Build RAG Chatbot with Haystack, Zilliz Cloud, Amazon Bedrock Claude 3.5 Haiku, and BAAI llm-embedder
Introduction to RAG
Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG) is a game-changer for GenAI applications, especially in conversational AI. It combines the power of pre-trained large language models (LLMs) like OpenAI’s GPT with external knowledge sources stored in vector databases such as Milvus and Zilliz Cloud, allowing for more accurate, contextually relevant, and up-to-date response generation. A RAG pipeline usually consists of four basic components: a vector database, an embedding model, an LLM, and a framework.
Key Components We'll Use for This RAG Chatbot
This tutorial shows you how to build a simple RAG chatbot in Python using the following components:
- Haystack: An open-source Python framework designed for building production-ready NLP applications, particularly question answering and semantic search systems. Haystack excels at retrieving information from large document collections through its modular architecture that combines retrieval and reader components. Ideal for developers creating search applications, chatbots, and knowledge management systems that require efficient document processing and accurate information extraction from unstructured text.
- Zilliz Cloud: a fully managed vector database-as-a-service platform built on top of the open-source Milvus, designed to handle high-performance vector data processing at scale. It enables organizations to efficiently store, search, and analyze large volumes of unstructured data, such as text, images, or audio, by leveraging advanced vector search technology. It offers a free tier supporting up to 1 million vectors.
- AmazonBedrock Claude 3.5 Haiku: A high-efficiency AI model designed for fast, scalable processing of diverse tasks. Strengths include low-latency responses, cost-effectiveness, and seamless AWS integration. Ideal for real-time applications, high-volume data analysis, and enterprise solutions requiring reliable performance with minimal operational overhead.
- BAAI llm-embedder: A unified embedding model designed to enhance retrieval-augmented LLMs by generating high-quality text representations. It excels in cross-domain knowledge integration, robustness, and semantic accuracy, making it ideal for retrieval systems, question answering, and textual analysis tasks requiring precise contextual understanding and scalability.
By the end of this tutorial, you’ll have a functional chatbot capable of answering questions based on a custom knowledge base.
Note: Since we may use proprietary models in our tutorials, make sure you have the required API key beforehand.
Step 1: Install and Set Up Haystack
import os
import requests
from haystack import Pipeline
from haystack.components.converters import MarkdownToDocument
from haystack.components.preprocessors import DocumentSplitter
from haystack.components.writers import DocumentWriter
Step 2: Install and Set Up Amazon Bedrock Claude 3.5 Haiku
Amazon Bedrock is a fully managed service that makes high-performing foundation models from leading AI startups and Amazon available through a unified API. You can choose from various foundation models to find the one best suited for your use case.
To use LLMs on Amazon Bedrock for text generation together with Haystack, you need to initialize an AmazonBedrockGenerator
with the model name, the AWS credentials (AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID
, AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY
, AWS_DEFAULT_REGION
) should be set as environment variables, be configured as described above or passed as Secret arguments. Note, make sure the region you set supports Amazon Bedrock.
Now, let's start installing and setting up models with Amazon Bedrock.
pip install amazon-bedrock-haystack
from haystack_integrations.components.generators.amazon_bedrock import AmazonBedrockGenerator
aws_access_key_id="..."
aws_secret_access_key="..."
aws_region_name="eu-central-1"
generator = AmazonBedrockGenerator(model="anthropic.claude-3-5-haiku-20241022-v1:0")
Step 3: Install and Set Up BAAI llm-embedder
from haystack import Document
from haystack.components.embedders import SentenceTransformersDocumentEmbedder
from haystack.components.embedders import SentenceTransformersTextEmbedder
doc_embedder = SentenceTransformersDocumentEmbedder(model="BAAI/llm-embedder")
doc_embedder.warm_up()
text_embedder = SentenceTransformersTextEmbedder(model="BAAI/llm-embedder")
text_embedder.warm_up()
Step 4: Install and Set Up Zilliz Cloud
pip install --upgrade pymilvus milvus-haystack
from milvus_haystack import MilvusDocumentStore
from milvus_haystack.milvus_embedding_retriever import MilvusEmbeddingRetriever
document_store = MilvusDocumentStore(connection_args={"uri": ZILLIZ_CLOUD_URI, "token": ZILLIZ_CLOUD_TOKEN}, drop_old=True,)
retriever = MilvusEmbeddingRetriever(document_store=document_store, top_k=3)
Step 5: Build a RAG Chatbot
Now that you’ve set up all components, let’s start to build a simple chatbot. We’ll use the Milvus introduction doc as a private knowledge base. You can replace it your own dataset to customize your RAG chatbot.
url = 'https://raw.githubusercontent.com/milvus-io/milvus-docs/refs/heads/v2.5.x/site/en/about/overview.md'
example_file = 'example_file.md'
response = requests.get(url)
with open(example_file, 'wb') as f:
f.write(response.content)
file_paths = [example_file] # You can replace it with your own file paths.
indexing_pipeline = Pipeline()
indexing_pipeline.add_component("converter", MarkdownToDocument())
indexing_pipeline.add_component("splitter", DocumentSplitter(split_by="sentence", split_length=2))
indexing_pipeline.add_component("embedder", document_embedder)
indexing_pipeline.add_component("writer", DocumentWriter(document_store))
indexing_pipeline.connect("converter", "splitter")
indexing_pipeline.connect("splitter", "embedder")
indexing_pipeline.connect("embedder", "writer")
indexing_pipeline.run({"converter": {"sources": file_paths}})
# print("Number of documents:", document_store.count_documents())
question = "What is Milvus?" # You can replace it with your own question.
retrieval_pipeline = Pipeline()
retrieval_pipeline.add_component("embedder", text_embedder)
retrieval_pipeline.add_component("retriever", retriever)
retrieval_pipeline.connect("embedder", "retriever")
retrieval_results = retrieval_pipeline.run({"embedder": {"text": question}})
# for doc in retrieval_results["retriever"]["documents"]:
# print(doc.content)
# print("-" * 10)
from haystack.utils import Secret
from haystack.components.builders import PromptBuilder
retriever = MilvusEmbeddingRetriever(document_store=document_store, top_k=3)
text_embedder = SentenceTransformersTextEmbedder(model="BAAI/llm-embedder")
text_embedder.warm_up()
prompt_template = """Answer the following query based on the provided context. If the context does
not include an answer, reply with 'I don't know'.\n
Query: {{query}}
Documents:
{% for doc in documents %}
{{ doc.content }}
{% endfor %}
Answer:
"""
rag_pipeline = Pipeline()
rag_pipeline.add_component("text_embedder", text_embedder)
rag_pipeline.add_component("retriever", retriever)
rag_pipeline.add_component("prompt_builder", PromptBuilder(template=prompt_template))
rag_pipeline.add_component("generator", generator)
rag_pipeline.connect("text_embedder.embedding", "retriever.query_embedding")
rag_pipeline.connect("retriever.documents", "prompt_builder.documents")
rag_pipeline.connect("prompt_builder", "generator")
results = rag_pipeline.run({"text_embedder": {"text": question}, "prompt_builder": {"query": question},})
print('RAG answer:\n', results["generator"]["replies"][0])
Optimization Tips
As you build your RAG system, optimization is key to ensuring peak performance and efficiency. While setting up the components is an essential first step, fine-tuning each one will help you create a solution that works even better and scales seamlessly. In this section, we’ll share some practical tips for optimizing all these components, giving you the edge to build smarter, faster, and more responsive RAG applications.
Haystack optimization tips
To optimize Haystack in a RAG setup, ensure you use an efficient retriever like FAISS or Milvus for scalable and fast similarity searches. Fine-tune your document store settings, such as indexing strategies and storage backends, to balance speed and accuracy. Use batch processing for embedding generation to reduce latency and optimize API calls. Leverage Haystack's pipeline caching to avoid redundant computations, especially for frequently queried documents. Tune your reader model by selecting a lightweight yet accurate transformer-based model like DistilBERT to speed up response times. Implement query rewriting or filtering techniques to enhance retrieval quality, ensuring the most relevant documents are retrieved for generation. Finally, monitor system performance with Haystack’s built-in evaluation tools to iteratively refine your setup based on real-world query performance.
Zilliz Cloud optimization tips
Optimizing Zilliz Cloud for a RAG system involves efficient index selection, query tuning, and resource management. Use Hierarchical Navigable Small World (HNSW) indexing for high-speed, approximate nearest neighbor search while balancing recall and efficiency. Fine-tune ef_construction and M parameters based on your dataset size and query workload to optimize search accuracy and latency. Enable dynamic scaling to handle fluctuating workloads efficiently, ensuring smooth performance under varying query loads. Implement data partitioning to improve retrieval speed by grouping related data, reducing unnecessary comparisons. Regularly update and optimize embeddings to keep results relevant, particularly when dealing with evolving datasets. Use hybrid search techniques, such as combining vector and keyword search, to improve response quality. Monitor system metrics in Zilliz Cloud’s dashboard and adjust configurations accordingly to maintain low-latency, high-throughput performance.
AmazonBedrock Claude 3.5 Haiku optimization tips
Optimize chunk size for retrieved context to balance relevance and processing efficiency, aiming for 500-800 tokens. Structure inputs with clear separators between user queries and retrieved documents, and use system prompts like "Base responses on the provided context" to reduce hallucinations. Fine-tune parameters: lower temperature (0.2-0.4) for factual accuracy, adjust max_tokens
to trim verbose outputs, and enable caching for repeated queries. Preprocess retrieved data to remove noise, validate outputs against source relevance, and implement batch processing for cost-effective scaling. Monitor latency and error rates via Amazon CloudWatch to refine performance.
BAAI llm-embedder optimization tips
Optimize BAAI llm-embedder in RAG by normalizing input text (lowercasing, removing special characters) to reduce noise, batching inference for efficiency, and fine-tuning on domain-specific data if labeled examples are available. Use dynamic truncation or padding to handle variable-length inputs, and cache frequent queries to minimize recomputation. Experiment with pooling strategies (e.g., CLS token vs. mean-pooling) for optimal semantic capture. Regularly evaluate retrieval accuracy via recall@k metrics and consider hybrid retrieval (dense + sparse) to balance precision and coverage. Monitor latency and memory usage to scale effectively.
By implementing these tips across your components, you'll be able to enhance the performance and functionality of your RAG system, ensuring it’s optimized for both speed and accuracy. Keep testing, iterating, and refining your setup to stay ahead in the ever-evolving world of AI development.
RAG Cost Calculator: A Free Tool to Calculate Your Cost in Seconds
Estimating the cost of a Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG) pipeline involves analyzing expenses across vector storage, compute resources, and API usage. Key cost drivers include vector database queries, embedding generation, and LLM inference.
RAG Cost Calculator is a free tool that quickly estimates the cost of building a RAG pipeline, including chunking, embedding, vector storage/search, and LLM generation. It also helps you identify cost-saving opportunities and achieve up to 10x cost reduction on vector databases with the serverless option.
Calculate your RAG cost
What Have You Learned?
By diving into this tutorial, you’ve unlocked the power of combining cutting-edge tools to build a RAG system that’s both intelligent and efficient! You learned how Haystack acts as the flexible orchestration framework, seamlessly connecting your components like a conductor leading an orchestra. Zilliz Cloud stepped in as your high-performance vector database, storing and retrieving embeddings at lightning speed, while BAAI’s llm-embedder transformed your text into rich, context-aware embeddings, ensuring your RAG system understands nuances like a pro. Then, Amazon Bedrock’s Claude 3.5 Haiku brought everything to life with its lightning-fast, cost-effective reasoning, turning retrieved data into coherent, accurate responses. Together, these tools form a pipeline that’s greater than the sum of its parts—ingesting data, fetching context, and generating answers with precision and scalability.
But wait, there’s more! You also discovered optimization tricks, like tuning chunk sizes and refining prompts, to squeeze every drop of performance from your system. And that free RAG cost calculator? A game-changer for balancing speed, accuracy, and budget. Now, imagine what you can build next—custom chatbots, dynamic knowledge bases, or AI-powered research tools. The world of RAG is your playground, and you’ve got the skills to innovate. So, what are you waiting for? Fire up your IDE, experiment with these tools, and let your creativity run wild. The future of intelligent applications is in your hands—build something amazing, share it with the world, and keep pushing the boundaries of what’s possible. Let’s go! 🚀
Further Resources
🌟 In addition to this RAG tutorial, unleash your full potential with these incredible resources to level up your RAG skills.
- How to Build a Multimodal RAG | Documentation
- How to Enhance the Performance of Your RAG Pipeline
- Graph RAG with Milvus | Documentation
- How to Evaluate RAG Applications - Zilliz Learn
- Generative AI Resource Hub | Zilliz
We'd Love to Hear What You Think!
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- Introduction to RAG
- Key Components We'll Use for This RAG Chatbot
- Step 1: Install and Set Up Haystack
- Step 2: Install and Set Up Amazon Bedrock Claude 3.5 Haiku
- Step 3: Install and Set Up BAAI llm-embedder
- Step 4: Install and Set Up Zilliz Cloud
- Step 5: Build a RAG Chatbot
- Optimization Tips
- RAG Cost Calculator: A Free Tool to Calculate Your Cost in Seconds
- What Have You Learned?
- Further Resources
- We'd Love to Hear What You Think!
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