- Removes Codespell from deps, docs, and `Makefile`s
- Python version requirements in all `pyproject.toml` files now use the
`~=` (compatible release) specifier
- All dependency groups and main dependencies now use explicit lower and
upper bounds, reducing potential for breaking changes
## Summary
This PR fixes several bugs and improves the example code in
`BaseChatMessageHistory` docstring that would prevent it from working
correctly.
### Bugs Fixed
- **Critical bug**: Fixed `json.dump(messages, f)` →
`json.dump(serialized, f)` - was using wrong variable
- **NameError**: Fixed bare variable references to use
`self.storage_path` and `self.session_id`
- **Missing imports**: Added required imports (`json`, `os`, message
converters) to make example runnable
### Improvements
- Added missing type hints following project standards (`messages() ->
list[BaseMessage]`, `clear() -> None`)
- Added robust error handling with `FileNotFoundError` exception
handling
- Added directory creation with `os.makedirs(exist_ok=True)` to prevent
path errors
- Improved performance: `json.load(f)` instead of `json.loads(f.read())`
- Added explicit UTF-8 encoding to all file operations
- Updated stores.py to use modern union syntax (`int | None` vs
`Optional[int]`)
### Test Plan
- [x] Code passes linting (`ruff check`)
- [x] Example code now has all required imports and proper syntax
- [x] Fixed variable references prevent runtime errors
- [x] Follows project's type annotation standards
The example code in the docstring is now fully functional and follows
LangChain's coding standards.
---------
Co-authored-by: sadiqkhzn <sadiqkhzn@users.noreply.github.com>
Release core 0.3.63
Small update just to expand the list of well known tools. This is
necessary while the logic lives in langchain-core.
---------
Co-authored-by: Chester Curme <chester.curme@gmail.com>
The first in a sequence of PRs focusing on improving performance in
core. We're starting with reducing import times for common structures,
hence the benchmarks here.
The benchmark looks a little bit complicated - we have to use a process
so that we don't suffer from Python's import caching system. I tried
doing manual modification of `sys.modules` between runs, but that's
pretty tricky / hacky to get right, hence the subprocess approach.
Motivated by extremely slow baseline for common imports (we're talking
2-5 seconds):
<img width="633" alt="Screenshot 2025-04-09 at 12 48 12 PM"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/994616fe-1798-404d-bcbe-48ad0eb8a9a0"
/>
Also added a `make benchmark` command to make local runs easy :).
Currently using walltimes so that we can track total time despite using
a manual proces.