprocessing you just performed:
    avg_doc_length = lambda documents: sum([len(doc.page_content) for doc in documents])//len(documents)
    
    print(f'Average length among {len(documents)} documents loaded is {avg_doc_length(documents)} characters.')
    print(f'After the split we have {len(docs)} documents as opposed to the original {len(documents)}.')
    print(f'Average length among {len(docs)} documents (after split) is {avg_doc_length(docs)} characters.')

  5. You started with four PDF documents, which have been split into approximately 500 smaller chunks. Now you can see how a sample embedding would look like for one of those chunks.
    sample_embedding = np.array(sagemaker_embeddings.embed_query(docs[0].page_content))
    print("Sample embedding of a document chunk: ", sample_embedding)
    print("Size of the embedding: ", sample_embedding.shape)

    This can be done using FAISS implementation inside LangChain which takes input from the embedding model and the documents to create the entire vector store. Using the Index Wrapper, you can abstract away most of the heavy lifting such as creating the prompt, getting embeddings of the query, sampling the relevant documents, and calling the LLM. VectorStoreIndexWrapper.

    from langchain_community.vectorstores import FAISS
    from langchain.indexes.vectorstore import VectorStoreIndexWrapper
     
    vectorstore_faiss = FAISS.from_documents(
        docs,
        sagemaker_embeddings,
    )
    wrapper_store_faiss = VectorStoreIndexWrapper(vectorstore=vectorstore_faiss)
    

Answer questions using a LangChain vector store wrapper

You use the wrapper provided by LangChain, which wraps around the vector store and takes input from the LLM. This wrapper performs the following steps behind the scenes:

  • Inputs the question
  • Creates question embedding
  • Fetches relevant documents
  • Stuffs the documents and the question into a prompt
  • Invokes the model with the prompt and generate the answer in a human readable manner.

Note: In this example we are using Llama 3 8B Instruct as the LLM under Amazon SageMaker, this particular model performs best if the inputs are provided under

<|begin_of_text|><|start_header_id|>system<|end_header_id|>,
{{system_message}},
<|eot_id|><|start_header_id|>user<|end_header_id|>,
{{user_message}}, and the model is requested to generate an output after
<|eot_id|><|start_header_id|>assistant<|end_header_id|>.

The following is an example of how to control the prompt so that the LLM stays grounded and doesn’t answer outside the context.

prompt_template = """<|begin_of_text|><|start_header_id|>system<|end_header_id|>
You are a helpful assistant.
<|eot_id|><|start_header_id|>user<|end_header_id|>
{query}
<|eot_id|><|start_header_id|>assistant<|end_header_id|>
"""
PROMPT = PromptTemplate(
    template=prompt_template, input_variables=["query"]
)
query = "How did AWS perform in 2021?"
answer = wrapper_store_faiss.query(question=PROMPT.format(query=query), llm=llm)
print(answer)

You can ask another question.

query_2 = "How much square footage did Amazon have in North America in 2023?"
answer = wrapper_store_faiss.query(question=PROMPT.format(query=query_2), llm=llm)
print(answer)

Retrieval QA chain

We’ve shown you a basic method to get context-aware answers. Now, let’s look at a more customizable option with RetrievalQA. You can customize how fetched documents are added to the prompt using the chain_type parameter, control the number of relevant documents retrieved by changing the k parameter, and get source documents used by the LLM by enabling return_source_documents.RetrievalQA also allows providing custom prompt templates specific to the model.

from langchain.chains import RetrievalQA

prompt_template = """
<|begin_of_text|><|start_header_id|>system<|end_header_id|>

This is a conversation between an AI assistant and a Human.

<|eot_id|><|start_header_id|>user<|end_header_id|>

Use the following pieces of context to provide a concise answer to the question at the end. If you don't know the answer, just say that you don't know, don't try to make up an answer.
#### Context ####
{context}
#### End of Context ####

Question: {question}
<|eot_id|><|start_header_id|>assistant<|end_header_id|>
"""
PROMPT = PromptTemplate(
template=prompt_template, input_variables=["context", "question"]
)

qa = RetrievalQA.from_chain_type(
llm=llm,
chain_type="stuff",
retriever=vectorstore_faiss.as_retriever(
search_type="similarity", search_kwargs={"k": 3}
),
return_source_documents=True,
chain_type_kwargs={"prompt": PROMPT}
)

You can then ask a question:

query = "How did AWS perform in 2023?"
result = qa({"query": query})
print(result['result'])

Parent document retriever chain

Let’s explore a more advanced RAG option with ParentDocumentRetriever. It balances storing small chunks for accurate embeddings and larger chunks to preserve context. First, a parent_splitter divides documents into larger parent chunks. Then, a child_splitter creates smaller child chunks. Child chunks are indexed in a vector store using embeddings for efficient retrieval. To retrieve relevant info, ParentDocumentRetriever fetches child chunks from the vector store, looks up their parent IDs, and returns corresponding larger parent chunks, stored in an InMemoryStore. This approach balances accurate embeddings with contextual information for meaningful retrieval.

from langchain.retrievers import ParentDocumentRetriever
from langchain.storage import InMemoryStore

  1. Sometimes, the full documents can so large that you don’t want to retrieve them as is. In that case, you can first split the raw documents into larger chunks, and then split it into smaller chunks. You then index the smaller chunks, but on retrieval you retrieve the larger chunks (but still not the full documents).
    # This text splitter is used to create the parent documents
    parent_splitter = RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter(chunk_size=2000)
    # This text splitter is used to create the child documents
    # It should create documents smaller than the parent
    child_splitter = RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter(chunk_size=400)
    # The vectorstore to use to index the child chunks
    vectorstore_faiss = FAISS.from_documents(
    child_splitter.split_documents(documents),
    sagemaker_embeddings,
    )
    # The storage layer for the parent documents
    store = InMemoryStore()
    
    # The storage layer for the parent documents
    store = InMemoryStore()
    retriever = ParentDocumentRetriever(
    vectorstore=vectorstore_faiss,
    docstore=store,
    child_splitter=child_splitter,
    parent_splitter=parent_splitter,
    )
    retriever.add_documents(documents, ids=None)

  2. Now, initialize the chain using the ParentDocumentRetriever. Pass the prompt in using the chain_type_kwargs argument.
    qa = RetrievalQA.from_chain_type(
        llm=llm,
        chain_type="stuff",
        retriever=retriever,
        return_source_documents=True,
        chain_type_kwargs={"prompt": PROMPT}
    )

  3. Start asking questions:
    query = "How did AWS perform in 2023?"
    result = qa({"query": query})
    print(result['result'])

Clean up

To avoid incurring unnecessary costs, when you’re done, delete the SageMaker endpoints and OpenSearch Service domain, either using the following code snippets or the SageMaker JumpStart UI.

predictor.delete_model()
predictor.delete_endpoint()
embedding_endpoint.delete_model()
embedding_endpoint.delete_endpoint()

To use the SageMaker console, complete the following steps:

  1. On the SageMaker console, under Inference in the navigation pane, choose Endpoints.
  2. Search for the embedding and text generation endpoints.
  3. On the endpoint details page, choose Delete.
  4. Choose Delete again to confirm.

Conclusion

In this post, we showed you a powerful RAG solution using SageMaker JumpStart to deploy the Llama 3 8B Instruct model and the BGE Large En v1.5 embedding model.

We showed you how to create a robust vector store by processing documents of various formats and generating embeddings. This vector store facilitates retrieving relevant documents based on user queries using LangChain’s retrieval algorithms. We demonstrated the ability to prepare custom prompts tailored for the Llama 3 model, ensuring context-aware responses, and presented these context-specific answers in a human-friendly manner.

This solution highlights the power of SageMaker JumpStart in deploying cutting-edge models and the versatility of LangChain in creating effective RAG applications. By seamlessly integrating these components, we enabled high-quality, context-specific response generation, enhancing the Llama 3 model’s performance across natural language processing tasks. To explore this solution and embark on your context-aware language generation journey, visit the notebook in the GitHub repository.

To get started now, check out SageMaker JumpStart in SageMaker Studio.


About the Authors

Supriya Puragundla is a Senior Solutions Architect at AWS. She has over 15 years of IT experience in software development, design and architecture. She helps key enterprise customer accounts on their data, generative AI and AI/ML journeys. She is passionate about data-driven AI and the area of depth in ML and generative AI.

Dr. Farooq Sabir is a Senior Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning Specialist Solutions Architect at AWS. He holds PhD and MS degrees in Electrical Engineering from the University of Texas at Austin and an MS in Computer Science from Georgia Institute of Technology. He has over 15 years of work experience and also likes to teach and mentor college students. At AWS, he helps customers formulate and solve their business problems in data science, machine learning, computer vision, artificial intelligence, numerical optimization, and related domains. Based in Dallas, Texas, he and his family love to travel and go on long road trips.

Marco Punio is a Sr. Specialist Solutions Architect focused on generative AI strategy, applied AI solutions, and conducting research to help customers hyperscale on AWS. Marco is based in Seattle, WA, and enjoys writing, reading, exercising, and building applications in his free time.

Niithiyn Vijeaswaran is a Solutions Architect at AWS. His area of focus is generative AI and AWS AI Accelerators. He holds a Bachelor’s degree in Computer Science and Bioinformatics. Niithiyn works closely with the Generative AI GTM team to enable AWS customers on multiple fronts and accelerate their adoption of generative AI. He’s an avid fan of the Dallas Mavericks and enjoys collecting sneakers.

Yousuf Athar is a Solutions Architect at AWS specializing in generative AI and AI/ML. With a Bachelor’s degree in Information Technology and a concentration in Cloud Computing, he helps customers integrate advanced generative AI capabilities into their systems, driving innovation and competitive edge. Outside of work, Yousuf loves to travel, watch sports, and play football.

Gaurav Parekh is an AWS Solutions Architect specializing in Generative AI, Analytics and Networking technologies.



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