# Setting up baibot (optional)

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baibot

🤖 [baibot](https://github.com/etkecc/baibot) (pronounced bye-bot) is a [Matrix](https://matrix.org/) bot developed by [etke.cc](https://etke.cc/) that exposes the power of [AI](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artificial_intelligence) / [Large Language Models](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Large_language_model) to you. 🤖 It supports [OpenAI](https://openai.com/)'s [ChatGPT](https://openai.com/blog/chatgpt/) models, as many well as other [☁ī¸ providers](https://github.com/etkecc/baibot/blob/main/docs/providers.md). It's designed as a more private and [✨ featureful](https://github.com/etkecc/baibot/?tab=readme-ov-file#-features) alternative to [matrix-chatgpt-bot](./configuring-playbook-bot-chatgpt.md). See the [baibot](https://github.com/etkecc/baibot) project and its documentation for more information. ## Prerequisites API access to one or more LLM [☁ī¸ providers](https://github.com/etkecc/baibot/blob/main/docs/providers.md). ## Adjusting the playbook configuration There are **a lot of configuration options** (some required, some possibly required, some optional), so they're **split into multiple sections below**: - [Base configuration](#base-configuration) - [👮‍♂ī¸ Administrator configuration](#ī¸-administrator-configuration) - [đŸ‘Ĩ Initial users configuration](#-initial-users-configuration) - [🤖 Configuring agents via Ansible](#-configuring-agents-via-ansible) - [🤝 Configuring initial default handlers](#-configuring-initial-default-handlers) Depending on your current `vars.yml` file and desired configuration, **you may require more than just the [base configuration](#base-configuration)**. ### Base configuration Add the following configuration to your `inventory/host_vars/matrix.example.com/vars.yml` file: ```yaml matrix_bot_baibot_enabled: true # Uncomment and adjust this part if you'd like to use a username different than the default # matrix_bot_baibot_config_user_mxid_localpart: baibot # Generate a strong password here. Consider generating it with `pwgen -s 64 1`. # If you'd like to change this password subsequently, see the details below. matrix_bot_baibot_config_user_password: 'PASSWORD_FOR_THE_BOT' # An optional passphrase to use for backing up and recovering the bot's encryption keys. # You can put any string here, but generating a strong one is preferred (e.g. `pwgen -s 64 1`). # # If set to null, the recovery module will not be used and losing your session/database # will mean you lose access to old messages in encrypted room. # It's highly recommended that you configure this to avoid losing access to encrypted messages. # # Changing this subsequently will also cause you to lose access to old messages in encrypted rooms. # For details about changing this subsequently or resetting, see `defaults/main.yml` in the baibot role. matrix_bot_baibot_config_user_encryption_recovery_passphrase: 'ANY_LONG_AND_SECURE_PASSPHRASE_STRING_HERE' # An optional secret for encrypting the bot's session data (see `matrix_bot_baibot_data_path`). # This must be 32-bytes (64 characters when HEX-encoded). # Generate it with: `openssl rand -hex 32` # Set to null or empty to avoid using encryption. # Changing this subsequently requires that you also throw away all data (see `matrix_bot_baibot_data_path`) matrix_bot_baibot_config_persistence_session_encryption_key: 'A_HEX_STRING_OF_64_CHARACTERS_HERE' # An optional secret for encrypting bot configuration stored in Matrix's account data. # This must be 32-bytes (64 characters when HEX-encoded). # Generate it with: `openssl rand -hex 32` # Set to null or empty to avoid using encryption. # Changing this subsequently will make you lose your configuration. matrix_bot_baibot_config_persistence_config_encryption_key: 'A_HEX_STRING_OF_64_CHARACTERS_HERE' ``` As mentioned above, **this may not be enough**. Continue with the configuration sections below. ### 👮‍♂ī¸ Administrator configuration This is an addition to the [base configuration](#base-configuration). To specify who is considered a bot [👮‍♂ī¸ Administrator](https://github.com/etkecc/baibot/blob/main/docs/access.md#administrators), you either need to specify `matrix_bot_baibot_config_access_admin_patterns` or `matrix_admin`. The latter is a single variable which affects all bridges and bots. If `matrix_admin` is already configured in your `vars.yml` configuration, you can skip this section. **If necessary**, add the following configuration to your `inventory/host_vars/matrix.example.com/vars.yml` file: ```yml # Uncomment to add one or more admins to this bridge: # # matrix_bot_baibot_config_access_admin_patterns: # - "@*:example.com" # - "@admin:example.net" # # .. unless you've made yourself an admin of all bots/bridges like this: # # matrix_admin: '@yourAdminAccount:{{ matrix_domain }}' ``` ### đŸ‘Ĩ Initial users configuration By default, **all users on your homeserver are considered allowed users**. If that's OK, you can skip this section. This is an addition to the [base configuration](#base-configuration). To specify who is considered a bot [đŸ‘Ĩ User](https://github.com/etkecc/baibot/blob/main/docs/access.md#user), you may: - define an **initial** value for `matrix_bot_baibot_config_initial_global_config_user_patterns` Ansible variable, as shown below - configure the list at runtime via the bot's `!bai access set-users SPACE_SEPARATED_PATTERNS` command Configuring `matrix_bot_baibot_config_initial_global_config_user_patterns` is optional, but it can be useful to pre-configure the bot with a list of users who should have access to the bot's features. **Note**: Once initially configured, the allowed users list **cannot be managed via Ansible anymore**. It can only be managed subsequently via bot commands. **If necessary**, add the following configuration to your `inventory/host_vars/matrix.example.com/vars.yml` file: ```yml # Uncomment and adjust the bot users if necessary: # # Subsequent changes to `matrix_bot_baibot_config_initial_global_config_user_patterns` do not affect the bot's behavior. # Once initially configured, the allowed users list is managed via bot commands, not via Ansible. # # matrix_bot_baibot_config_initial_global_config_user_patterns: # - "@*:{{ matrix_bot_baibot_config_homeserver_server_name }}" ``` ### 🤖 Configuring agents via Ansible You are **not required** to define agents [statically](https://github.com/etkecc/baibot/blob/main/docs/configuration/README.md#static-configuration) via Ansible. **To get started quickly**, you can **skip this section and define agents at runtime via chat commands** (following the bot's guidance). Privileged users (like the [👮‍♂ī¸ Administrator](#ī¸-administrator-configuration), but potentially others too - see the upstream [🔒 access](https://github.com/etkecc/baibot/blob/main/docs/access.md) documentation) can **define agents dynamically at any time** via chat commands. The Ansible role includes preset variables for easily enabling some [🤖 agents](https://github.com/etkecc/baibot/blob/main/docs/agents.md) on various [☁ī¸ providers](https://github.com/etkecc/baibot/blob/main/docs/providers.md) (e.g. OpenAI, etc). Besides the presets, the Ansible role also includes support for configuring additional statically-defined agents via the `matrix_bot_baibot_config_agents_static_definitions_custom` Ansible variable. Agents defined statically and those created dynamically (via chat) are named differently, so **conflict cannot arise**. Depending on your propensity for [GitOps](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DevOps#GitOps), you may prefer to define agents statically via Ansible, or you may wish to do it dynamically via chat. Before proceeding, we recommend reading the upstream documentation on [How to choose a provider](https://github.com/etkecc/baibot/blob/main/docs/providers.md#how-to-choose-a-provider). In short, it's probably best to go with [OpenAI](#openai). #### Anthropic You can statically-define a single [🤖 agent](https://github.com/etkecc/baibot/blob/main/docs/agents.md) instance powered by the [Anthropic provider](https://github.com/etkecc/baibot/blob/main/docs/providers.md#anthropic) with the help of the playbook's preset variables. Here's an example **addition** to your `vars.yml` file: ```yml matrix_bot_baibot_config_agents_static_definitions_anthropic_enabled: true matrix_bot_baibot_config_agents_static_definitions_anthropic_config_api_key: "YOUR_API_KEY_HERE" # If you'd like to use another text-generation agent, uncomment and adjust: # matrix_bot_baibot_config_agents_static_definitions_anthropic_config_text_generation_model_id: claude-3-5-sonnet-20240620 # The playbook defines a default prompt for all statically-defined agents. # You can adjust it in the `matrix_bot_baibot_config_agents_static_definitions_prompt` variable, # or you can adjust it below only for the Anthropic agent. # matrix_bot_baibot_config_agents_static_definitions_anthropic_config_text_generation_prompt: "{{ matrix_bot_baibot_config_agents_static_definitions_prompt }}" # See `defaults/main.yml` in the baibot role for more configuration options. ``` If you'd like to use more than one model, take a look at the [Configuring additional agents (without a preset)](#configuring-additional-agents-without-a-preset) section below. 💡 You may also wish to use this new agent for [🤝 Configuring initial default handlers](#-configuring-initial-default-handlers). #### Groq You can statically-define a single [🤖 agent](https://github.com/etkecc/baibot/blob/main/docs/agents.md) instance powered by the [Groq provider](https://github.com/etkecc/baibot/blob/main/docs/providers.md#groq) with the help of the playbook's preset variables. Here's an example **addition** to your `vars.yml` file: ```yml matrix_bot_baibot_config_agents_static_definitions_groq_enabled: true matrix_bot_baibot_config_agents_static_definitions_groq_config_api_key: "YOUR_API_KEY_HERE" # Specify the text-generation agent you'd like to use matrix_bot_baibot_config_agents_static_definitions_groq_config_text_generation_model_id: "llama3-70b-8192" # The playbook defines a default prompt for all statically-defined agents. # You can adjust it in the `matrix_bot_baibot_config_agents_static_definitions_prompt` variable, # or you can adjust it below only for the Groq agent. # matrix_bot_baibot_config_agents_static_definitions_groq_config_text_generation_prompt: "{{ matrix_bot_baibot_config_agents_static_definitions_prompt }}" # Uncomment and adjust this part if you're not happy with these speech-to-text defaults: # # matrix_bot_baibot_config_agents_static_definitions_groq_config_speech_to_text_enabled: true # matrix_bot_baibot_config_agents_static_definitions_groq_config_speech_to_text_model_id: whisper-large-v3 # See `defaults/main.yml` in the baibot role for more configuration options. ``` Because this is a [statically](https://github.com/etkecc/baibot/blob/main/docs/configuration/README.md#static-configuration)-defined agent, it will be given a `static/` ID prefix and will be named `static/groq`. If you'd like to use more than one model, take a look at the [Configuring additional agents (without a preset)](#configuring-additional-agents-without-a-preset) section below. 💡 You may also wish to use this new agent for [🤝 Configuring initial default handlers](#-configuring-initial-default-handlers). #### Mistral You can statically-define a single [🤖 agent](https://github.com/etkecc/baibot/blob/main/docs/agents.md) instance powered by the [đŸ‡Ģ🇷 Mistral provider](https://github.com/etkecc/baibot/blob/main/docs/providers.md#mistral) with the help of the playbook's preset variables. Here's an example **addition** to your `vars.yml` file: ```yml matrix_bot_baibot_config_agents_static_definitions_mistral_enabled: true matrix_bot_baibot_config_agents_static_definitions_mistral_config_api_key: "YOUR_API_KEY_HERE" # The playbook defines a default prompt for all statically-defined agents. # You can adjust it in the `matrix_bot_baibot_config_agents_static_definitions_prompt` variable, # or you can adjust it below only for the Mistral agent. # matrix_bot_baibot_config_agents_static_definitions_mistral_config_text_generation_prompt: "{{ matrix_bot_baibot_config_agents_static_definitions_prompt }}" # Uncomment and adjust this part if you're not happy with these defaults: # matrix_bot_baibot_config_agents_static_definitions_mistral_config_text_generation_model_id: mistral-large-latest # See `defaults/main.yml` in the baibot role for more configuration options. ``` Because this is a [statically](https://github.com/etkecc/baibot/blob/main/docs/configuration/README.md#static-configuration)-defined agent, it will be given a `static/` ID prefix and will be named `static/mistral`. If you'd like to use more than one model, take a look at the [Configuring additional agents (without a preset)](#configuring-additional-agents-without-a-preset) section below. 💡 You may also wish to use this new agent for [🤝 Configuring initial default handlers](#-configuring-initial-default-handlers). #### OpenAI You can statically-define a single [🤖 agent](https://github.com/etkecc/baibot/blob/main/docs/agents.md) instance powered by the [OpenAI provider](https://github.com/etkecc/baibot/blob/main/docs/providers.md#openai) with the help of the playbook's preset variables. The OpenAI provider is **only meant to be used with OpenAI's official API** and compatibility with other services (which do not fully adhere to the OpenAI API spec completely) is limited. **If you're targeting an OpenAI-compatible service**, use the [OpenAI Compatible](#openai-compatible) provider instead. Here's an example **addition** to your `vars.yml` file: ```yml matrix_bot_baibot_config_agents_static_definitions_openai_enabled: true matrix_bot_baibot_config_agents_static_definitions_openai_config_api_key: "YOUR_API_KEY_HERE" # The playbook defines a default prompt for all statically-defined agents. # You can adjust it in the `matrix_bot_baibot_config_agents_static_definitions_prompt` variable, # or you can adjust it below only for the OpenAI agent. # matrix_bot_baibot_config_agents_static_definitions_openai_config_text_generation_prompt: "{{ matrix_bot_baibot_config_agents_static_definitions_prompt }}" # If you'd like to use another text-generation agent, uncomment and adjust: # matrix_bot_baibot_config_agents_static_definitions_openai_config_text_generation_model_id: gpt-4o # See `defaults/main.yml` in the baibot role for more configuration options. ``` Because this is a [statically](https://github.com/etkecc/baibot/blob/main/docs/configuration/README.md#static-configuration)-defined agent, it will be given a `static/` ID prefix and will be named `static/openai`. If you'd like to use more than one model, take a look at the [Configuring additional agents (without a preset)](#configuring-additional-agents-without-a-preset) section below. 💡 You may also wish to use this new agent for [🤝 Configuring initial default handlers](#-configuring-initial-default-handlers). #### OpenAI Compatible You can statically-define a single [🤖 agent](https://github.com/etkecc/baibot/blob/main/docs/agents.md) instance powered by the [OpenAI Compatible provider](https://github.com/etkecc/baibot/blob/main/docs/providers.md#openai-compatible) with the help of the playbook's preset variables. This provider allows you to use OpenAI-compatible API services like [OpenRouter](https://github.com/etkecc/baibot/blob/main/docs/providers.md#openrouter), [Together AI](https://github.com/etkecc/baibot/blob/main/docs/providers.md#together-ai), etc. Some of these popular services already have **shortcut** providers (see [supported providers](https://github.com/etkecc/baibot/blob/main/docs/providers.md#supported-providers) leading to this one behind the scenes - this make it easier to get started. As of this moment, the playbook does not include presets for any of these services, so you'll need to [Configuring additional agents (without a preset)](#configuring-additional-agents-without-a-preset). #### Configuring additional agents (without a preset) The Ansible role may be lacking preset variables for some [☁ī¸ provider](https://github.com/etkecc/baibot/blob/main/docs/providers.md), or you may wish to statically-define an agent on the same provider twice (or more) with different configuration. It's possible to inject your own agent configuration using the `matrix_bot_baibot_config_agents_static_definitions_custom` Ansible variable. You can also define providers at runtime, by chatting with the bot, so using Ansible is not a requirement. Below is an an **example** demonstrating **statically-defining agents via Ansible without using presets**: ```yml matrix_bot_baibot_config_agents_static_definitions_custom: # This agent will use the GPT 3.5 model and will only support text-generation, # even though the `openai` provider could support other features (e.g. image-generation). - id: my-openai-gpt-3.5-turbo-agent provider: openai config: base_url: https://api.openai.com/v1 api_key: "YOUR_API_KEY_HERE" text_generation: model_id: gpt-3.5-turbo-0125 prompt: "{{ matrix_bot_baibot_config_agents_static_definitions_prompt }}" temperature: 1.0 max_response_tokens: 4096 max_context_tokens: 16385 speech_to_text: null text_to_speech: null image_generation: null # This agent uses the `openai` provider, but adjusts the base URL, so that it points to some Ollama instance # (which supports an OpenAI-compatible API). - id: my-ollama-agent provider: openai config: base_url: http://ollama-service:1234/v1 api_key: "" text_generation: model_id: "llama3.1:8b" prompt: "{{ matrix_bot_baibot_config_agents_static_definitions_prompt }}" temperature: 1.0 max_response_tokens: 4096 max_context_tokens: 128000 speech_to_text: null text_to_speech: null image_generation: null ``` Because these are [statically](https://github.com/etkecc/baibot/blob/main/docs/configuration/README.md#static-configuration)-defined agents, they will be given a `static/` ID prefix and will be named `static/my-openai-gpt-3.5-turbo-agent` and `static/my-ollama-agent`, respectively. 💡 To figure out what to put in the `config` section, refer to the [☁ī¸ provider](https://github.com/etkecc/baibot/blob/main/docs/providers.md) page, which contains **sample configuration YAML for each provider**. As with any [🤖 agent](https://github.com/etkecc/baibot/blob/main/docs/agents.md), defining them means they exist. To actually make use of them, they need to be configured as handlers globally or in a specific room - see [Mixing & matching models](https://github.com/etkecc/baibot/blob/main/docs/features.md#mixing--matching-models). 💡 You may also wish to use these new agents for [🤝 Configuring initial default handlers](#-configuring-initial-default-handlers). ### 🤝 Configuring initial default handlers This section is only useful if you're [🤖 Configuring agents via Ansible](#-configuring-agents-via-ansible), as it lets you put these agents to use as soon as the bot starts (by adjusting the bot's **initial global configuration**). If you're not configuring agents via Ansible, you can skip this section. This section is only useful the first time around. **Once initially configured the global configuration cannot be managed Ansible**, but only via bot commands. baibot supports [various purposes](https://github.com/etkecc/baibot/blob/main/docs/features.md): - [đŸ’Ŧ text-generation](https://github.com/etkecc/baibot/blob/main/docs/features.md#-text-generation): communicating with you via text - [đŸĻģ speech-to-text](https://github.com/etkecc/baibot/blob/main/docs/features.md#-speech-to-text): turning your voice messages into text - [đŸ—Ŗī¸ text-to-speech](https://github.com/etkecc/baibot/blob/main/docs/features.md#-text-to-speech): turning bot or users text messages into voice messages - [🖌ī¸ image-generation](https://github.com/etkecc/baibot/blob/main/docs/features.md#-image-generation): generating images based on instructions - ❓ catch-all: special purposes, indicating use as a fallback (when no specific handler is configured) [Mixing & matching models](https://github.com/etkecc/baibot/blob/main/docs/features.md#mixing--matching-models) is made possible by the bot's ability to have different [🤝 handlers](https://github.com/etkecc/baibot/blob/main/docs/configuration/handlers.md) configured for different purposes. This configuration can be done as a global fallback, or per-room. Both of these [🛠ī¸ configurations](https://github.com/etkecc/baibot/blob/main/docs/configuration/README.md) are managed at runtime (viat chat), but **the global configuration can have some initial defaults configured via Ansible**. You can configure the **initial values** for these via Ansible, via the `matrix_bot_baibot_config_initial_global_config_handler_*` variables. Example **additional** `vars.yml` configuration: ```yml # Note: these are initial defaults for the bot's global configuration. # As such, changing any of these values subsequently has no effect on the bot's behavior. # Once initially configured, the global configuration is managed via bot commands, not via Ansible. matrix_bot_baibot_config_initial_global_config_handler_catch_all: static/openai # In this example, there's no need to define any of these below. # Configuring the catch-all purpose handler is enough. matrix_bot_baibot_config_initial_global_config_handler_text_generation: null matrix_bot_baibot_config_initial_global_config_handler_text_to_speech: null matrix_bot_baibot_config_initial_global_config_handler_speech_to_text: null matrix_bot_baibot_config_initial_global_config_handler_image_generation: null ``` **Note**: these are initial defaults for the bot's global configuration. As such, changing any of these values subsequently has no effect on the bot's behavior. **Once initially configured the global configuration cannot be managed Ansible**, but only via bot commands. ## Installing After configuring the playbook, run the [installation](installing.md) command: ```sh just run-tags install-all,ensure-matrix-users-created,start ``` **Notes**: - the `ensure-matrix-users-created` playbook tag makes the playbook automatically create the bot's user account - if you change the bot password (`matrix_bot_baibot_config_user_password` in your `vars.yml` file) subsequently, the bot user's credentials on the homeserver won't be updated automatically. If you'd like to change the bot user's password, use a tool like [synapse-admin](configuring-playbook-synapse-admin.md) to change it, and then update `matrix_bot_baibot_config_user_password` to let the bot know its new password ## Usage To use the bot, invite the `@baibot:example.com` bot user into a room. If you're an allowed bot [đŸ‘Ĩ user](https://github.com/etkecc/baibot/blob/main/docs/access.md#user) (see [đŸ‘Ĩ Initial users configuration](#-initial-users-configuration)), the bot will accept your invitation and join the room. After joining, the bot will introduce itself and show information about the [✨ features](https://github.com/etkecc/baibot/blob/main/docs/features.md) that are enabled for it. If you've [🤖 configured one or more agents via Ansible](#-configuring-agents-via-ansible) and have [🤝 configured initial default handlers](#configuring-initial-default-handlers), the bot will immediately be able to make use of these agents for this new room. Otherwise, you will need to configure agents and/or handlers via chat commands. Send `!bai help` to the room at any time to see the bot's help menu for additional commands. You can also refer to the upstream [baibot](https://github.com/etkecc/baibot) project's documentation. ## Debugging As with all other services, you can find service logs in [systemd-journald](https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/systemd-journald.service.html) by running something like `journalctl -fu matrix-bot-baibot` The default logging level for this service is `info`, but you can increase it to `debug` (or even `trace`) with the following additional configuration: ```yaml # Adjust the bot's own logging level. matrix_bot_baibot_config_logging_level_baibot: debug # Adjust the logging level for the mxlink bot library used by the bot. matrix_bot_baibot_config_logging_level_mxlink: debug # Adjust the logging level for other libraries used by the bot. # Having this set to a value other than "warn" can be very noisy. matrix_bot_baibot_config_logging_level_other_libs: debug ``` **Alternatively**, you can use a single variable to set the logging level for all of the above (bot + all libraries): ```yaml matrix_bot_baibot_config_logging: debug ```