🔥 Nov 24: pyautogen v0.2 is released with many updates and new features compared to v0.1.1. It switches to using openai-python v1. Please read the migration guide.
🔥 Nov 11: OpenAI's Assistants are available in AutoGen and interoperatable with other AutoGen agents! Checkout our blogpost for details and examples.
🔥 Nov 8: AutoGen is selected into Open100: Top 100 Open Source achievements 35 days after spinoff.
🔥 Nov 6: AutoGen is mentioned by Satya Nadella in a fireside chat around 13:20.
🔥 Nov 1: AutoGen is the top trending repo on GitHub in October 2023.
🎉 Oct 03: AutoGen spins off from FLAML on Github and has a major paper update.
🎉 Aug 16: Paper about AutoGen on arxiv. 📚 Cite paper.
🎉 Mar 29: AutoGen is first created in FLAML.
AutoGen is a framework that enables the development of LLM applications using multiple agents that can converse with each other to solve tasks. AutoGen agents are customizable, conversable, and seamlessly allow human participation. They can operate in various modes that employ combinations of LLMs, human inputs, and tools.
- AutoGen enables building next-gen LLM applications based on multi-agent conversations with minimal effort. It simplifies the orchestration, automation, and optimization of a complex LLM workflow. It maximizes the performance of LLM models and overcomes their weaknesses.
- It supports diverse conversation patterns for complex workflows. With customizable and conversable agents, developers can use AutoGen to build a wide range of conversation patterns concerning conversation autonomy, the number of agents, and agent conversation topology.
- It provides a collection of working systems with different complexities. These systems span a wide range of applications from various domains and complexities. This demonstrates how AutoGen can easily support diverse conversation patterns.
- AutoGen provides enhanced LLM inference. It offers utilities like API unification and caching, and advanced usage patterns, such as error handling, multi-config inference, context programming, etc.
AutoGen is powered by collaborative research studies from Microsoft, Penn State University, and the University of Washington.
The easiest way to start playing is
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Click below to use the GitHub Codespace
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Copy OAI_CONFIG_LIST_sample to ./notebook folder, name to OAI_CONFIG_LIST, and set the correct configuration.
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Start playing with the notebooks!
AutoGen requires Python version >= 3.8, < 3.12. It can be installed from pip:
pip install pyautogen
Minimal dependencies are installed without extra options. You can install extra options based on the feature you need.
Find more options in Installation.
For code execution, we strongly recommend installing the Python docker package and using docker.
For LLM inference configurations, check the FAQs.
Autogen enables the next-gen LLM applications with a generic multi-agent conversation framework. It offers customizable and conversable agents that integrate LLMs, tools, and humans. By automating chat among multiple capable agents, one can easily make them collectively perform tasks autonomously or with human feedback, including tasks that require using tools via code.
Features of this use case include:
- Multi-agent conversations: AutoGen agents can communicate with each other to solve tasks. This allows for more complex and sophisticated applications than would be possible with a single LLM.
- Customization: AutoGen agents can be customized to meet the specific needs of an application. This includes the ability to choose the LLMs to use, the types of human input to allow, and the tools to employ.
- Human participation: AutoGen seamlessly allows human participation. This means that humans can provide input and feedback to the agents as needed.
For example,
from autogen import AssistantAgent, UserProxyAgent, config_list_from_json
# Load LLM inference endpoints from an env variable or a file
# See https://microsoft.github.io/autogen/docs/FAQ#set-your-api-endpoints
# and OAI_CONFIG_LIST_sample
config_list = config_list_from_json(env_or_file="OAI_CONFIG_LIST")
# You can also set config_list directly as a list, for example, config_list = [{'model': 'gpt-4', 'api_key': '<your OpenAI API key here>'},]
assistant = AssistantAgent("assistant", llm_config={"config_list": config_list})
user_proxy = UserProxyAgent("user_proxy", code_execution_config={"work_dir": "coding"})
user_proxy.initiate_chat(assistant, message="Plot a chart of NVDA and TESLA stock price change YTD.")
# This initiates an automated chat between the two agents to solve the task
This example can be run with
python test/twoagent.py
After the repo is cloned. The figure below shows an example conversation flow with AutoGen.
Please find more code examples for this feature.
Autogen also helps maximize the utility out of the expensive LLMs such as ChatGPT and GPT-4. It offers enhanced LLM inference with powerful functionalities like caching, error handling, multi-config inference and templating.
You can find detailed documentation about AutoGen here.
In addition, you can find:
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Research, blogposts around AutoGen, and Transparency FAQs
@inproceedings{wu2023autogen,
title={AutoGen: Enabling Next-Gen LLM Applications via Multi-Agent Conversation Framework},
author={Qingyun Wu and Gagan Bansal and Jieyu Zhang and Yiran Wu and Beibin Li and Erkang Zhu and Li Jiang and Xiaoyun Zhang and Shaokun Zhang and Jiale Liu and Ahmed Hassan Awadallah and Ryen W White and Doug Burger and Chi Wang},
year={2023},
eprint={2308.08155},
archivePrefix={arXiv},
primaryClass={cs.AI}
}
@inproceedings{wang2023EcoOptiGen,
title={Cost-Effective Hyperparameter Optimization for Large Language Model Generation Inference},
author={Chi Wang and Susan Xueqing Liu and Ahmed H. Awadallah},
year={2023},
booktitle={AutoML'23},
}
@inproceedings{wu2023empirical,
title={An Empirical Study on Challenging Math Problem Solving with GPT-4},
author={Yiran Wu and Feiran Jia and Shaokun Zhang and Hangyu Li and Erkang Zhu and Yue Wang and Yin Tat Lee and Richard Peng and Qingyun Wu and Chi Wang},
year={2023},
booktitle={ArXiv preprint arXiv:2306.01337},
}
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