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How to create custom tools

When constructing an agent, you will need to provide it with a list of Tools that it can use. Besides the actual function that is called, the Tool consists of several components:

AttributeTypeDescription
namestrMust be unique within a set of tools provided to an LLM or agent.
descriptionstrDescribes what the tool does. Used as context by the LLM or agent.
args_schemaPydantic BaseModelOptional but recommended, can be used to provide more information (e.g., few-shot examples) or validation for expected parameters
return_directbooleanOnly relevant for agents. When True, after invoking the given tool, the agent will stop and return the result direcly to the user.

LangChain provides 3 ways to create tools:

  1. Using @tool decorator -- the simplest way to define a custom tool.
  2. Using StructuredTool.from_function class method -- this is similar to the @tool decorator, but allows more configuration and specification of both sync and async implementations.
  3. By sub-classing from BaseTool -- This is the most flexible method, it provides the largest degree of control, at the expense of more effort and code.

The @tool or the StructuredTool.from_function class method should be sufficient for most use cases.

tip

Models will perform better if the tools have well chosen names, descriptions and JSON schemas.

@tool decorator​

This @tool decorator is the simplest way to define a custom tool. The decorator uses the function name as the tool name by default, but this can be overridden by passing a string as the first argument. Additionally, the decorator will use the function's docstring as the tool's description - so a docstring MUST be provided.

from langchain_core.tools import tool


@tool
def multiply(a: int, b: int) -> int:
"""Multiply two numbers."""
return a * b


# Let's inspect some of the attributes associated with the tool.
print(multiply.name)
print(multiply.description)
print(multiply.args)

API Reference:

multiply
multiply(a: int, b: int) -> int - Multiply two numbers.
{'a': {'title': 'A', 'type': 'integer'}, 'b': {'title': 'B', 'type': 'integer'}}

Or create an async implementation, like this:

from langchain_core.tools import tool


@tool
async def amultiply(a: int, b: int) -> int:
"""Multiply two numbers."""
return a * b

API Reference:

You can also customize the tool name and JSON args by passing them into the tool decorator.

from langchain.pydantic_v1 import BaseModel, Field


class CalculatorInput(BaseModel):
a: int = Field(description="first number")
b: int = Field(description="second number")


@tool("multiplication-tool", args_schema=CalculatorInput, return_direct=True)
def multiply(a: int, b: int) -> int:
"""Multiply two numbers."""
return a * b


# Let's inspect some of the attributes associated with the tool.
print(multiply.name)
print(multiply.description)
print(multiply.args)
print(multiply.return_direct)
multiplication-tool
multiplication-tool(a: int, b: int) -> int - Multiply two numbers.
{'a': {'title': 'A', 'description': 'first number', 'type': 'integer'}, 'b': {'title': 'B', 'description': 'second number', 'type': 'integer'}}
True

StructuredTool​

The StrurcturedTool.from_function class method provides a bit more configurability than the @tool decorator, without requiring much additional code.

from langchain_core.tools import StructuredTool


def multiply(a: int, b: int) -> int:
"""Multiply two numbers."""
return a * b


async def amultiply(a: int, b: int) -> int:
"""Multiply two numbers."""
return a * b


calculator = StructuredTool.from_function(func=multiply, coroutine=amultiply)

print(calculator.invoke({"a": 2, "b": 3}))
print(await calculator.ainvoke({"a": 2, "b": 5}))

API Reference:

6
10

To configure it:

class CalculatorInput(BaseModel):
a: int = Field(description="first number")
b: int = Field(description="second number")


def multiply(a: int, b: int) -> int:
"""Multiply two numbers."""
return a * b


calculator = StructuredTool.from_function(
func=multiply,
name="Calculator",
description="multiply numbers",
args_schema=CalculatorInput,
return_direct=True,
# coroutine= ... <- you can specify an async method if desired as well
)

print(calculator.invoke({"a": 2, "b": 3}))
print(calculator.name)
print(calculator.description)
print(calculator.args)
6
Calculator
Calculator(a: int, b: int) -> int - multiply numbers
{'a': {'title': 'A', 'description': 'first number', 'type': 'integer'}, 'b': {'title': 'B', 'description': 'second number', 'type': 'integer'}}

Subclass BaseTool​

You can define a custom tool by sub-classing from BaseTool. This provides maximal control over the tool definition, but requires writing more code.

from typing import Optional, Type

from langchain.pydantic_v1 import BaseModel
from langchain_core.callbacks import (
AsyncCallbackManagerForToolRun,
CallbackManagerForToolRun,
)
from langchain_core.tools import BaseTool


class CalculatorInput(BaseModel):
a: int = Field(description="first number")
b: int = Field(description="second number")


class CustomCalculatorTool(BaseTool):
name = "Calculator"
description = "useful for when you need to answer questions about math"
args_schema: Type[BaseModel] = CalculatorInput
return_direct: bool = True

def _run(
self, a: int, b: int, run_manager: Optional[CallbackManagerForToolRun] = None
) -> str:
"""Use the tool."""
return a * b

async def _arun(
self,
a: int,
b: int,
run_manager: Optional[AsyncCallbackManagerForToolRun] = None,
) -> str:
"""Use the tool asynchronously."""
# If the calculation is cheap, you can just delegate to the sync implementation
# as shown below.
# If the sync calculation is expensive, you should delete the entire _arun method.
# LangChain will automatically provide a better implementation that will
# kick off the task in a thread to make sure it doesn't block other async code.
return self._run(a, b, run_manager=run_manager.get_sync())
multiply = CustomCalculatorTool()
print(multiply.name)
print(multiply.description)
print(multiply.args)
print(multiply.return_direct)

print(multiply.invoke({"a": 2, "b": 3}))
print(await multiply.ainvoke({"a": 2, "b": 3}))
Calculator
useful for when you need to answer questions about math
{'a': {'title': 'A', 'description': 'first number', 'type': 'integer'}, 'b': {'title': 'B', 'description': 'second number', 'type': 'integer'}}
True
6
6

How to create async tools​

LangChain Tools implement the Runnable interface πŸƒ.

All Runnables expose the invoke and ainvoke methods (as well as other methods like batch, abatch, astream etc).

So even if you only provide an sync implementation of a tool, you could still use the ainvoke interface, but there are some important things to know:

  • LangChain's by default provides an async implementation that assumes that the function is expensive to compute, so it'll delegate execution to another thread.
  • If you're working in an async codebase, you should create async tools rather than sync tools, to avoid incuring a small overhead due to that thread.
  • If you need both sync and async implementations, use StructuredTool.from_function or sub-class from BaseTool.
  • If implementing both sync and async, and the sync code is fast to run, override the default LangChain async implementation and simply call the sync code.
  • You CANNOT and SHOULD NOT use the sync invoke with an async tool.
from langchain_core.tools import StructuredTool


def multiply(a: int, b: int) -> int:
"""Multiply two numbers."""
return a * b


calculator = StructuredTool.from_function(func=multiply)

print(calculator.invoke({"a": 2, "b": 3}))
print(
await calculator.ainvoke({"a": 2, "b": 5})
) # Uses default LangChain async implementation incurs small overhead

API Reference:

6
10
from langchain_core.tools import StructuredTool


def multiply(a: int, b: int) -> int:
"""Multiply two numbers."""
return a * b


async def amultiply(a: int, b: int) -> int:
"""Multiply two numbers."""
return a * b


calculator = StructuredTool.from_function(func=multiply, coroutine=amultiply)

print(calculator.invoke({"a": 2, "b": 3}))
print(
await calculator.ainvoke({"a": 2, "b": 5})
) # Uses use provided amultiply without additional overhead

API Reference:

6
10

You should not and cannot use .invoke when providing only an async definition.

@tool
async def multiply(a: int, b: int) -> int:
"""Multiply two numbers."""
return a * b


try:
multiply.invoke({"a": 2, "b": 3})
except NotImplementedError:
print("Raised not implemented error. You should not be doing this.")
Raised not implemented error. You should not be doing this.

Handling Tool Errors​

If you're using tools with agents, you will likely need an error handling strategy, so the agent can recover from the error and continue execution.

A simple strategy is to throw a ToolException from inside the tool and specify an error handler using handle_tool_error.

When the error handler is specified, the exception will be caught and the error handler will decide which output to return from the tool.

You can set handle_tool_error to True, a string value, or a function. If it's a function, the function should take a ToolException as a parameter and return a value.

Please note that only raising a ToolException won't be effective. You need to first set the handle_tool_error of the tool because its default value is False.

from langchain_core.tools import ToolException


def get_weather(city: str) -> int:
"""Get weather for the given city."""
raise ToolException(f"Error: There is no city by the name of {city}.")

API Reference:

Here's an example with the default handle_tool_error=True behavior.

get_weather_tool = StructuredTool.from_function(
func=get_weather,
handle_tool_error=True,
)

get_weather_tool.invoke({"city": "foobar"})
'Error: There is no city by the name of foobar.'

We can set handle_tool_error to a string that will always be returned.

get_weather_tool = StructuredTool.from_function(
func=get_weather,
handle_tool_error="There is no such city, but it's probably above 0K there!",
)

get_weather_tool.invoke({"city": "foobar"})
"There is no such city, but it's probably above 0K there!"

Handling the error using a function:

def _handle_error(error: ToolException) -> str:
return f"The following errors occurred during tool execution: `{error.args[0]}`"


get_weather_tool = StructuredTool.from_function(
func=get_weather,
handle_tool_error=_handle_error,
)

get_weather_tool.invoke({"city": "foobar"})
'The following errors occurred during tool execution: `Error: There is no city by the name of foobar.`'

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