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Dismiss alert {{ message }} OpenInterpreter / open-interpreter Public * Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings * Fork 4.8k * Star 55.8k A natural language interface for computers openinterpreter.com/ License AGPL-3.0 license 55.8k stars 4.8k forks Branches Tags Activity Star Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings * Code * Issues 187 * Pull requests 24 * Actions * Security * Insights Additional navigation options * Code * Issues * Pull requests * Actions * Security * Insights OpenInterpreter/open-interpreter main BranchesTags [ ] Go to file Code Folders and files Last commit Last Name Name message commit date Latest commit History 3,062 Commits .devcontainer .devcontainer .github .github docs docs examples examples installers installers interpreter interpreter scripts scripts tests tests .gitignore .gitignore .pre-commit-config.yaml .pre-commit-config.yaml Dockerfile Dockerfile LICENSE LICENSE README.md README.md poetry.lock poetry.lock pyproject.toml pyproject.toml View all files Repository files navigation * README * AGPL-3.0 license * Security * Open Interpreter Discord JA doc ZH doc ES doc UK doc IN doc License Get early access to the desktop app | Documentation local_explorer pip install open-interpreter Not working? Read our setup guide. interpreter Open Interpreter lets LLMs run code (Python, Javascript, Shell, and more) locally. You can chat with Open Interpreter through a ChatGPT-like interface in your terminal by running $ interpreter after installing. This provides a natural-language interface to your computer's general-purpose capabilities: * Create and edit photos, videos, PDFs, etc. * Control a Chrome browser to perform research * Plot, clean, and analyze large datasets * ...etc. [?][?] Note: You'll be asked to approve code before it's run. Demo Open.Interpreter.Demo.mp4 An interactive demo is also available on Google Colab: Open In Colab Along with an example voice interface, inspired by Her: Open In Colab Quick Start pip install open-interpreter Terminal After installation, simply run interpreter: interpreter Python from interpreter import interpreter interpreter.chat("Plot AAPL and META's normalized stock prices") # Executes a single command interpreter.chat() # Starts an interactive chat GitHub Codespaces Press the , key on this repository's GitHub page to create a codespace. After a moment, you'll receive a cloud virtual machine environment pre-installed with open-interpreter. You can then start interacting with it directly and freely confirm its execution of system commands without worrying about damaging the system. Comparison to ChatGPT's Code Interpreter OpenAI's release of Code Interpreter with GPT-4 presents a fantastic opportunity to accomplish real-world tasks with ChatGPT. However, OpenAI's service is hosted, closed-source, and heavily restricted: * No internet access. * Limited set of pre-installed packages. * 100 MB maximum upload, 120.0 second runtime limit. * State is cleared (along with any generated files or links) when the environment dies. --------------------------------------------------------------------- Open Interpreter overcomes these limitations by running in your local environment. It has full access to the internet, isn't restricted by time or file size, and can utilize any package or library. This combines the power of GPT-4's Code Interpreter with the flexibility of your local development environment. Commands Update: The Generator Update (0.1.5) introduced streaming: message = "What operating system are we on?" for chunk in interpreter.chat(message, display=False, stream=True): print(chunk) Interactive Chat To start an interactive chat in your terminal, either run interpreter from the command line: interpreter Or interpreter.chat() from a .py file: interpreter.chat() You can also stream each chunk: message = "What operating system are we on?" for chunk in interpreter.chat(message, display=False, stream=True): print(chunk) Programmatic Chat For more precise control, you can pass messages directly to .chat (message): interpreter.chat("Add subtitles to all videos in /videos.") # ... Streams output to your terminal, completes task ... interpreter.chat("These look great but can you make the subtitles bigger?") # ... Start a New Chat In Python, Open Interpreter remembers conversation history. If you want to start fresh, you can reset it: interpreter.messages = [] Save and Restore Chats interpreter.chat() returns a List of messages, which can be used to resume a conversation with interpreter.messages = messages: messages = interpreter.chat("My name is Killian.") # Save messages to 'messages' interpreter.messages = [] # Reset interpreter ("Killian" will be forgotten) interpreter.messages = messages # Resume chat from 'messages' ("Killian" will be remembered) Customize System Message You can inspect and configure Open Interpreter's system message to extend its functionality, modify permissions, or give it more context. interpreter.system_message += """ Run shell commands with -y so the user doesn't have to confirm them. """ print(interpreter.system_message) Change your Language Model Open Interpreter uses LiteLLM to connect to hosted language models. You can change the model by setting the model parameter: interpreter --model gpt-3.5-turbo interpreter --model claude-2 interpreter --model command-nightly In Python, set the model on the object: interpreter.llm.model = "gpt-3.5-turbo" Find the appropriate "model" string for your language model here. Running Open Interpreter locally Terminal Open Interpreter can use OpenAI-compatible server to run models locally. (LM Studio, jan.ai, ollama etc) Simply run interpreter with the api_base URL of your inference server (for LM studio it is http://localhost:1234/v1 by default): interpreter --api_base "http://localhost:1234/v1" --api_key "fake_key" Alternatively you can use Llamafile without installing any third party software just by running interpreter --local for a more detailed guide check out this video by Mike Bird How to run LM Studio in the background. 1. Download https://lmstudio.ai/ then start it. 2. Select a model then click | Download. 3. Click the -[?] button on the left (below ). 4. Select your model at the top, then click Start Server. Once the server is running, you can begin your conversation with Open Interpreter. Note: Local mode sets your context_window to 3000, and your max_tokens to 1000. If your model has different requirements, set these parameters manually (see below). Python Our Python package gives you more control over each setting. To replicate and connect to LM Studio, use these settings: from interpreter import interpreter interpreter.offline = True # Disables online features like Open Procedures interpreter.llm.model = "openai/x" # Tells OI to send messages in OpenAI's format interpreter.llm.api_key = "fake_key" # LiteLLM, which we use to talk to LM Studio, requires this interpreter.llm.api_base = "http://localhost:1234/v1" # Point this at any OpenAI compatible server interpreter.chat() Context Window, Max Tokens You can modify the max_tokens and context_window (in tokens) of locally running models. For local mode, smaller context windows will use less RAM, so we recommend trying a much shorter window (~1000) if it's failing / if it's slow. Make sure max_tokens is less than context_window. interpreter --local --max_tokens 1000 --context_window 3000 Verbose mode To help you inspect Open Interpreter we have a --verbose mode for debugging. You can activate verbose mode by using its flag (interpreter --verbose), or mid-chat: $ interpreter ... > %verbose true <- Turns on verbose mode > %verbose false <- Turns off verbose mode Interactive Mode Commands In the interactive mode, you can use the below commands to enhance your experience. Here's a list of available commands: Available Commands: * %verbose [true/false]: Toggle verbose mode. Without arguments or with true it enters verbose mode. With false it exits verbose mode. * %reset: Resets the current session's conversation. * %undo: Removes the previous user message and the AI's response from the message history. * %tokens [prompt]: (Experimental) Calculate the tokens that will be sent with the next prompt as context and estimate their cost. Optionally calculate the tokens and estimated cost of a prompt if one is provided. Relies on LiteLLM's cost_per_token() method for estimated costs. * %help: Show the help message. Configuration / Profiles Open Interpreter allows you to set default behaviors using yaml files. This provides a flexible way to configure the interpreter without changing command-line arguments every time. Run the following command to open the profiles directory: interpreter --profiles You can add yaml files there. The default profile is named default.yaml. Multiple Profiles Open Interpreter supports multiple yaml files, allowing you to easily switch between configurations: interpreter --profile my_profile.yaml Sample FastAPI Server The generator update enables Open Interpreter to be controlled via HTTP REST endpoints: # server.py from fastapi import FastAPI from fastapi.responses import StreamingResponse from interpreter import interpreter app = FastAPI() @app.get("/chat") def chat_endpoint(message: str): def event_stream(): for result in interpreter.chat(message, stream=True): yield f"data: {result}\n\n" return StreamingResponse(event_stream(), media_type="text/event-stream") @app.get("/history") def history_endpoint(): return interpreter.messages pip install fastapi uvicorn uvicorn server:app --reload You can also start a server identical to the one above by simply running interpreter.server(). Android The step-by-step guide for installing Open Interpreter on your Android device can be found in the open-interpreter-termux repo. Safety Notice Since generated code is executed in your local environment, it can interact with your files and system settings, potentially leading to unexpected outcomes like data loss or security risks. [?][?] Open Interpreter will ask for user confirmation before executing code. You can run interpreter -y or set interpreter.auto_run = True to bypass this confirmation, in which case: * Be cautious when requesting commands that modify files or system settings. * Watch Open Interpreter like a self-driving car, and be prepared to end the process by closing your terminal. * Consider running Open Interpreter in a restricted environment like Google Colab or Replit. These environments are more isolated, reducing the risks of executing arbitrary code. There is experimental support for a safe mode to help mitigate some risks. How Does it Work? Open Interpreter equips a function-calling language model with an exec() function, which accepts a language (like "Python" or "JavaScript") and code to run. We then stream the model's messages, code, and your system's outputs to the terminal as Markdown. Access Documentation Offline The full documentation is accessible on-the-go without the need for an internet connection. Node is a pre-requisite: * Version 18.17.0 or any later 18.x.x version. * Version 20.3.0 or any later 20.x.x version. * Any version starting from 21.0.0 onwards, with no upper limit specified. Install Mintlify: npm i -g mintlify@latest Change into the docs directory and run the appropriate command: # Assuming you're at the project's root directory cd ./docs # Run the documentation server mintlify dev A new browser window should open. The documentation will be available at http://localhost:3000 as long as the documentation server is running. Contributing Thank you for your interest in contributing! We welcome involvement from the community. Please see our contributing guidelines for more details on how to get involved. Roadmap Visit our roadmap to preview the future of Open Interpreter. Note: This software is not affiliated with OpenAI. thumbnail-ncu Having access to a junior programmer working at the speed of your fingertips ... can make new workflows effortless and efficient, as well as open the benefits of programming to new audiences. -- OpenAI's Code Interpreter Release About A natural language interface for computers openinterpreter.com/ Topics nodejs javascript python interpreter gpt-4 chatgpt Resources Readme License AGPL-3.0 license Security policy Security policy Activity Custom properties Stars 55.8k stars Watchers 415 watching Forks 4.8k forks Report repository Releases 49 tags Used by 540 * @sachnaror * @infractura * @dreamguo * @termo-ai * @JacquesGariepy * @SunXiaoXiang * @ucobankuser1 * @thzva + 532 Contributors 124 * @KillianLucas * @Notnaton * @MikeBirdTech * @CyanideByte * @ericrallen * @tyfiero * @jordanbtucker * @TanmayDoesAI * @imapersonman * @Steve235lab * @oliverpalonkorp * @krrishdholakia * @thefazzer * @RainRat + 110 contributors Languages * Python 98.4% * Other 1.6% Footer (c) 2024 GitHub, Inc. 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