Artificial Intelligence Infrastructure-as-Code Generator.
aiac
is a library and command line tool to generate IaC (Infrastructure as Code)
templates, configurations, utilities, queries and more via LLM providers such
as OpenAI, Amazon Bedrock and Ollama.
The CLI allows you to ask a model to generate templates for different scenarios (e.g. "get terraform for AWS EC2"). It composes an appropriate request to the selected provider, and stores the resulting code to a file, and/or prints it to standard output.
Users can define multiple "backends" targeting different LLM providers and environments using a simple configuration file.
aiac terraform for a highly available eks
aiac pulumi golang for an s3 with sns notification
aiac cloudformation for a neptundb
aiac dockerfile for a secured nginx
aiac k8s manifest for a mongodb deployment
aiac jenkins pipeline for building nodejs
aiac github action that plans and applies terraform and sends a slack notification
aiac opa policy that enforces readiness probe at k8s deployments
aiac python code that scans all open ports in my network
aiac bash script that kills all active terminal sessions
aiac kubectl that gets ExternalIPs of all nodes
aiac awscli that lists instances with public IP address and Name
aiac mongo query that aggregates all documents by created date
aiac elastic query that applies a condition on a value greater than some value in aggregation
aiac sql query that counts the appearances of each row in one table in another table based on an id column
Before installing/running aiac
, you may need to configure your LLM providers
or collect some information.
For OpenAI, you will need an API key in order for aiac
to work. Refer to
OpenAI's pricing model for more information. If you're not using the API hosted
by OpenAI (for example, you may be using Azure OpenAI), you will also need to
provide the API URL endpoint.
For Amazon Bedrock, you will need an AWS account with Bedrock enabled, and access to relevant models. Refer to the Bedrock documentation for more information.
For Ollama, you only need the URL to the local Ollama API server, including
the /api path prefix. This defaults to http://localhost:11434/api. Ollama does
not provide an authentication mechanism, but one may be in place in case of a
proxy server being used. This scenario is not currently supported by aiac
.
Via brew
:
brew tap gofireflyio/aiac https://github.com/gofireflyio/aiac
brew install aiac
Using docker
:
docker pull ghcr.io/gofireflyio/aiac
Using go install
:
go install github.com/gofireflyio/aiac/v5@latest
Alternatively, clone the repository and build from source:
git clone https://github.com/gofireflyio/aiac.git
go build
aiac
is also available in the Arch Linux user repository (AUR) as aiac (which
compiles from source) and aiac-bin (which downloads a compiled executable).
aiac
is configured via a TOML configuration file. Unless a specific path is
provided, aiac
looks for a configuration file in the user's XDG_CONFIG_HOME
directory, specifically ${XDG_CONFIG_HOME}/aiac/aiac.toml
. On Unix-like
operating systems, this will default to "~/.config/aiac/aiac.toml". If you want
to use a different path, provide the --config
or -c
flag with the file's path.
The configuration file defines one or more named backends. Each backend has a type identifying the LLM provider (e.g. "openai", "bedrock", "ollama"), and various settings relevant to that provider. Multiple backends of the same LLM provider can be configured, for example for "staging" and "production" environments.
Here's an example configuration file:
default_backend = "official_openai" # Default backend when one is not selected
[backends.official_openai]
type = "openai"
api_key = "API KEY"
# Or
# api_key = "$OPENAI_API_KEY"
default_model = "gpt-4o" # Default model to use for this backend
[backends.azure_openai]
type = "openai"
url = "https://tenant.openai.azure.com/openai/deployments/test"
api_key = "API KEY"
api_version = "2023-05-15" # Optional
auth_header = "api-key" # Default is "Authorization"
extra_headers = { X-Header-1 = "one", X-Header-2 = "two" }
[backends.aws_staging]
type = "bedrock"
aws_profile = "staging"
aws_region = "eu-west-2"
[backends.aws_prod]
type = "bedrock"
aws_profile = "production"
aws_region = "us-east-1"
default_model = "amazon.titan-text-express-v1"
[backends.localhost]
type = "ollama"
url = "http://localhost:11434/api" # This is the default
Notes:
- Every backend can have a default model (via configuration key
default_model
). If not provided, calls that do not define a model will fail. - Backends of type "openai" can change the header used for authorization by
providing the
auth_header
setting. This defaults to "Authorization", but Azure OpenAI uses "api-key" instead. When the header is either "Authorization" or "Proxy-Authorization", the header's value for requests will be "Bearer API_KEY". If it's anything else, it'll simply be "API_KEY". - Backends of type "openai" and "ollama" support adding extra headers to every
request issued by aiac, by utilizing the
extra_headers
setting.
Once a configuration file is created, you can start generating code and you only
need to refer to the name of the backend. You can use aiac
from the command
line, or as a Go library.
Before starting to generate code, you can list all models available in a backend:
aiac -b aws_prod --list-models
This will return a list of all available models. Note that depending on the LLM provider, this may list models that aren't accessible or enabled for the specific account.
By default, aiac prints the extracted code to standard output and opens an interactive shell that allows conversing with the model, retrying requests, saving output to files, copying code to clipboard, and more:
aiac terraform for AWS EC2
This will use the default backend in the configuration file and the default
model for that backend, assuming they are indeed defined. To use a specific
backend, provide the --backend
or -b
flag:
aiac -b aws_prod terraform for AWS EC2
To use a specific model, provide the --model
or -m
flag:
aiac -m gpt-4-turbo terraform for AWS EC2
You can ask aiac
to save the resulting code to a specific file:
aiac terraform for eks --output-file=eks.tf
You can use a flag to save the full Markdown output as well:
aiac terraform for eks --output-file=eks.tf --readme-file=eks.md
If you prefer aiac to print the full Markdown output to standard output rather
than the extracted code, use the -f
or --full
flag:
aiac terraform for eks -f
You can use aiac in non-interactive mode, simply printing the generated code
to standard output, and optionally saving it to files with the above flags,
by providing the -q
or --quiet
flag:
aiac terraform for eks -q
In quiet mode, you can also send the resulting code to the clipboard by
providing the --clipboard
flag:
aiac terraform for eks -q --clipboard
Note that aiac will not exit in this case until the contents of the clipboard changes. This is due to the mechanics of the clipboard.
All the same instructions apply, except you execute a docker
image:
docker run \
-it \
-v ~/.config/aiac/aiac.toml:~/.config/aiac/aiac.toml \
ghcr.io/gofireflyio/aiac terraform for ec2
You can use aiac
as a Go library:
package main
import (
"context"
"log"
"os"
"github.com/gofireflyio/aiac/v5/libaiac"
)
func main() {
aiac, err := libaiac.New() // Will load default configuration path.
// You can also do libaiac.New("/path/to/aiac.toml")
if err != nil {
log.Fatalf("Failed creating aiac object: %s", err)
}
ctx := context.TODO()
models, err := aiac.ListModels(ctx, "backend name")
if err != nil {
log.Fatalf("Failed listing models: %s", err)
}
chat, err := aiac.Chat(ctx, "backend name", "model name")
if err != nil {
log.Fatalf("Failed starting chat: %s", err)
}
res, err = chat.Send(ctx, "generate terraform for eks")
res, err = chat.Send(ctx, "region must be eu-central-1")
}
Version 5.0.0 introduced a significant change to the aiac
API in both the
command line and library forms, as per feedback from the community.
Before v5, there was no concept of a configuration file or named backends. Users had to provide all the information necessary to contact a specific LLM provider via command line flags or environment variables, and the library allowed creating a "client" object that could only talk with one LLM provider.
Backends are now configured only via the configuration file. Refer to the
Configuration section for instructions. Provider-specific flags such as
--api-key
, --aws-profile
, etc. (and their respective environment variables,
if any) are no longer accepted.
Since v5, backends are also named. Previously, the --backend
and -b
flags
referred to the name of the LLM provider (e.g. "openai", "bedrock", "ollama").
Now they refer to whatever name you've defined in the configuration file:
[backends.my_local_llm]
type = "ollama"
url = "http://localhost:11434/api"
Here we configure an Ollama backend named "my_local_llm". When you want to
generate code with this backend, you will use -b my_local_llm
rather than
-b ollama
, as multiple backends may exist for the same LLM provider.
Before v5, the command line was split into three subcommands: get
,
list-models
and version
. Due to this hierarchical nature of the CLI, flags may
not have been accepted if they were provided in the "wrong location". For
example, the --model
flag had to be provided after the word "get", otherwise
it would not be accepted. In v5, there are no subcommands, so the position of
the flags no longer matters.
The list-models
subcommand is replaced with the flag --list-models
, and the
version
subcommand is replaced with the flag --version
.
Before v5:
aiac -b ollama list-models
Since v5:
aiac -b my_local_llm --list-models
In earlier versions, the word "get" was actually a subcommand and not truly part of the prompt sent to the LLM provider. Since v5, there is no "get" subcommand, so you no longer need to add this word to your prompts.
Before v5:
aiac get terraform for S3 bucket
Since v5:
aiac terraform for S3 bucket
That said, adding either the word "get" or "generate" will not hurt, as v5 will simply remove it if provided.
Before v5, the models for each LLM provider were hardcoded in each backend
implementation, and each provider had a hardcoded default model. This
significantly limited the usability of the project, and required us to update
aiac
whenever new models were added or deprecated. On the other hand, we could
provide extra information about each model, such as its context lengths and
type, as we manually extracted them from the provider documentation.
Since v5, aiac
no longer hardcodes any models, including default ones. It
will not attempt to verify the model you select actually exists. The
--list-models
flag will now directly contact the chosen backend API to get a
list of supported models. Setting a model when generating code simply sends its
name to the API as-is. Also, instead of hardcoding a default model for each
backend, users can define their own default models in the configuration file:
[backends.my_local_llm]
type = "ollama"
url = "http://localhost:11434/api"
default_model = "mistral:latest"
Before v5, aiac
supported both completion models and chat models. Since v5,
it only supports chat models. Since none of the LLM provider APIs actually
note whether a model is a completion model or a chat model (or even an image
or video model), the --list-models
flag may list models which are not actually
usable, and attempting to use them will result in an error being returned from
the provider API. The reason we've decided to drop support for completion models
was that they require setting a maximum amount of tokens for the API to
generate (at least in OpenAI), which we can no longer do without knowing the
context length. Chat models are not only a lot more useful, but they do not have
this limitation.
Most LLM provider APIs, when returning a response to a prompt, will include a
"reason" for why the response ended where it did. Generally, the response should
end because the model finished generating a response, but sometimes the response
may be truncated due to the model's context length or the user's token
utilization. When the response did not "stop" because it finished generation,
the response is said to be "truncated". Before v5, if the API returned that the
response was truncated, aiac
returned an error. Since v5, an error is no longer
returned, as it seems that some providers do not return an accurate stop reason.
Instead, the library returns the stop reason as part of its output for users to
decide how to proceed.
Command line prompt:
aiac dockerfile for nodejs with comments
Output:
FROM node:latest
# Create app directory
WORKDIR /usr/src/app
# Install app dependencies
# A wildcard is used to ensure both package.json AND package-lock.json are copied
# where available (npm@5+)
COPY package*.json ./
RUN npm install
# If you are building your code for production
# RUN npm ci -->
# Bundle app source
COPY . .
EXPOSE 8080
CMD [ "node", "index.js" ]
Most errors that you are likely to encounter are coming from the LLM provider API, e.g. OpenAI or Amazon Bedrock. Some common errors you may encounter are:
-
"[insufficient_quota] You exceeded your current quota, please check your plan and billing details": As described in the Instructions section, OpenAI is a paid API with a certain amount of free credits given. This error means you have exceeded your quota, whether free or paid. You will need to top up to continue usage.
-
"[tokens] Rate limit reached...": The OpenAI API employs rate limiting as described here.
aiac
only performs individual requests and cannot workaround or prevent these rate limits. If you are usingaiac
in programmatically, you will have to implement throttling yourself. See here for tips.
This code is published under the terms of the Apache License 2.0.