❗ The new version of GPT-Shell is called Erin! Find out more at Erin's Website! ❗ |
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GPT-Shell is an OpenAI based chat-bot that is similar to OpenAI's ChatGPT.
It allows users to converse with a virtual companion. It uses nodejs and typescript, as well as modern yarn, to create a seamless conversation experience.
It can also generate images based on your conversation!
4_5888485297657745744.1.online-video-cutter.com.mp4
You can try the bot on the official Discord server:
To interact with GPT-Shell, users can:
- Use the
/chat-gpt
command to start a conversation with the bot - Ping the bot in a channel it's in
- Message the bot directly
The /chat-gpt
command will start a new conversation thread, and whenever the user types something,
the bot will respond.
The bot is able to handle multiple conversations at once, so you can start as many conversations as you like.
Set up a discord bot here and add it to your server.
Scopes:
- bot
- application.commands
Bot Permissions:
- read messages/view channels
- send messages
- create public threads
- create private threads
- send messages in threads
- embed links
- attach files
- use slash commands
You also need to enable the Message Content Intent:
-
You can try to fork the replit here
-
Or you can set it up on your machine.
-
Nodejs: (18 or above)
-
Yarn: (after installing nodejs)
-
pm2: To keep your bot alive even after killing your terminal.
To use GPT-Shell, you will need to:
- Clone the project:
git clone https://github.com/firtoz/GPT-Shell.git
- Open the terminal in the project's folder:
cd GPT-Shell
(in windows, right click somewhere in the folder and select "Open In Terminal")
if you see something about powershell, type cmd
and hit enter, to go to the simpler command line terminal.
- Install yarn:
yarn install
- Set up environment variables
The following environment variables are required for GPT-Shell to work properly.
You can set the environment variables in any way you like, or place an .env.local file at the root of your project (rename example.env.local
to .env.local
),
Ensure that your .env.local
looks like this:
[EXPAND] Click to see .env.local
# MongoDB:
MONGODB_URI=
DB_NAME=CHAT_DB
# Bot Token from Discord:
BOT_TOKEN=
# Commands:
COMMAND_NAME=chat-gpt
PRIVATE_COMMAND_NAME=chat-gpt-private
CONFIG_COMMAND_NAME=chat-gpt-config
CUSTOM_PROMPT_COMMAND_NAME=chat-gpt-prompt
DRAW_COMMAND_NAME=draw-gpt
# Discord Server Details:
MAIN_SERVER_ID=
LOG_CHANNEL_ID=
MAIN_SERVER_INVITE=
ADMIN_PING_ID=
USE_SAME_API_KEY_FOR_ALL=false
IGNORE_INIT=false
MongoDB:
- MONGODB_URI: The MongoDB connection string.
- Should look something like this: mongodb+srv://:..mongodb.net/?retryWrites=true&w=majority
- DB_NAME: The name of the collection in MongoDB. You can use
CHAT_DB
or anything you like.
Bot Token:
- BOT_TOKEN: The Discord bot token
- You can get it by following https://discord.com/developers/applications then selecting your app and then selecting "Bot".
Commands:
- COMMAND_NAME: The name of the chat-gpt command
- PRIVATE_COMMAND_NAME: Command to create private threads.
- CONFIG_COMMAND_NAME: The name of the config command
- CUSTOM_PROMPT_COMMAND_NAME: (Optional) The name of the command for custom prompts
- DRAW_COMMAND_NAME: (Optional) The name of the draw command.
Discord Server Details:
-
MAIN_SERVER_ID: The Discord server where the bot lives
-
LOG_CHANNEL_ID: (Optional) The channel for log messages
-
MAIN_SERVER_INVITE: (Optional) The ideally non-expiring server invite link (if you want users to add the bot to their server)
-
USE_SAME_API_KEY_FOR_ALL: (Optional) When set to 'true', it will allow any server or user to use the bot without needing to provide their own API keys.
-
ADMIN_PING_ID: Bot owner's Discord id (that's you!)
Used to let you send some special commands and configure the bot.
-
IGNORE_INIT: (Optional) When set to 'true', when it starts, will not check active threads for new messages since the bot was last online. If you're in many servers, there may be many active threads, so that would hit a rate limit. In that case, it's better to handle messages as they come, instead of checking many threads at once.
Extras:
-
WOLFRAM_APP_ID: Used for the Wolfram Alpha ability.
Can create an app at https://developer.wolframalpha.com/portal/myapps and get its id.
Set up the environment variables as described above.
- Install pm2:
With yarn:
yarn global add pm2
With npm:
npm install pm2 -g
With debian, use the install script:
apt update && apt install sudo curl && curl -sL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Unitech/pm2/master/packager/setup.deb.sh | sudo -E bash -
- Then to start a development environment, run
yarn dev
This way, whenever you change the code, it will restart the bot to update.
- To build and start the bot, run
yarn build
and then
yarn start
You can also run npm start
or npm run start
to start the bot.
NOTE: running yarn start
, npm start
or npm run start
will start the bot with PM2 and give it the name "GPT-Shell". You can replace "GPT-Shell" with a name of your choice in package.json. It will also show logs for the PM2 running processes and save them.
If you are in dev environment, use node .
to test your code:
node .
Once you are satisfied with the changes run:
pm2 restart GPT-Shell && pm2 logs
In order to stop the bot, run:
yarn run stop
You can also restart it from the pm2.io dashboard as shown bellow:
Go to your server, and type the config command, and set the API key for your server using the config.
/chat-gpt-config
Starting from 2.0.0, the bot has the capacity to have a long-term memory.
Expand to see how to configure long term memory.
This functionality is experimental, but internal testing shows that it works quite well for typical conversation.
Does not work so well if the conversation has long pieces of code, because of token limitations.
How it works:
- the bot creates embeddings for every message in the conversation
- if the conversation is short, all the conversation history is included in the prompt
- if the conversation is long enough, when a new message is sent, that message's embedding is compared to the conversation history, and only the most relevant messages will be included in the prompt.
To be able to set this up, use the config command on the main server:
/chat-gpt-config
Then enter the pinecone configuration details.
You can create an account at https://app.pinecone.io/.
If you did it correctly, you should see something like this:
By default, the bot behaves like a helpful software engineer.
If you want the bot to behave differently, you can use a custom prompt.
This can be done in a new channel dedicated to the bot, or a new conversation thread, or in DMs.
You can use the /chat-gpt-prompt
command, if you have the permissions, and you can set the custom prompt
for the bot by filling the form.
This command can be used in:
- channels (if you are a server admin)
- threads (if you are the one who created the thread)
- DMs
The temperature is the same as OpenAI's temperature parameter. 0 means it becoems repetitive, 1 means it becomes a bit chaotic. Default is 0.8 for GPT-Shell.
We welcome contributions to GPT-Shell. If you have an idea for a new feature or have found a bug, please open an issue on GitHub. We would also appreciate any sponsorships or donations.
You can sponsor us through our GitHub sponsor page here.
GPT-Shell is released under the MIT License.