Self-hosting LangSmith on Kubernetes
Self-hosting LangSmith is an add-on to the Enterprise Plan designed for our largest, most security-conscious customers. See our pricing page for more detail, and contact us at sales@langchain.dev if you want to get a license key to trial LangSmith in your environment.
This guide will walk you through the process of deploying LangSmith to a Kubernetes cluster. We will use Helm to install LangSmith and its dependencies.
We've successfully tested LangSmith on the following Kubernetes distributions:
- Google Kubernetes Engine (GKE)
- Amazon Elastic Kubernetes Service (EKS)
- Azure Kubernetes Service (AKS)
- OpenShift
- Minikube and Kind (for development purposes)
To review all configuration options, look at the values.yaml for the LangSmith helm chart.
Prerequisites
Ensure you have the following tools/items ready. Some items are marked optional:
A working Kubernetes cluster that you can access via
kubectl
. Your cluster should have the following minimum requirements:- Recommended: At least 4 vCPUs, 16GB Memory available
- You may need to tune resource requests/limits for all of our different services based off of organization size/usage
- Valid Dynamic PV provisioner or PVs available on your cluster. You can verify this by running:
kubectl get storageclass
The output should show at least one storage class with a provisioner that supports dynamic provisioning. For example:
NAME PROVISIONER RECLAIMPOLICY VOLUMEBINDINGMODE ALLOWVOLUMEEXPANSION AGE
gp2 (default) kubernetes.io/aws-ebs Delete WaitForFirstConsumer true 161dnoteWe highly recommend using a storage class that supports volume expansion. This is because traces can potentially require a lot of disk space and your volumes may need to be resized over time.
Refer to the Kubernetes documentation for more information on storage classes.
- Recommended: At least 4 vCPUs, 16GB Memory available
Helm
brew install helm
LangSmith License Key
- You can get this from your Langchain representative. Contact us at sales@langchain.dev for more information.
Api Key Salt
- This is a secret key that you can generate. It should be a random string of characters.
- You can generate this using the following command:
openssl rand -base64 32
Configuration
- There are several configuration options that you can set in the
langsmith_config.yaml
file. You can find more information on the available configuration options in the Configuration section.
- There are several configuration options that you can set in the
Configure your Helm Charts:
- Create a new file called
langsmith_config.yaml
. This should have a similar structure to thevalues.yaml
file in the LangSmith Helm Chart repository. Only include the values you want to override to avoid having to update the file every time the chart is updated. - Set the appropriate values in the
langsmith_config.yaml
file. You can find the available configuration options in the configuration section.
You can also see some example configurations in the examples directory of the Helm Chart repository here: LangSmith helm chart examples.
Deploying to Kubernetes:
Verify that you can connect to your Kubernetes cluster(note: We highly suggest installing into an empty namespace)
Run
kubectl get pods
Output should look something like:
kubectl get pods ⎈ langsmith-eks-2vauP7wf 21:07:46
No resources found in default namespace.
Ensure you have the Langchain Helm repo added. (skip this step if you are using local charts)
helm repo add langchain https://langchain-ai.github.io/helm/
"langchain" has been added to your repositoriesRun
helm install langsmith langchain/langsmith --values langsmith_config.yaml --namespace <your-namespace> --version <version>
Output should look something like:
NAME: langsmith
LAST DEPLOYED: Fri Sep 17 21:08:47 2021
NAMESPACE: langsmith
STATUS: deployed
REVISION: 1
TEST SUITE: NoneRun
kubectl get pods
Output should now look something like:langsmith-backend-6ff46c99c4-wz22d 1/1 Running 0 3h2m
langsmith-frontend-6bbb94c5df-8xrlr 1/1 Running 0 3h2m
langsmith-hub-backend-5cc68c888c-vppjj 1/1 Running 0 3h2m
langsmith-playground-6d95fd8dc6-x2d9b 1/1 Running 0 3h2m
langsmith-postgres-0 1/1 Running 0 9h
langsmith-queue-5898b9d566-tv6q8 1/1 Running 0 3h2m
langsmith-redis-0 1/1 Running 0 9h
Validate your deployment:
Run
kubectl get services
Output should look something like:
NAME TYPE CLUSTER-IP EXTERNAL-IP PORT(S) AGE
langsmith-backend ClusterIP 172.20.140.77 <none> 1984/TCP 35h
langsmith-frontend LoadBalancer 172.20.253.251 <external ip> 80:31591/TCP 35h
langsmith-hub-backend ClusterIP 172.20.112.234 <none> 1985/TCP 35h
langsmith-playground ClusterIP 172.20.153.194 <none> 3001/TCP 9h
langsmith-postgres ClusterIP 172.20.244.82 <none> 5432/TCP 35h
langsmith-redis ClusterIP 172.20.81.217 <none> 6379/TCP 35hCurl the external ip of the
langsmith-frontend
service:curl <external ip>/api/tenants
[{"id":"00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000","has_waitlist_access":true,"created_at":"2023-09-13T18:25:10.488407","display_name":"Personal","config":{"is_personal":true,"max_identities":1},"tenant_handle":"default"}]%Visit the external ip for the
langsmith-frontend
service on your browserThe LangSmith UI should be visible/operational
Using LangSmith
Now that LangSmith is running, you can start using it to trace your code. You can find more information on how to use self-hosted LangSmith in the self-hosted usage guide.