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Ruby Implementation of Nano Bots: small, AI-powered bots that can be easily shared as a single file, designed to support multiple providers such as Anthropic Claude, Cohere Command, Google Gemini, Maritaca AI, Mistral AI, Ollama, OpenAI ChatGPT, and others, with support for calling tools (functions).

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Nano Bots 💎 🤖

An implementation of the Nano Bots specification with support for Anthropic Claude, Cohere Command, Google Gemini, Maritaca AI Sabiá, Mistral AI, Ollama, OpenAI ChatGPT, and others, with support for calling tools (functions).

Ruby Nano Bots

nano-bot.mp4

TL;DR and Quick Start

gem install nano-bots -v 3.4.0
nb - - eval "hello"
# => Hello! How may I assist you today?
nb - - repl
🤖> Hi, how are you doing?

As an AI language model, I do not experience emotions but I am functioning
well. How can I assist you?

🤖> |
---
meta:
  symbol: 🤖
  name: Nano Bot Name
  author: Your Name
  version: 1.0.0
  license: CC0-1.0
  description: A helpful assistant.

behaviors:
  interaction:
    directive: You are a helpful assistant.

provider:
  id: openai
  credentials:
    access-token: ENV/OPENAI_API_KEY
  settings:
    user: ENV/NANO_BOTS_END_USER
    model: gpt-4o
nb gpt.yml - eval "hi"
# => Hello! How can I assist you today?
gem 'nano-bots', '~> 3.4.0'
require 'nano-bots'

bot = NanoBot.new(cartridge: 'gpt.yml')

bot.eval('Hi!') do |content, fragment, finished, meta|
  print fragment unless fragment.nil?
end

# => Hello! How can I assist you today?

Usage

Command Line

After installing the gem, the nb binary command will be available for your project or system.

Examples of usage:

nb - - eval "hello"
# => Hello! How may I assist you today?

nb to-en-us-translator.yml - eval "Salut, comment ça va?"
# => Hello, how are you doing?

nb midjourney.yml - eval "happy cyberpunk robot"
# => A cheerful and fun-loving robot is dancing wildly amidst a
#    futuristic and lively cityscape. Holographic advertisements
#    and vibrant neon colors can be seen in the background.

nb lisp.yml - eval "(+ 1 2)"
# => 3

cat article.txt |
  nb to-en-us-translator.yml - eval |
  nb summarizer.yml - eval
# -> LLM stands for Large Language Model, which refers to an
#    artificial intelligence algorithm capable of processing
#    and understanding vast amounts of natural language data,
#    allowing it to generate human-like responses and perform
#    a range of language-related tasks.
nb - - repl

nb assistant.yml - repl
🤖> Hi, how are you doing?

As an AI language model, I do not experience emotions but I am functioning
well. How can I assist you?

🤖> |

You can exit the REPL by typing exit.

All of the commands above are stateless. If you want to preserve the history of your interactions, replace the - with a state key:

nb assistant.yml your-user eval "Salut, comment ça va?"
nb assistant.yml your-user repl

nb assistant.yml 6ea6c43c42a1c076b1e3c36fa349ac2c eval "Salut, comment ça va?"
nb assistant.yml 6ea6c43c42a1c076b1e3c36fa349ac2c repl

You can use a simple key, such as your username, or a randomly generated one:

require 'securerandom'

SecureRandom.hex # => 6ea6c43c42a1c076b1e3c36fa349ac2c

Debugging

nb - - cartridge
nb cartridge.yml - cartridge

nb - STATE-KEY state
nb cartridge.yml STATE-KEY state

Library

To use it as a library:

require 'nano-bots/cli' # Equivalent to the `nb` command.
require 'nano-bots'

NanoBot.cli # Equivalent to the `nb` command.

NanoBot.repl(cartridge: 'cartridge.yml') # Starts a new REPL.

bot = NanoBot.new(cartridge: 'cartridge.yml')

bot = NanoBot.new(
  cartridge: YAML.safe_load(File.read('cartridge.yml'), permitted_classes: [Symbol])
)

bot = NanoBot.new(
  cartridge: { ... } # Parsed Cartridge Hash
)

bot.eval('Hello')

bot.eval('Hello', as: 'eval')
bot.eval('Hello', as: 'repl')

# When stream is enabled and available:
bot.eval('Hi!') do |content, fragment, finished, meta|
  print fragment unless fragment.nil?
end

bot.repl # Starts a new REPL.

NanoBot.repl(cartridge: 'cartridge.yml', state: '6ea6c43c42a1c076b1e3c36fa349ac2c')

bot = NanoBot.new(cartridge: 'cartridge.yml', state: '6ea6c43c42a1c076b1e3c36fa349ac2c')

bot.prompt # => "🤖\u001b[34m> \u001b[0m"

bot.boot

bot.boot(as: 'eval')
bot.boot(as: 'repl')

bot.boot do |content, fragment, finished, meta|
  print fragment unless fragment.nil?
end

Setup

To install the CLI on your system:

gem install nano-bots -v 3.4.0

To use it in a Ruby project as a library, add to your Gemfile:

gem 'nano-bots', '~> 3.4.0'
bundle install

For credentials and configurations, relevant environment variables can be set in your .bashrc, .zshrc, or equivalent files, as well as in your Docker Container or System Environment. Example:

export NANO_BOTS_ENCRYPTION_PASSWORD=UNSAFE
export NANO_BOTS_END_USER=your-user

# export NANO_BOTS_STATE_PATH=/home/user/.local/state/nano-bots
# export NANO_BOTS_CARTRIDGES_PATH=/home/user/.local/share/nano-bots/cartridges

Alternatively, if your current directory has a .env file with the environment variables, they will be automatically loaded:

NANO_BOTS_ENCRYPTION_PASSWORD=UNSAFE
NANO_BOTS_END_USER=your-user

# NANO_BOTS_STATE_PATH=/home/user/.local/state/nano-bots
# NANO_BOTS_CARTRIDGES_PATH=/home/user/.local/share/nano-bots/cartridges

Anthropic Claude

You can obtain your credentials on the Anthropic Console.

export ANTHROPIC_API_KEY=your-api-key

Alternatively, if your current directory has a .env file with the environment variables, they will be automatically loaded:

ANTHROPIC_API_KEY=your-api-key

Create a cartridge.yml file:

---
meta:
  symbol: 🤖
  name: Nano Bot Name
  author: Your Name
  version: 1.0.0
  license: CC0-1.0
  description: A helpful assistant.

behaviors:
  interaction:
    directive: You are a helpful assistant.

provider:
  id: anthropic
  credentials:
    api-key: ENV/ANTHROPIC_API_KEY
  settings:
    model: claude-3-5-sonnet-20240620
    max_tokens: 4096

Read the full specification for Anthropic Claude.

nb cartridge.yml - eval "Hello"

nb cartridge.yml - repl
bot = NanoBot.new(cartridge: 'cartridge.yml')

puts bot.eval('Hello')

Cohere Command

You can obtain your credentials on the Cohere Platform.

export COHERE_API_KEY=your-api-key

Alternatively, if your current directory has a .env file with the environment variables, they will be automatically loaded:

COHERE_API_KEY=your-api-key

Create a cartridge.yml file:

---
meta:
  symbol: 🤖
  name: Nano Bot Name
  author: Your Name
  version: 1.0.0
  license: CC0-1.0
  description: A helpful assistant.

behaviors:
  interaction:
    directive: You are a helpful assistant.

provider:
  id: cohere
  credentials:
    api-key: ENV/COHERE_API_KEY
  settings:
    model: command

Read the full specification for Cohere Command.

nb cartridge.yml - eval "Hello"

nb cartridge.yml - repl
bot = NanoBot.new(cartridge: 'cartridge.yml')

puts bot.eval('Hello')

Maritaca AI MariTalk

You can obtain your API key at MariTalk.

Enclose credentials in single quotes when using environment variables to prevent issues with the $ character in the API key:

export MARITACA_API_KEY='123...$a12...'

Alternatively, if your current directory has a .env file with the environment variables, they will be automatically loaded:

MARITACA_API_KEY='123...$a12...'

Create a cartridge.yml file:

---
meta:
  symbol: 🤖
  name: Nano Bot Name
  author: Your Name
  version: 1.0.0
  license: CC0-1.0
  description: A helpful assistant.

behaviors:
  interaction:
    directive: You are a helpful assistant.

provider:
  id: maritaca
  credentials:
    api-key: ENV/MARITACA_API_KEY
  settings:
    model: sabia-2-medium

Read the full specification for Mistral AI.

nb cartridge.yml - eval "Hello"

nb cartridge.yml - repl
bot = NanoBot.new(cartridge: 'cartridge.yml')

puts bot.eval('Hello')

Mistral AI

You can obtain your credentials on the Mistral Platform.

export MISTRAL_API_KEY=your-api-key

Alternatively, if your current directory has a .env file with the environment variables, they will be automatically loaded:

MISTRAL_API_KEY=your-api-key

Create a cartridge.yml file:

---
meta:
  symbol: 🤖
  name: Nano Bot Name
  author: Your Name
  version: 1.0.0
  license: CC0-1.0
  description: A helpful assistant.

behaviors:
  interaction:
    directive: You are a helpful assistant.

provider:
  id: mistral
  credentials:
    api-key: ENV/MISTRAL_API_KEY
  settings:
    model: mistral-medium-latest

Read the full specification for Mistral AI.

nb cartridge.yml - eval "Hello"

nb cartridge.yml - repl
bot = NanoBot.new(cartridge: 'cartridge.yml')

puts bot.eval('Hello')

Ollama

To install and set up, follow the instructions on the Ollama website.

export OLLAMA_API_ADDRESS=http://localhost:11434

Alternatively, if your current directory has a .env file with the environment variables, they will be automatically loaded:

OLLAMA_API_ADDRESS=http://localhost:11434

Create a cartridge.yml file:

---
meta:
  symbol: 🤖
  name: Nano Bot Name
  author: Your Name
  version: 1.0.0
  license: CC0-1.0
  description: A helpful assistant.

behaviors:
  interaction:
    directive: You are a helpful assistant.

provider:
  id: ollama
  credentials:
    address: ENV/OLLAMA_API_ADDRESS
  settings:
    model: llama3

Read the full specification for Ollama.

nb cartridge.yml - eval "Hello"

nb cartridge.yml - repl
bot = NanoBot.new(cartridge: 'cartridge.yml')

puts bot.eval('Hello')

OpenAI ChatGPT

You can obtain your credentials on the OpenAI Platform.

export OPENAI_API_KEY=your-access-token

Alternatively, if your current directory has a .env file with the environment variables, they will be automatically loaded:

OPENAI_API_KEY=your-access-token

Create a cartridge.yml file:

---
meta:
  symbol: 🤖
  name: Nano Bot Name
  author: Your Name
  version: 1.0.0
  license: CC0-1.0
  description: A helpful assistant.

behaviors:
  interaction:
    directive: You are a helpful assistant.

provider:
  id: openai
  credentials:
    access-token: ENV/OPENAI_API_KEY
  settings:
    user: ENV/NANO_BOTS_END_USER
    model: gpt-4o

Read the full specification for OpenAI ChatGPT.

nb cartridge.yml - eval "Hello"

nb cartridge.yml - repl
bot = NanoBot.new(cartridge: 'cartridge.yml')

puts bot.eval('Hello')

Google Gemini

Click here to learn how to obtain your credentials.

Option 1: API Key (Generative Language API)

export GOOGLE_API_KEY=your-api-key

Alternatively, if your current directory has a .env file with the environment variables, they will be automatically loaded:

GOOGLE_API_KEY=your-api-key

Create a cartridge.yml file:

---
meta:
  symbol: 🤖
  name: Nano Bot Name
  author: Your Name
  version: 1.0.0
  license: CC0-1.0
  description: A helpful assistant.

behaviors:
  interaction:
    directive: You are a helpful assistant.

provider:
  id: google
  credentials:
    service: generative-language-api
    api-key: ENV/GOOGLE_API_KEY
  options:
    model: gemini-pro

Read the full specification for Google Gemini.

nb cartridge.yml - eval "Hello"

nb cartridge.yml - repl
bot = NanoBot.new(cartridge: 'cartridge.yml')

puts bot.eval('Hello')

Option 2: Service Account Credentials File (Vertex AI API)

export GOOGLE_CREDENTIALS_FILE_PATH=google-credentials.json
export GOOGLE_REGION=us-east4

Alternatively, if your current directory has a .env file with the environment variables, they will be automatically loaded:

GOOGLE_CREDENTIALS_FILE_PATH=google-credentials.json
GOOGLE_REGION=us-east4

Create a cartridge.yml file:

---
meta:
  symbol: 🤖
  name: Nano Bot Name
  author: Your Name
  version: 1.0.0
  license: CC0-1.0
  description: A helpful assistant.

behaviors:
  interaction:
    directive: You are a helpful assistant.

provider:
  id: google
  credentials:
    service: vertex-ai-api
    file-path: ENV/GOOGLE_CREDENTIALS_FILE_PATH
    region: ENV/GOOGLE_REGION
  options:
    model: gemini-pro

Read the full specification for Google Gemini.

nb cartridge.yml - eval "Hello"

nb cartridge.yml - repl
bot = NanoBot.new(cartridge: 'cartridge.yml')

puts bot.eval('Hello')

Option 3: Application Default Credentials (Vertex AI API)

export GOOGLE_REGION=us-east4

Alternatively, if your current directory has a .env file with the environment variables, they will be automatically loaded:

GOOGLE_REGION=us-east4

Create a cartridge.yml file:

---
meta:
  symbol: 🤖
  name: Nano Bot Name
  author: Your Name
  version: 1.0.0
  license: CC0-1.0
  description: A helpful assistant.

behaviors:
  interaction:
    directive: You are a helpful assistant.

provider:
  id: google
  credentials:
    service: vertex-ai-api
    region: ENV/GOOGLE_REGION
  options:
    model: gemini-pro

Read the full specification for Google Gemini.

nb cartridge.yml - eval "Hello"

nb cartridge.yml - repl
bot = NanoBot.new(cartridge: 'cartridge.yml')

puts bot.eval('Hello')

Custom Project ID

If you need to manually set a Google Project ID:

export GOOGLE_PROJECT_ID=your-project-id

Alternatively, if your current directory has a .env file with the environment variables, they will be automatically loaded:

GOOGLE_PROJECT_ID=your-project-id

Add to your cartridge.yml file:

---
provider:
  id: google
  credentials:
    project-id: ENV/GOOGLE_PROJECT_ID

Cartridges

Check the Nano Bots specification to learn more about how to build cartridges.

Try the Nano Bots Clinic (Live Editor) to learn about creating Cartridges.

Here's what a Nano Bot Cartridge looks like:

---
meta:
  symbol: 🤖
  name: Nano Bot Name
  author: Your Name
  version: 1.0.0
  license: CC0-1.0
  description: A helpful assistant.

behaviors:
  interaction:
    directive: You are a helpful assistant.

provider:
  id: openai
  credentials:
    access-token: ENV/OPENAI_API_KEY
  settings:
    user: ENV/NANO_BOTS_END_USER
    model: gpt-4o

Tools (Functions)

Nano Bots can also be powered by Tools (Functions):

---
tools:
  - name: random-number
    description: Generates a random number between 1 and 100.
    fennel: |
      (math.random 1 100)
🤖> please generate a random number

random-number {} [yN] y

random-number {}
59

The randomly generated number is 59.

🤖> |

To successfully use Tools (Functions), you need to specify a provider and a model that supports them. As of the writing of this README, the provider that supports them is OpenAI, with models gpt-3.5-turbo-1106 and gpt-4o, and Google, with the vertex-ai-api service and the model gemini-pro. Other providers do not yet have support.

Check the Nano Bots specification to learn more about Tools (Functions).

Experimental Clojure Support

We are exploring the use of Clojure through Babashka, powered by GraalVM.

The experimental support for Clojure would be similar to Lua and Fennel, using the clojure: key:

---
clojure: |
  (-> (java.time.ZonedDateTime/now)
      (.format (java.time.format.DateTimeFormatter/ofPattern "yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm"))
      (clojure.string/trimr))

Unlike Lua and Fennel, Clojure support is not embedded in this implementation. It relies on having the Babashka binary (bb) available in your environment where the Nano Bot is running.

Here's how to install Babashka:

curl -s https://raw.githubusercontent.com/babashka/babashka/master/install | sudo bash

This is a quick check to ensure that it is available and working:

bb -e '{:hello "world"}'
# => {:hello "world"}

We don't have sandbox support for Clojure; this means that you need to disable it to be able to run Clojure code, which you do at your own risk:

---
safety:
  functions:
    sandboxed: false

Marketplace

You can explore the Nano Bots Marketplace to discover new Cartridges that can help you.

Security and Privacy

Each provider will have its own security and privacy policies (e.g. OpenAI Policy), so you must consult them to understand their implications.

Cryptography

By default, all states stored in your local disk are encrypted.

To ensure that the encryption is secure, you need to define a password through the NANO_BOTS_ENCRYPTION_PASSWORD environment variable. Otherwise, although the content will be encrypted, anyone would be able to decrypt it without a password.

It's important to note that the content shared with providers, despite being transmitted over secure connections (e.g., HTTPS), will be readable by the provider. This is because providers need to operate on the data, which would not be possible if the content was encrypted beyond HTTPS. So, the data stored locally on your system is encrypted, which does not mean that what you share with providers will not be readable by them.

To ensure that your encryption and password are configured properly, you can run the following command:

nb security

Which should return:

âś… Encryption is enabled and properly working.
     This means that your data is stored in an encrypted format on your disk.

âś… A password is being used for the encrypted content.
     This means that only those who possess the password can decrypt your data.

Alternatively, you can check it at runtime with:

require 'nano-bots'

NanoBot.security.check
# => { encryption: true, password: true }

End-user IDs

A common strategy for deploying Nano Bots to multiple users through APIs or automations is to assign a unique end-user ID for each user. This can be useful if any of your users violate the provider's policy due to abusive behavior. By providing the end-user ID, you can unravel that even though the activity originated from your API Key, the actions taken were not your own.

You can define custom end-user identifiers in the following way:

NanoBot.new(environment: { NANO_BOTS_END_USER: 'custom-user-a' })
NanoBot.new(environment: { NANO_BOTS_END_USER: 'custom-user-b' })

Consider that you have the following end-user identifier in your environment:

NANO_BOTS_END_USER=your-name

Or a configuration in your Cartridge:

---
provider:
  id: openai
  settings:
    user: your-name

The requests will be performed as follows:

NanoBot.new(cartridge: '-')
# { user: 'your-name' }

NanoBot.new(cartridge: '-', environment: { NANO_BOTS_END_USER: 'custom-user-a' })
# { user: 'custom-user-a' }

NanoBot.new(cartridge: '-', environment: { NANO_BOTS_END_USER: 'custom-user-b' })
# { user: 'custom-user-b' }

Actually, to enhance privacy, neither your user nor your users' identifiers will be shared in this way. Instead, they will be encrypted before being shared with the provider:

'your-name'
# _O7OjYUESagb46YSeUeSfSMzoO1Yg0BZqpsAkPg4j62SeNYlgwq3kn51Ob2wmIehoA==

'custom-user-a'
# _O7OjYUESagb46YSeUeSfSMzoO1Yg0BZJgIXHCBHyADW-rn4IQr-s2RvP7vym8u5tnzYMIs=

'custom-user-b'
# _O7OjYUESagb46YSeUeSfSMzoO1Yg0BZkjUwCcsh9sVppKvYMhd2qGRvP7vym8u5tnzYMIg=

In this manner, you possess identifiers if required, however, their actual content can only be decrypted by you via your secure password (NANO_BOTS_ENCRYPTION_PASSWORD).

Decrypting

To decrypt your encrypted data, once you have properly configured your password, you can simply run:

require 'nano-bots'

NanoBot.security.decrypt('_O7OjYUESagb46YSeUeSfSMzoO1Yg0BZqpsAkPg4j62SeNYlgwq3kn51Ob2wmIehoA==')
# your-name

NanoBot.security.decrypt('_O7OjYUESagb46YSeUeSfSMzoO1Yg0BZJgIXHCBHyADW-rn4IQr-s2RvP7vym8u5tnzYMIs=')
# custom-user-a

NanoBot.security.decrypt('_O7OjYUESagb46YSeUeSfSMzoO1Yg0BZkjUwCcsh9sVppKvYMhd2qGRvP7vym8u5tnzYMIg=')
# custom-user-b

If you lose your password, you lose your data. It is not possible to recover it at all. For real.

Supported Providers

01.AI Yi, LMSYS Vicuna, Meta Llama, and WizardLM are open-source models that are supported through Ollama.

Docker

Clone the repository and copy the Docker Compose template:

git clone https://github.com/icebaker/ruby-nano-bots.git
cd ruby-nano-bots
cp docker-compose.example.yml docker-compose.yml

Set your provider credentials and choose your desired path for the cartridges files:

Anthropic Claude Container

---
services:
  nano-bots:
    image: ruby:3.3.3-slim-bookworm
    command: sh -c "apt-get update && apt-get install -y --no-install-recommends build-essential libffi-dev libsodium-dev lua5.4-dev curl && curl -s https://raw.githubusercontent.com/babashka/babashka/master/install | bash && gem install nano-bots -v 3.4.0 && bash"
    environment:
      ANTHROPIC_API_KEY: your-api-key
      NANO_BOTS_ENCRYPTION_PASSWORD: UNSAFE
      NANO_BOTS_END_USER: your-user
    volumes:
      - ./your-cartridges:/root/.local/share/nano-bots/cartridges
      - ./your-state-path:/root/.local/state/nano-bots

Cohere Command Container

---
services:
  nano-bots:
    image: ruby:3.3.3-slim-bookworm
    command: sh -c "apt-get update && apt-get install -y --no-install-recommends build-essential libffi-dev libsodium-dev lua5.4-dev curl && curl -s https://raw.githubusercontent.com/babashka/babashka/master/install | bash && gem install nano-bots -v 3.4.0 && bash"
    environment:
      COHERE_API_KEY: your-api-key
      NANO_BOTS_ENCRYPTION_PASSWORD: UNSAFE
      NANO_BOTS_END_USER: your-user
    volumes:
      - ./your-cartridges:/root/.local/share/nano-bots/cartridges
      - ./your-state-path:/root/.local/state/nano-bots

Maritaca AI MariTalk Container

---
services:
  nano-bots:
    image: ruby:3.3.3-slim-bookworm
    command: sh -c "apt-get update && apt-get install -y --no-install-recommends build-essential libffi-dev libsodium-dev lua5.4-dev curl && curl -s https://raw.githubusercontent.com/babashka/babashka/master/install | bash && gem install nano-bots -v 3.4.0 && bash"
    environment:
      MARITACA_API_KEY: your-api-key
      NANO_BOTS_ENCRYPTION_PASSWORD: UNSAFE
      NANO_BOTS_END_USER: your-user
    volumes:
      - ./your-cartridges:/root/.local/share/nano-bots/cartridges
      - ./your-state-path:/root/.local/state/nano-bots

Mistral AI Container

---
services:
  nano-bots:
    image: ruby:3.3.3-slim-bookworm
    command: sh -c "apt-get update && apt-get install -y --no-install-recommends build-essential libffi-dev libsodium-dev lua5.4-dev curl && curl -s https://raw.githubusercontent.com/babashka/babashka/master/install | bash && gem install nano-bots -v 3.4.0 && bash"
    environment:
      MISTRAL_API_KEY: your-api-key
      NANO_BOTS_ENCRYPTION_PASSWORD: UNSAFE
      NANO_BOTS_END_USER: your-user
    volumes:
      - ./your-cartridges:/root/.local/share/nano-bots/cartridges
      - ./your-state-path:/root/.local/state/nano-bots

Ollama Container

Remember that your localhost is by default inaccessible from inside Docker. You need to either establish inter-container networking, use the host's address, or use the host network, depending on where the Ollama server is running and your preferences.

---
services:
  nano-bots:
    image: ruby:3.3.3-slim-bookworm
    command: sh -c "apt-get update && apt-get install -y --no-install-recommends build-essential libffi-dev libsodium-dev lua5.4-dev curl && curl -s https://raw.githubusercontent.com/babashka/babashka/master/install | bash && gem install nano-bots -v 3.4.0 && bash"
    environment:
      OLLAMA_API_ADDRESS: http://localhost:11434
      NANO_BOTS_ENCRYPTION_PASSWORD: UNSAFE
      NANO_BOTS_END_USER: your-user
    volumes:
      - ./your-cartridges:/root/.local/share/nano-bots/cartridges
      - ./your-state-path:/root/.local/state/nano-bots
    # If you are running the Ollama server on your localhost:
    network_mode: host # WARNING: Be careful, this may be a security risk.

OpenAI ChatGPT Container

---
services:
  nano-bots:
    image: ruby:3.3.3-slim-bookworm
    command: sh -c "apt-get update && apt-get install -y --no-install-recommends build-essential libffi-dev libsodium-dev lua5.4-dev curl && curl -s https://raw.githubusercontent.com/babashka/babashka/master/install | bash && gem install nano-bots -v 3.4.0 && bash"
    environment:
      OPENAI_API_KEY: your-access-token
      NANO_BOTS_ENCRYPTION_PASSWORD: UNSAFE
      NANO_BOTS_END_USER: your-user
    volumes:
      - ./your-cartridges:/root/.local/share/nano-bots/cartridges
      - ./your-state-path:/root/.local/state/nano-bots

Google Gemini Container

Option 1: API Key (Generative Language API) Config

---
services:
  nano-bots:
    image: ruby:3.3.3-slim-bookworm
    command: sh -c "apt-get update && apt-get install -y --no-install-recommends build-essential libffi-dev libsodium-dev lua5.4-dev curl && curl -s https://raw.githubusercontent.com/babashka/babashka/master/install | bash && gem install nano-bots -v 3.4.0 && bash"
    environment:
      GOOGLE_API_KEY: your-api-key
      NANO_BOTS_ENCRYPTION_PASSWORD: UNSAFE
      NANO_BOTS_END_USER: your-user
    volumes:
      - ./your-cartridges:/root/.local/share/nano-bots/cartridges
      - ./your-state-path:/root/.local/state/nano-bots

Option 2: Service Account Credentials File (Vertex AI API) Config

---
services:
  nano-bots:
    image: ruby:3.3.3-slim-bookworm
    command: sh -c "apt-get update && apt-get install -y --no-install-recommends build-essential libffi-dev libsodium-dev lua5.4-dev curl && curl -s https://raw.githubusercontent.com/babashka/babashka/master/install | bash && gem install nano-bots -v 3.4.0 && bash"
    environment:
      GOOGLE_CREDENTIALS_FILE_PATH: /root/.config/google-credentials.json
      GOOGLE_REGION: us-east4
      NANO_BOTS_ENCRYPTION_PASSWORD: UNSAFE
      NANO_BOTS_END_USER: your-user
    volumes:
      - ./google-credentials.json:/root/.config/google-credentials.json
      - ./your-cartridges:/root/.local/share/nano-bots/cartridges
      - ./your-state-path:/root/.local/state/nano-bots

Option 3: Application Default Credentials (Vertex AI API) Config

---
services:
  nano-bots:
    image: ruby:3.3.3-slim-bookworm
    command: sh -c "apt-get update && apt-get install -y --no-install-recommends build-essential libffi-dev libsodium-dev lua5.4-dev curl && curl -s https://raw.githubusercontent.com/babashka/babashka/master/install | bash && gem install nano-bots -v 3.4.0 && bash"
    environment:
      GOOGLE_REGION: us-east4
      NANO_BOTS_ENCRYPTION_PASSWORD: UNSAFE
      NANO_BOTS_END_USER: your-user
    volumes:
      - ./your-cartridges:/root/.local/share/nano-bots/cartridges
      - ./your-state-path:/root/.local/state/nano-bots

Custom Project ID Config

If you need to manually set a Google Project ID:

environment:
  GOOGLE_PROJECT_ID=your-project-id

Running the Container

Enter the container:

docker compose run nano-bots

Start playing:

nb - - eval "hello"
nb - - repl

nb assistant.yml - eval "hello"
nb assistant.yml - repl

You can exit the REPL by typing exit.

Development

bundle
rubocop -A
rspec

bundle exec ruby spec/tasks/run-all-models.rb

bundle exec ruby spec/tasks/run-model.rb spec/data/cartridges/models/openai/gpt-4-turbo.yml
bundle exec ruby spec/tasks/run-model.rb spec/data/cartridges/models/openai/gpt-4-turbo.yml stream

If you face issues upgrading gem versions:

bundle install --full-index

Publish to RubyGems

gem build nano-bots.gemspec

gem signin

gem push nano-bots-3.4.0.gem

About

Ruby Implementation of Nano Bots: small, AI-powered bots that can be easily shared as a single file, designed to support multiple providers such as Anthropic Claude, Cohere Command, Google Gemini, Maritaca AI, Mistral AI, Ollama, OpenAI ChatGPT, and others, with support for calling tools (functions).

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