Model endpoint management is a preview feature. To learn how to use AI models in production environments, see Build generative AI applications using AlloyDB AI.
This page lists parameters for different functions provided by the
google_ml_integration
extension to register and manage model endpoints and
secrets with the
model endpoint management preview feature. You must set the
google_ml_integration.enable_model_support
database flag to on
before you
can start using the extension.
For more information, see Use Model endpoint management for AI models
Models
Use this reference to understand parameters for functions that let you manage model endpoints.
google_ml.create_model()
The following shows how to call the google_ml.create_model()
SQL function used
to register model endpoint metadata:
CALL
google_ml.create_model(
model_id => 'MODEL_ID',
model_request_url => 'REQUEST_URL',
model_provider => 'PROVIDER_ID',
model_type => 'MODEL_TYPE',
model_qualified_name => 'MODEL_QUALIFIED_NAME',
model_auth_type => 'AUTH_TYPE',
model_auth_id => 'AUTH_ID',
generate_headers_fn => 'GENERATE_HEADER_FUNCTION',
model_in_transform_fn => 'INPUT_TRANSFORM_FUNCTION',
model_out_transform_fn => 'OUTPUT_TRANSFORM_FUNCTION');
Parameter | Required | Description |
---|---|---|
MODEL_ID |
Required for all model endpoints. | A unique ID for the model endpoint that you define. |
REQUEST_URL |
Optional for text embedding model endpoints with built-in support. | The model-specific endpoint when adding other text embedding and generic model endpoints. The request URL that the function generates for built-in model endpoints refers to your cluster's project and region or location. If you want to refer to another project, then ensure that you specify the model_request_url explicitly. For custom hosted model endpoints, ensure that the model endpoint is accessible through an internal IP address. |
PROVIDER_ID |
Required for text embedding model endpoints with built-in support. | The provider of the model endpoint. The default value is custom . Set to google for Vertex AI model endpoints and custom for custom-hosted model endpoints. For AlloyDB Omni, set to google for Vertex AI model endpoints, open_ai for OpenAI model endpoints, and custom for other providers. |
MODEL_TYPE |
Optional for generic model endpoints. | The model type. You can set this value to text_embedding for text embedding model endpoints or generic for all other model endpoints. |
MODEL_QUALIFIED_NAME |
Required for OpenAI model endpoints; optional for other model endpoints. | The fully qualified name in case the model endpoint has multiple versions or if the model endpoint defines it—for example, textembedding-gecko@001 or textembedding-gecko@002 . Since the textembedding-gecko@001 model is pre-registered with model endpoint management, you can generate embeddings using textembedding-gecko@001 as the model ID. |
AUTH_TYPE |
Optional unless model endpoint has a specific authentication requirement. | The authentication type used by the model endpoint. You can set it to either alloydb_service_agent_iam for Vertex AI models or secret_manager for other providers. |
AUTH_ID |
Don't set for Vertex AI model endpoints; required for all other model endpoints that store secrets in Secret Manager. | The secret ID that you set and is subsequently used when registering a model endpoint. |
GENERATE_HEADER_FUNCTION |
Optional. | The function name you set to generate custom headers. The signature of this function depends on the google_ml.predict_row() function. See Header generation function. |
INPUT_TRANSFORM_FUNCTION |
Optional for text embedding model endpoints with built-in support; don't set for generic model endpoints. | The function to transform input of the corresponding prediction function to the model-specific input. See Transform functions. |
OUTPUT_TRANSFORM_FUNCTION |
Optional for text embedding model endpoints with built-in support; don't set for generic model endpoints. | The function to transform model specific output to the prediction function output. See Transform functions. |
google_ml.alter_model()
The following shows how to call the google_ml.alter_model()
SQL function used
to update model endpoint metadata:
CALL
google_ml.alter_model(
model_id => 'MODEL_ID',
model_request_url => 'REQUEST_URL',
model_provider => 'PROVIDER_ID',
model_type => 'MODEL_TYPE',
model_qualified_name => 'MODEL_QUALIFIED_NAME',
model_auth_type => 'AUTH_TYPE',
model_auth_id => 'AUTH_ID',
generate_headers_fn => 'GENERATE_HEADER_FUNCTION',
model_in_transform_fn => 'INPUT_TRANSFORM_FUNCTION',
model_out_transform_fn => 'OUTPUT_TRANSFORM_FUNCTION');
google_ml.drop_model()
The following shows how to call the google_ml.drop_model()
SQL function used
to drop a model endpoint:
CALL google_ml.drop_model('MODEL_ID');
Parameter | Description |
---|---|
MODEL_ID |
A unique ID for the model endpoint that you define. |
google_ml.list_model()
The following shows how to call the google_ml.list_model()
SQL function used
to list model endpoint information:
SELECT google_ml.list_model('MODEL_ID');
Parameter | Description |
---|---|
MODEL_ID |
A unique ID for the model endpoint that you define. |
google_ml.model_info_view
The following shows how to call the google_ml.model_info_view
view that is
used to list model endpoint information for all model endpoints:
SELECT * FROM google_ml.model_info_view;
Secrets
Use this reference to understand parameters for functions that let you manage secrets.
google_ml.create_sm_secret()
The following shows how to call the google_ml.create_sm_secret()
SQL function
used to add the secret created in Secret Manager:
CALL
google_ml.create_sm_secret(
secret_id => 'SECRET_ID',
secret_path => 'projects/project-id/secrets/SECRET_MANAGER_SECRET_ID/versions/VERSION_NUMBER');
Parameter | Description |
---|---|
SECRET_ID |
The secret ID that you set and is subsequently used when registering a model endpoint. |
PROJECT_ID |
The ID of your Google Cloud project that contains the secret. For AlloyDB Omni, the ID of your Google Cloud project that contains the secret. |
SECRET_MANAGER_SECRET_ID |
The secret ID set in Secret Manager when you created the secret. |
VERSION_NUMBER |
The version number of the secret ID. |
google_ml.alter_sm_secret()
The following shows how to call the google_ml.alter_sm_secret()
SQL function
used to update secret information:
CALL
google_ml.alter_sm_secret(
secret_id => 'SECRET_ID',
secret_path => 'projects/project-id/secrets/SECRET_MANAGER_SECRET_ID/versions/VERSION_NUMBER');
SECRET_MANAGER_SECRET_ID
: the secret ID set in Secret Manager when you created the secret.
Parameter | Description |
---|---|
SECRET_ID |
The secret ID that you set and is subsequently used when registering a model endpoint. |
PROJECT_ID |
The ID of your Google Cloud project that contains the secret. For AlloyDB Omni, the ID of your Google Cloud project that contains the secret. |
SECRET_MANAGER_SECRET_ID |
The secret ID set in Secret Manager when you created the secret. |
VERSION_NUMBER |
The version number of the secret ID. |
google_ml.drop_sm_secret()
The following shows how to call the google_ml.drop_sm_secret()
SQL function
used to drop a secret:
CALL google_ml.drop_sm_secret('SECRET_ID');
Parameter | Description |
---|---|
SECRET_ID |
The secret ID that you set and is subsequently used when registering a model endpoint. |
Prediction functions
Use this reference to understand parameters for functions that let you generate embeddings or invoke predictions.
google_ml.embedding()
The following shows how to generate embeddings:
SELECT
google_ml.embedding(
model_id => 'MODEL_ID',
contents => 'CONTENT');
Parameter | Description |
---|---|
MODEL_ID |
A unique ID for the model endpoint that you define. |
CONTENT |
the text to translate into a vector embedding. |
For example SQL queries to generate text embeddings, see Transform function examples for AlloyDB Omni.
google_ml.predict_row()
The following shows how to invoke predictions:
SELECT
google_ml.predict_row(
model_id => 'MODEL_ID',
request_body => 'REQUEST_BODY');
Parameter | Description |
---|---|
MODEL_ID |
A unique ID for the model endpoint that you define. |
REQUEST_BODY |
the parameters to the prediction function, in JSON format. |
For example SQL queries to invoke predictions, see Examples for AlloyDB Omni.
Transform functions
Use this reference to understand parameters for input and output transform functions.
Input transform function
The following shows the signature for the prediction function for text embedding model endpoints:
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION INPUT_TRANSFORM_FUNCTION(model_id VARCHAR(100), input_text TEXT) RETURNS JSON;
Parameter | Description |
---|---|
INPUT_TRANSFORM_FUNCTION |
The function to transform input of the corresponding prediction function to the model endpoint-specific input. |
Output transform function
The following shows the signature for the prediction function for text embedding model endpoints:
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION OUTPUT_TRANSFORM_FUNCTION(model_id VARCHAR(100), response_json JSON) RETURNS real[];
Parameter | Description |
---|---|
OUTPUT_TRANSFORM_FUNCTION |
The function to transform model endpoint-specific output to the prediction function output. |
Transform functions example
To better understand how to create transform functions for your model endpoint, consider a custom-hosted text embedding model endpoint that requires JSON input and output.
The following example cURL request creates embeddings based on the prompt and the model endpoint:
curl -m 100 -X POST https://cymbal.com/models/text/embeddings/v1 \
-H "Content-Type: application/json"
-d '{"prompt": ["AlloyDB Omni Embeddings"]}'
The following example response is returned:
[[ 0.3522231 -0.35932037 0.10156056 0.17734447 -0.11606089 -0.17266059
0.02509351 0.20305622 -0.09787305 -0.12154685 -0.17313677 -0.08075467
0.06821183 -0.06896557 0.1171584 -0.00931572 0.11875633 -0.00077482
0.25604948 0.0519384 0.2034983 -0.09952664 0.10347155 -0.11935943
-0.17872004 -0.08706985 -0.07056875 -0.05929353 0.4177883 -0.14381726
0.07934926 0.31368294 0.12543282 0.10758053 -0.30210832 -0.02951015
0.3908268 -0.03091059 0.05302926 -0.00114946 -0.16233777 0.1117468
-0.1315904 0.13947351 -0.29569918 -0.12330773 -0.04354299 -0.18068913
0.14445548 0.19481727]]
Based on this input and response, we can infer the following:
The model expects JSON input through the
prompt
field. This field accepts an array of inputs. As thegoogle_ml.embedding()
function is a row level function, it expects one text input at a time. Thus, you need to create an input transform function that builds an array with single element.The response from the model is an array of embeddings, one for each prompt input to the model. As the
google_ml.embedding()
function is a row level function, it returns single input at a time. Thus, you need to create an output transform function that can be used to extract the embedding from the array.
The following example shows the input and output transform functions that is used for this model endpoint when it is registered with model endpoint management:
input transform function
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION cymbal_text_input_transform(model_id VARCHAR(100), input_text TEXT)
RETURNS JSON
LANGUAGE plpgsql
AS $$
DECLARE
transformed_input JSON;
model_qualified_name TEXT;
BEGIN
SELECT json_build_object('prompt', json_build_array(input_text))::JSON INTO transformed_input;
RETURN transformed_input;
END;
$$;
output transform function
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION cymbal_text_output_transform(model_id VARCHAR(100), response_json JSON)
RETURNS REAL[]
LANGUAGE plpgsql
AS $$
DECLARE
transformed_output REAL[];
BEGIN
SELECT ARRAY(SELECT json_array_elements_text(response_json->0)) INTO transformed_output;
RETURN transformed_output;
END;
$$;
HTTP header generation function
The following shows signature for the header generation function that can be
used with the google_ml.embedding()
prediction function when registering other
text embedding model endpoints.
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION GENERATE_HEADERS(model_id VARCHAR(100), input_text TEXT) RETURNS JSON;
For the google_ml.predict_row()
prediction function, the signature is as
follows:
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION GENERATE_HEADERS(model_id TEXT, input JSON) RETURNS JSON;
Parameter | Description |
---|---|
GENERATE_HEADERS |
The function to generate custom headers. You can also pass the authorization header generated by the header generation function while registering the model endpoint. |
Header generation function example
To better understand how to create a function that generates output in JSON key value pairs that are used as HTTP headers, consider a custom-hosted text embedding model endpoint.
The following example cURL request passes the version
HTTP header which is
used by the model endpoint:
curl -m 100 -X POST https://cymbal.com/models/text/embeddings/v1 \
-H "Content-Type: application/json" \
-H "version: 2024-01-01" \
-d '{"prompt": ["AlloyDB Omni Embeddings"]}'
The model expects text input through the version
field and returns the version
value in JSON format. The following example shows the header generation function
that is used for this text embedding model endpoint when it is registered with model
endpoint management:
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION header_gen_fn(model_id VARCHAR(100), input_text TEXT)
RETURNS JSON
LANGUAGE plpgsql
AS $$
BEGIN
RETURN json_build_object('version', '2024-01-01')::JSON;
END;
$$;
Request URL generation
Use the request URL generation function to infer the request URLs for the model endpoints with built-in support. The following shows the signature for this function:
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION GENERATE_REQUEST_URL(provider google_ml.model_provider, model_type google_ml.MODEL_TYPE, model_qualified_name VARCHAR(100), model_region VARCHAR(100) DEFAULT NULL)
Parameter | Description |
---|---|
GENERATE_REQUEST_URL |
The function to generate request URL generated by the extension for model endpoints with built-in support. |