How to use Phi-3 family chat models with Azure Machine Learning
In this article, you learn about Phi-3 family chat models and how to use them. The Phi-3 family of small language models (SLMs) is a collection of instruction-tuned generative text models.
Important
This feature is currently in public preview. This preview version is provided without a service-level agreement, and we don't recommend it for production workloads. Certain features might not be supported or might have constrained capabilities.
For more information, see Supplemental Terms of Use for Microsoft Azure Previews.
Phi-3 family chat models
The Phi-3 family chat models include the following models:
Phi-3.5 models are lightweight, state-of-the-art open models. These models were trained with Phi-3 datasets that include both synthetic data and the filtered, publicly available websites data, with a focus on high quality and reasoning-dense properties.
Phi-3.5 Mini uses 3.8B parameters, and is a dense decoder-only transformer model using the same tokenizer as Phi-3 Mini.
Phi-3.5 MoE (mixture-of-expert) uses 16x3.8B parameters with 6.6B active parameters when using 2 experts. The model is a mixture-of-expert decoder-only transformer model, using a tokenizer with vocabulary size of 32,064.
The models underwent a rigorous enhancement process, incorporating both supervised fine-tuning, proximal policy optimization, and direct preference optimization to ensure precise instruction adherence and robust safety measures. When assessed against benchmarks that test common sense, language understanding, math, code, long context and logical reasoning, Phi-3.5 models showcased robust and state-of-the-art performance among models with less than 13 billion parameters.
The Phi-3.5 models come in the following variants, with the variants having a context length (in tokens) of 128K.
The following models are available:
- Phi-3.5-Mini-Instruct
- Phi-3.5-MoE-Instruct
Prerequisites
To use Phi-3 family chat models with Azure Machine Learning, you need the following prerequisites:
A model deployment
Deployment to serverless APIs
Phi-3 family chat models can be deployed to serverless API endpoints with pay-as-you-go billing. This kind of deployment provides a way to consume models as an API without hosting them on your subscription, while keeping the enterprise security and compliance that organizations need.
Deployment to a serverless API endpoint doesn't require quota from your subscription. If your model isn't deployed already, use the Azure Machine Learning studio, Azure Machine Learning SDK for Python, the Azure CLI, or ARM templates to deploy the model as a serverless API.
Deployment to a self-hosted managed compute
Phi-3 family chat models can be deployed to our self-hosted managed inference solution, which allows you to customize and control all the details about how the model is served.
For deployment to a self-hosted managed compute, you must have enough quota in your subscription. If you don't have enough quota available, you can use our temporary quota access by selecting the option I want to use shared quota and I acknowledge that this endpoint will be deleted in 168 hours.
The inference package installed
You can consume predictions from this model by using the azure-ai-inference
package with Python. To install this package, you need the following prerequisites:
- Python 3.8 or later installed, including pip.
- The endpoint URL. To construct the client library, you need to pass in the endpoint URL. The endpoint URL has the form
https://your-host-name.your-azure-region.inference.ai.azure.com
, whereyour-host-name
is your unique model deployment host name andyour-azure-region
is the Azure region where the model is deployed (for example, eastus2). - Depending on your model deployment and authentication preference, you need either a key to authenticate against the service, or Microsoft Entra ID credentials. The key is a 32-character string.
Once you have these prerequisites, install the Azure AI inference package with the following command:
pip install azure-ai-inference
Read more about the Azure AI inference package and reference.
Work with chat completions
In this section, you use the Azure AI model inference API with a chat completions model for chat.
Tip
The Azure AI model inference API allows you to talk with most models deployed in Azure AI Foundry portal with the same code and structure, including Phi-3 family chat models.
Create a client to consume the model
First, create the client to consume the model. The following code uses an endpoint URL and key that are stored in environment variables.
import os
from azure.ai.inference import ChatCompletionsClient
from azure.core.credentials import AzureKeyCredential
client = ChatCompletionsClient(
endpoint=os.environ["AZURE_INFERENCE_ENDPOINT"],
credential=AzureKeyCredential(os.environ["AZURE_INFERENCE_CREDENTIAL"]),
)
When you deploy the model to a self-hosted online endpoint with Microsoft Entra ID support, you can use the following code snippet to create a client.
import os
from azure.ai.inference import ChatCompletionsClient
from azure.identity import DefaultAzureCredential
client = ChatCompletionsClient(
endpoint=os.environ["AZURE_INFERENCE_ENDPOINT"],
credential=DefaultAzureCredential(),
)
Note
Currently, serverless API endpoints do not support using Microsoft Entra ID for authentication.
Get the model's capabilities
The /info
route returns information about the model that is deployed to the endpoint. Return the model's information by calling the following method:
model_info = client.get_model_info()
The response is as follows:
print("Model name:", model_info.model_name)
print("Model type:", model_info.model_type)
print("Model provider name:", model_info.model_provider_name)
Model name: Phi-3.5-Mini-Instruct
Model type: chat-completions
Model provider name: Microsoft
Create a chat completion request
The following example shows how you can create a basic chat completions request to the model.
from azure.ai.inference.models import SystemMessage, UserMessage
response = client.complete(
messages=[
SystemMessage(content="You are a helpful assistant."),
UserMessage(content="How many languages are in the world?"),
],
)
Note
Phi-3.5-Mini-Instruct, Phi-3.5-MoE-Instruct, Phi-3-mini-4k-Instruct, Phi-3-mini-128k-Instruct, Phi-3-small-8k-Instruct, Phi-3-small-128k-Instruct and Phi-3-medium-128k-Instruct don't support system messages (role="system"
). When you use the Azure AI model inference API, system messages are translated to user messages, which is the closest capability available. This translation is offered for convenience, but it's important for you to verify that the model is following the instructions in the system message with the right level of confidence.
The response is as follows, where you can see the model's usage statistics:
print("Response:", response.choices[0].message.content)
print("Model:", response.model)
print("Usage:")
print("\tPrompt tokens:", response.usage.prompt_tokens)
print("\tTotal tokens:", response.usage.total_tokens)
print("\tCompletion tokens:", response.usage.completion_tokens)
Response: As of now, it's estimated that there are about 7,000 languages spoken around the world. However, this number can vary as some languages become extinct and new ones develop. It's also important to note that the number of speakers can greatly vary between languages, with some having millions of speakers and others only a few hundred.
Model: Phi-3.5-Mini-Instruct
Usage:
Prompt tokens: 19
Total tokens: 91
Completion tokens: 72
Inspect the usage
section in the response to see the number of tokens used for the prompt, the total number of tokens generated, and the number of tokens used for the completion.
Stream content
By default, the completions API returns the entire generated content in a single response. If you're generating long completions, waiting for the response can take many seconds.
You can stream the content to get it as it's being generated. Streaming content allows you to start processing the completion as content becomes available. This mode returns an object that streams back the response as data-only server-sent events. Extract chunks from the delta field, rather than the message field.
result = client.complete(
messages=[
SystemMessage(content="You are a helpful assistant."),
UserMessage(content="How many languages are in the world?"),
],
temperature=0,
top_p=1,
max_tokens=2048,
stream=True,
)
To stream completions, set stream=True
when you call the model.
To visualize the output, define a helper function to print the stream.
def print_stream(result):
"""
Prints the chat completion with streaming.
"""
import time
for update in result:
if update.choices:
print(update.choices[0].delta.content, end="")
You can visualize how streaming generates content:
print_stream(result)
Explore more parameters supported by the inference client
Explore other parameters that you can specify in the inference client. For a full list of all the supported parameters and their corresponding documentation, see Azure AI Model Inference API reference.
from azure.ai.inference.models import ChatCompletionsResponseFormat
response = client.complete(
messages=[
SystemMessage(content="You are a helpful assistant."),
UserMessage(content="How many languages are in the world?"),
],
presence_penalty=0.1,
frequency_penalty=0.8,
max_tokens=2048,
stop=["<|endoftext|>"],
temperature=0,
top_p=1,
response_format={ "type": ChatCompletionsResponseFormatText() },
)
Warning
Phi-3 family models don't support JSON output formatting (response_format = { "type": "json_object" }
). You can always prompt the model to generate JSON outputs. However, such outputs are not guaranteed to be valid JSON.
If you want to pass a parameter that isn't in the list of supported parameters, you can pass it to the underlying model using extra parameters. See Pass extra parameters to the model.
Pass extra parameters to the model
The Azure AI Model Inference API allows you to pass extra parameters to the model. The following code example shows how to pass the extra parameter logprobs
to the model.
Before you pass extra parameters to the Azure AI model inference API, make sure your model supports those extra parameters. When the request is made to the underlying model, the header extra-parameters
is passed to the model with the value pass-through
. This value tells the endpoint to pass the extra parameters to the model. Use of extra parameters with the model doesn't guarantee that the model can actually handle them. Read the model's documentation to understand which extra parameters are supported.
response = client.complete(
messages=[
SystemMessage(content="You are a helpful assistant."),
UserMessage(content="How many languages are in the world?"),
],
model_extras={
"logprobs": True
}
)
The following extra parameters can be passed to Phi-3 family chat models:
Name | Description | Type |
---|---|---|
logit_bias |
Accepts a JSON object that maps tokens (specified by their token ID in the tokenizer) to an associated bias value from -100 to 100. Mathematically, the bias is added to the logits generated by the model prior to sampling. The exact effect will vary per model, but values between -1 and 1 should decrease or increase likelihood of selection; values like -100 or 100 should result in a ban or exclusive selection of the relevant token. | float |
logprobs |
Whether to return log probabilities of the output tokens or not. If true, returns the log probabilities of each output token returned in the content of message . |
int |
top_logprobs |
An integer between 0 and 20 specifying the number of most likely tokens to return at each token position, each with an associated log probability. logprobs must be set to true if this parameter is used. |
float |
n |
How many chat completion choices to generate for each input message. Note that you will be charged based on the number of generated tokens across all of the choices. | int |
Apply content safety
The Azure AI model inference API supports Azure AI content safety. When you use deployments with Azure AI content safety turned on, inputs and outputs pass through an ensemble of classification models aimed at detecting and preventing the output of harmful content. The content filtering (preview) system detects and takes action on specific categories of potentially harmful content in both input prompts and output completions.
The following example shows how to handle events when the model detects harmful content in the input prompt and content safety is enabled.
from azure.ai.inference.models import AssistantMessage, UserMessage, SystemMessage
try:
response = client.complete(
messages=[
SystemMessage(content="You are an AI assistant that helps people find information."),
UserMessage(content="Chopping tomatoes and cutting them into cubes or wedges are great ways to practice your knife skills."),
]
)
print(response.choices[0].message.content)
except HttpResponseError as ex:
if ex.status_code == 400:
response = ex.response.json()
if isinstance(response, dict) and "error" in response:
print(f"Your request triggered an {response['error']['code']} error:\n\t {response['error']['message']}")
else:
raise
raise
Tip
To learn more about how you can configure and control Azure AI content safety settings, check the Azure AI content safety documentation.
Note
Azure AI content safety is only available for models deployed as serverless API endpoints.
Phi-3 family chat models
The Phi-3 family chat models include the following models:
Phi-3.5 models are lightweight, state-of-the-art open models. These models were trained with Phi-3 datasets that include both synthetic data and the filtered, publicly available websites data, with a focus on high quality and reasoning-dense properties.
Phi-3.5 Mini uses 3.8B parameters, and is a dense decoder-only transformer model using the same tokenizer as Phi-3 Mini.
Phi-3.5 MoE (mixture-of-expert) uses 16x3.8B parameters with 6.6B active parameters when using 2 experts. The model is a mixture-of-expert decoder-only transformer model, using a tokenizer with vocabulary size of 32,064.
The models underwent a rigorous enhancement process, incorporating both supervised fine-tuning, proximal policy optimization, and direct preference optimization to ensure precise instruction adherence and robust safety measures. When assessed against benchmarks that test common sense, language understanding, math, code, long context and logical reasoning, Phi-3.5 models showcased robust and state-of-the-art performance among models with less than 13 billion parameters.
The Phi-3.5 models come in the following variants, with the variants having a context length (in tokens) of 128K.
The following models are available:
- Phi-3.5-Mini-Instruct
- Phi-3.5-MoE-Instruct
Prerequisites
To use Phi-3 family chat models with Azure Machine Learning studio, you need the following prerequisites:
A model deployment
Deployment to serverless APIs
Phi-3 family chat models can be deployed to serverless API endpoints with pay-as-you-go billing. This kind of deployment provides a way to consume models as an API without hosting them on your subscription, while keeping the enterprise security and compliance that organizations need.
Deployment to a serverless API endpoint doesn't require quota from your subscription. If your model isn't deployed already, use the Azure Machine Learning studio, Azure Machine Learning SDK for Python, the Azure CLI, or ARM templates to deploy the model as a serverless API.
Deployment to a self-hosted managed compute
Phi-3 family chat models can be deployed to our self-hosted managed inference solution, which allows you to customize and control all the details about how the model is served.
For deployment to a self-hosted managed compute, you must have enough quota in your subscription. If you don't have enough quota available, you can use our temporary quota access by selecting the option I want to use shared quota and I acknowledge that this endpoint will be deleted in 168 hours.
The inference package installed
You can consume predictions from this model by using the @azure-rest/ai-inference
package from npm
. To install this package, you need the following prerequisites:
- LTS versions of
Node.js
withnpm
. - The endpoint URL. To construct the client library, you need to pass in the endpoint URL. The endpoint URL has the form
https://your-host-name.your-azure-region.inference.ai.azure.com
, whereyour-host-name
is your unique model deployment host name andyour-azure-region
is the Azure region where the model is deployed (for example, eastus2). - Depending on your model deployment and authentication preference, you need either a key to authenticate against the service, or Microsoft Entra ID credentials. The key is a 32-character string.
Once you have these prerequisites, install the Azure Inference library for JavaScript with the following command:
npm install @azure-rest/ai-inference
Work with chat completions
In this section, you use the Azure AI model inference API with a chat completions model for chat.
Tip
The Azure AI model inference API allows you to talk with most models deployed in Azure Machine Learning studio with the same code and structure, including Phi-3 family chat models.
Create a client to consume the model
First, create the client to consume the model. The following code uses an endpoint URL and key that are stored in environment variables.
import ModelClient from "@azure-rest/ai-inference";
import { isUnexpected } from "@azure-rest/ai-inference";
import { AzureKeyCredential } from "@azure/core-auth";
const client = new ModelClient(
process.env.AZURE_INFERENCE_ENDPOINT,
new AzureKeyCredential(process.env.AZURE_INFERENCE_CREDENTIAL)
);
When you deploy the model to a self-hosted online endpoint with Microsoft Entra ID support, you can use the following code snippet to create a client.
import ModelClient from "@azure-rest/ai-inference";
import { isUnexpected } from "@azure-rest/ai-inference";
import { DefaultAzureCredential } from "@azure/identity";
const client = new ModelClient(
process.env.AZURE_INFERENCE_ENDPOINT,
new DefaultAzureCredential()
);
Note
Currently, serverless API endpoints do not support using Microsoft Entra ID for authentication.
Get the model's capabilities
The /info
route returns information about the model that is deployed to the endpoint. Return the model's information by calling the following method:
var model_info = await client.path("/info").get()
The response is as follows:
console.log("Model name: ", model_info.body.model_name)
console.log("Model type: ", model_info.body.model_type)
console.log("Model provider name: ", model_info.body.model_provider_name)
Model name: Phi-3.5-Mini-Instruct
Model type: chat-completions
Model provider name: Microsoft
Create a chat completion request
The following example shows how you can create a basic chat completions request to the model.
var messages = [
{ role: "system", content: "You are a helpful assistant" },
{ role: "user", content: "How many languages are in the world?" },
];
var response = await client.path("/chat/completions").post({
body: {
messages: messages,
}
});
Note
Phi-3.5-Mini-Instruct, Phi-3.5-MoE-Instruct, Phi-3-mini-4k-Instruct, Phi-3-mini-128k-Instruct, Phi-3-small-8k-Instruct, Phi-3-small-128k-Instruct and Phi-3-medium-128k-Instruct don't support system messages (role="system"
). When you use the Azure AI model inference API, system messages are translated to user messages, which is the closest capability available. This translation is offered for convenience, but it's important for you to verify that the model is following the instructions in the system message with the right level of confidence.
The response is as follows, where you can see the model's usage statistics:
if (isUnexpected(response)) {
throw response.body.error;
}
console.log("Response: ", response.body.choices[0].message.content);
console.log("Model: ", response.body.model);
console.log("Usage:");
console.log("\tPrompt tokens:", response.body.usage.prompt_tokens);
console.log("\tTotal tokens:", response.body.usage.total_tokens);
console.log("\tCompletion tokens:", response.body.usage.completion_tokens);
Response: As of now, it's estimated that there are about 7,000 languages spoken around the world. However, this number can vary as some languages become extinct and new ones develop. It's also important to note that the number of speakers can greatly vary between languages, with some having millions of speakers and others only a few hundred.
Model: Phi-3.5-Mini-Instruct
Usage:
Prompt tokens: 19
Total tokens: 91
Completion tokens: 72
Inspect the usage
section in the response to see the number of tokens used for the prompt, the total number of tokens generated, and the number of tokens used for the completion.
Stream content
By default, the completions API returns the entire generated content in a single response. If you're generating long completions, waiting for the response can take many seconds.
You can stream the content to get it as it's being generated. Streaming content allows you to start processing the completion as content becomes available. This mode returns an object that streams back the response as data-only server-sent events. Extract chunks from the delta field, rather than the message field.
var messages = [
{ role: "system", content: "You are a helpful assistant" },
{ role: "user", content: "How many languages are in the world?" },
];
var response = await client.path("/chat/completions").post({
body: {
messages: messages,
}
}).asNodeStream();
To stream completions, use .asNodeStream()
when you call the model.
You can visualize how streaming generates content:
var stream = response.body;
if (!stream) {
stream.destroy();
throw new Error(`Failed to get chat completions with status: ${response.status}`);
}
if (response.status !== "200") {
throw new Error(`Failed to get chat completions: ${response.body.error}`);
}
var sses = createSseStream(stream);
for await (const event of sses) {
if (event.data === "[DONE]") {
return;
}
for (const choice of (JSON.parse(event.data)).choices) {
console.log(choice.delta?.content ?? "");
}
}
Explore more parameters supported by the inference client
Explore other parameters that you can specify in the inference client. For a full list of all the supported parameters and their corresponding documentation, see Azure AI Model Inference API reference.
var messages = [
{ role: "system", content: "You are a helpful assistant" },
{ role: "user", content: "How many languages are in the world?" },
];
var response = await client.path("/chat/completions").post({
body: {
messages: messages,
presence_penalty: "0.1",
frequency_penalty: "0.8",
max_tokens: 2048,
stop: ["<|endoftext|>"],
temperature: 0,
top_p: 1,
response_format: { type: "text" },
}
});
Warning
Phi-3 family models don't support JSON output formatting (response_format = { "type": "json_object" }
). You can always prompt the model to generate JSON outputs. However, such outputs are not guaranteed to be valid JSON.
If you want to pass a parameter that isn't in the list of supported parameters, you can pass it to the underlying model using extra parameters. See Pass extra parameters to the model.
Pass extra parameters to the model
The Azure AI Model Inference API allows you to pass extra parameters to the model. The following code example shows how to pass the extra parameter logprobs
to the model.
Before you pass extra parameters to the Azure AI model inference API, make sure your model supports those extra parameters. When the request is made to the underlying model, the header extra-parameters
is passed to the model with the value pass-through
. This value tells the endpoint to pass the extra parameters to the model. Use of extra parameters with the model doesn't guarantee that the model can actually handle them. Read the model's documentation to understand which extra parameters are supported.
var messages = [
{ role: "system", content: "You are a helpful assistant" },
{ role: "user", content: "How many languages are in the world?" },
];
var response = await client.path("/chat/completions").post({
headers: {
"extra-params": "pass-through"
},
body: {
messages: messages,
logprobs: true
}
});
The following extra parameters can be passed to Phi-3 family chat models:
Name | Description | Type |
---|---|---|
logit_bias |
Accepts a JSON object that maps tokens (specified by their token ID in the tokenizer) to an associated bias value from -100 to 100. Mathematically, the bias is added to the logits generated by the model prior to sampling. The exact effect will vary per model, but values between -1 and 1 should decrease or increase likelihood of selection; values like -100 or 100 should result in a ban or exclusive selection of the relevant token. | float |
logprobs |
Whether to return log probabilities of the output tokens or not. If true, returns the log probabilities of each output token returned in the content of message . |
int |
top_logprobs |
An integer between 0 and 20 specifying the number of most likely tokens to return at each token position, each with an associated log probability. logprobs must be set to true if this parameter is used. |
float |
n |
How many chat completion choices to generate for each input message. Note that you will be charged based on the number of generated tokens across all of the choices. | int |
Apply content safety
The Azure AI model inference API supports Azure AI content safety. When you use deployments with Azure AI content safety turned on, inputs and outputs pass through an ensemble of classification models aimed at detecting and preventing the output of harmful content. The content filtering (preview) system detects and takes action on specific categories of potentially harmful content in both input prompts and output completions.
The following example shows how to handle events when the model detects harmful content in the input prompt and content safety is enabled.
try {
var messages = [
{ role: "system", content: "You are an AI assistant that helps people find information." },
{ role: "user", content: "Chopping tomatoes and cutting them into cubes or wedges are great ways to practice your knife skills." },
];
var response = await client.path("/chat/completions").post({
body: {
messages: messages,
}
});
console.log(response.body.choices[0].message.content);
}
catch (error) {
if (error.status_code == 400) {
var response = JSON.parse(error.response._content);
if (response.error) {
console.log(`Your request triggered an ${response.error.code} error:\n\t ${response.error.message}`);
}
else
{
throw error;
}
}
}
Tip
To learn more about how you can configure and control Azure AI content safety settings, check the Azure AI content safety documentation.
Note
Azure AI content safety is only available for models deployed as serverless API endpoints.
Phi-3 family chat models
The Phi-3 family chat models include the following models:
Phi-3.5 models are lightweight, state-of-the-art open models. These models were trained with Phi-3 datasets that include both synthetic data and the filtered, publicly available websites data, with a focus on high quality and reasoning-dense properties.
Phi-3.5 Mini uses 3.8B parameters, and is a dense decoder-only transformer model using the same tokenizer as Phi-3 Mini.
Phi-3.5 MoE (mixture-of-expert) uses 16x3.8B parameters with 6.6B active parameters when using 2 experts. The model is a mixture-of-expert decoder-only transformer model, using a tokenizer with vocabulary size of 32,064.
The models underwent a rigorous enhancement process, incorporating both supervised fine-tuning, proximal policy optimization, and direct preference optimization to ensure precise instruction adherence and robust safety measures. When assessed against benchmarks that test common sense, language understanding, math, code, long context and logical reasoning, Phi-3.5 models showcased robust and state-of-the-art performance among models with less than 13 billion parameters.
The Phi-3.5 models come in the following variants, with the variants having a context length (in tokens) of 128K.
The following models are available:
- Phi-3.5-Mini-Instruct
- Phi-3.5-MoE-Instruct
Prerequisites
To use Phi-3 family chat models with Azure Machine Learning studio, you need the following prerequisites:
A model deployment
Deployment to serverless APIs
Phi-3 family chat models can be deployed to serverless API endpoints with pay-as-you-go billing. This kind of deployment provides a way to consume models as an API without hosting them on your subscription, while keeping the enterprise security and compliance that organizations need.
Deployment to a serverless API endpoint doesn't require quota from your subscription. If your model isn't deployed already, use the Azure Machine Learning studio, Azure Machine Learning SDK for Python, the Azure CLI, or ARM templates to deploy the model as a serverless API.
Deployment to a self-hosted managed compute
Phi-3 family chat models can be deployed to our self-hosted managed inference solution, which allows you to customize and control all the details about how the model is served.
For deployment to a self-hosted managed compute, you must have enough quota in your subscription. If you don't have enough quota available, you can use our temporary quota access by selecting the option I want to use shared quota and I acknowledge that this endpoint will be deleted in 168 hours.
The inference package installed
You can consume predictions from this model by using the Azure.AI.Inference
package from NuGet. To install this package, you need the following prerequisites:
- The endpoint URL. To construct the client library, you need to pass in the endpoint URL. The endpoint URL has the form
https://your-host-name.your-azure-region.inference.ai.azure.com
, whereyour-host-name
is your unique model deployment host name andyour-azure-region
is the Azure region where the model is deployed (for example, eastus2). - Depending on your model deployment and authentication preference, you need either a key to authenticate against the service, or Microsoft Entra ID credentials. The key is a 32-character string.
Once you have these prerequisites, install the Azure AI inference library with the following command:
dotnet add package Azure.AI.Inference --prerelease
You can also authenticate with Microsoft Entra ID (formerly Azure Active Directory). To use credential providers provided with the Azure SDK, install the Azure.Identity
package:
dotnet add package Azure.Identity
Import the following namespaces:
using Azure;
using Azure.Identity;
using Azure.AI.Inference;
This example also uses the following namespaces but you may not always need them:
using System.Text.Json;
using System.Text.Json.Serialization;
using System.Reflection;
Work with chat completions
In this section, you use the Azure AI model inference API with a chat completions model for chat.
Tip
The Azure AI model inference API allows you to talk with most models deployed in Azure Machine Learning studio with the same code and structure, including Phi-3 family chat models.
Create a client to consume the model
First, create the client to consume the model. The following code uses an endpoint URL and key that are stored in environment variables.
ChatCompletionsClient client = new ChatCompletionsClient(
new Uri(Environment.GetEnvironmentVariable("AZURE_INFERENCE_ENDPOINT")),
new AzureKeyCredential(Environment.GetEnvironmentVariable("AZURE_INFERENCE_CREDENTIAL"))
);
When you deploy the model to a self-hosted online endpoint with Microsoft Entra ID support, you can use the following code snippet to create a client.
client = new ChatCompletionsClient(
new Uri(Environment.GetEnvironmentVariable("AZURE_INFERENCE_ENDPOINT")),
new DefaultAzureCredential(includeInteractiveCredentials: true)
);
Note
Currently, serverless API endpoints do not support using Microsoft Entra ID for authentication.
Get the model's capabilities
The /info
route returns information about the model that is deployed to the endpoint. Return the model's information by calling the following method:
Response<ModelInfo> modelInfo = client.GetModelInfo();
The response is as follows:
Console.WriteLine($"Model name: {modelInfo.Value.ModelName}");
Console.WriteLine($"Model type: {modelInfo.Value.ModelType}");
Console.WriteLine($"Model provider name: {modelInfo.Value.ModelProviderName}");
Model name: Phi-3.5-Mini-Instruct
Model type: chat-completions
Model provider name: Microsoft
Create a chat completion request
The following example shows how you can create a basic chat completions request to the model.
ChatCompletionsOptions requestOptions = new ChatCompletionsOptions()
{
Messages = {
new ChatRequestSystemMessage("You are a helpful assistant."),
new ChatRequestUserMessage("How many languages are in the world?")
},
};
Response<ChatCompletions> response = client.Complete(requestOptions);
Note
Phi-3.5-Mini-Instruct, Phi-3.5-MoE-Instruct, Phi-3-mini-4k-Instruct, Phi-3-mini-128k-Instruct, Phi-3-small-8k-Instruct, Phi-3-small-128k-Instruct and Phi-3-medium-128k-Instruct don't support system messages (role="system"
). When you use the Azure AI model inference API, system messages are translated to user messages, which is the closest capability available. This translation is offered for convenience, but it's important for you to verify that the model is following the instructions in the system message with the right level of confidence.
The response is as follows, where you can see the model's usage statistics:
Console.WriteLine($"Response: {response.Value.Choices[0].Message.Content}");
Console.WriteLine($"Model: {response.Value.Model}");
Console.WriteLine("Usage:");
Console.WriteLine($"\tPrompt tokens: {response.Value.Usage.PromptTokens}");
Console.WriteLine($"\tTotal tokens: {response.Value.Usage.TotalTokens}");
Console.WriteLine($"\tCompletion tokens: {response.Value.Usage.CompletionTokens}");
Response: As of now, it's estimated that there are about 7,000 languages spoken around the world. However, this number can vary as some languages become extinct and new ones develop. It's also important to note that the number of speakers can greatly vary between languages, with some having millions of speakers and others only a few hundred.
Model: Phi-3.5-Mini-Instruct
Usage:
Prompt tokens: 19
Total tokens: 91
Completion tokens: 72
Inspect the usage
section in the response to see the number of tokens used for the prompt, the total number of tokens generated, and the number of tokens used for the completion.
Stream content
By default, the completions API returns the entire generated content in a single response. If you're generating long completions, waiting for the response can take many seconds.
You can stream the content to get it as it's being generated. Streaming content allows you to start processing the completion as content becomes available. This mode returns an object that streams back the response as data-only server-sent events. Extract chunks from the delta field, rather than the message field.
static async Task StreamMessageAsync(ChatCompletionsClient client)
{
ChatCompletionsOptions requestOptions = new ChatCompletionsOptions()
{
Messages = {
new ChatRequestSystemMessage("You are a helpful assistant."),
new ChatRequestUserMessage("How many languages are in the world? Write an essay about it.")
},
MaxTokens=4096
};
StreamingResponse<StreamingChatCompletionsUpdate> streamResponse = await client.CompleteStreamingAsync(requestOptions);
await PrintStream(streamResponse);
}
To stream completions, use CompleteStreamingAsync
method when you call the model. Notice that in this example we the call is wrapped in an asynchronous method.
To visualize the output, define an asynchronous method to print the stream in the console.
static async Task PrintStream(StreamingResponse<StreamingChatCompletionsUpdate> response)
{
await foreach (StreamingChatCompletionsUpdate chatUpdate in response)
{
if (chatUpdate.Role.HasValue)
{
Console.Write($"{chatUpdate.Role.Value.ToString().ToUpperInvariant()}: ");
}
if (!string.IsNullOrEmpty(chatUpdate.ContentUpdate))
{
Console.Write(chatUpdate.ContentUpdate);
}
}
}
You can visualize how streaming generates content:
StreamMessageAsync(client).GetAwaiter().GetResult();
Explore more parameters supported by the inference client
Explore other parameters that you can specify in the inference client. For a full list of all the supported parameters and their corresponding documentation, see Azure AI Model Inference API reference.
requestOptions = new ChatCompletionsOptions()
{
Messages = {
new ChatRequestSystemMessage("You are a helpful assistant."),
new ChatRequestUserMessage("How many languages are in the world?")
},
PresencePenalty = 0.1f,
FrequencyPenalty = 0.8f,
MaxTokens = 2048,
StopSequences = { "<|endoftext|>" },
Temperature = 0,
NucleusSamplingFactor = 1,
ResponseFormat = new ChatCompletionsResponseFormatText()
};
response = client.Complete(requestOptions);
Console.WriteLine($"Response: {response.Value.Choices[0].Message.Content}");
Warning
Phi-3 family models don't support JSON output formatting (response_format = { "type": "json_object" }
). You can always prompt the model to generate JSON outputs. However, such outputs are not guaranteed to be valid JSON.
If you want to pass a parameter that isn't in the list of supported parameters, you can pass it to the underlying model using extra parameters. See Pass extra parameters to the model.
Pass extra parameters to the model
The Azure AI Model Inference API allows you to pass extra parameters to the model. The following code example shows how to pass the extra parameter logprobs
to the model.
Before you pass extra parameters to the Azure AI model inference API, make sure your model supports those extra parameters. When the request is made to the underlying model, the header extra-parameters
is passed to the model with the value pass-through
. This value tells the endpoint to pass the extra parameters to the model. Use of extra parameters with the model doesn't guarantee that the model can actually handle them. Read the model's documentation to understand which extra parameters are supported.
requestOptions = new ChatCompletionsOptions()
{
Messages = {
new ChatRequestSystemMessage("You are a helpful assistant."),
new ChatRequestUserMessage("How many languages are in the world?")
},
AdditionalProperties = { { "logprobs", BinaryData.FromString("true") } },
};
response = client.Complete(requestOptions, extraParams: ExtraParameters.PassThrough);
Console.WriteLine($"Response: {response.Value.Choices[0].Message.Content}");
The following extra parameters can be passed to Phi-3 family chat models:
Name | Description | Type |
---|---|---|
logit_bias |
Accepts a JSON object that maps tokens (specified by their token ID in the tokenizer) to an associated bias value from -100 to 100. Mathematically, the bias is added to the logits generated by the model prior to sampling. The exact effect will vary per model, but values between -1 and 1 should decrease or increase likelihood of selection; values like -100 or 100 should result in a ban or exclusive selection of the relevant token. | float |
logprobs |
Whether to return log probabilities of the output tokens or not. If true, returns the log probabilities of each output token returned in the content of message . |
int |
top_logprobs |
An integer between 0 and 20 specifying the number of most likely tokens to return at each token position, each with an associated log probability. logprobs must be set to true if this parameter is used. |
float |
n |
How many chat completion choices to generate for each input message. Note that you will be charged based on the number of generated tokens across all of the choices. | int |
Apply content safety
The Azure AI model inference API supports Azure AI content safety. When you use deployments with Azure AI content safety turned on, inputs and outputs pass through an ensemble of classification models aimed at detecting and preventing the output of harmful content. The content filtering (preview) system detects and takes action on specific categories of potentially harmful content in both input prompts and output completions.
The following example shows how to handle events when the model detects harmful content in the input prompt and content safety is enabled.
try
{
requestOptions = new ChatCompletionsOptions()
{
Messages = {
new ChatRequestSystemMessage("You are an AI assistant that helps people find information."),
new ChatRequestUserMessage(
"Chopping tomatoes and cutting them into cubes or wedges are great ways to practice your knife skills."
),
},
};
response = client.Complete(requestOptions);
Console.WriteLine(response.Value.Choices[0].Message.Content);
}
catch (RequestFailedException ex)
{
if (ex.ErrorCode == "content_filter")
{
Console.WriteLine($"Your query has trigger Azure Content Safety: {ex.Message}");
}
else
{
throw;
}
}
Tip
To learn more about how you can configure and control Azure AI content safety settings, check the Azure AI content safety documentation.
Note
Azure AI content safety is only available for models deployed as serverless API endpoints.
Phi-3 family chat models
The Phi-3 family chat models include the following models:
Phi-3.5 models are lightweight, state-of-the-art open models. These models were trained with Phi-3 datasets that include both synthetic data and the filtered, publicly available websites data, with a focus on high quality and reasoning-dense properties.
Phi-3.5 Mini uses 3.8B parameters, and is a dense decoder-only transformer model using the same tokenizer as Phi-3 Mini.
Phi-3.5 MoE (mixture-of-expert) uses 16x3.8B parameters with 6.6B active parameters when using 2 experts. The model is a mixture-of-expert decoder-only transformer model, using a tokenizer with vocabulary size of 32,064.
The models underwent a rigorous enhancement process, incorporating both supervised fine-tuning, proximal policy optimization, and direct preference optimization to ensure precise instruction adherence and robust safety measures. When assessed against benchmarks that test common sense, language understanding, math, code, long context and logical reasoning, Phi-3.5 models showcased robust and state-of-the-art performance among models with less than 13 billion parameters.
The Phi-3.5 models come in the following variants, with the variants having a context length (in tokens) of 128K.
The following models are available:
- Phi-3.5-Mini-Instruct
- Phi-3.5-MoE-Instruct
Prerequisites
To use Phi-3 family chat models with Azure Machine Learning studio, you need the following prerequisites:
A model deployment
Deployment to serverless APIs
Phi-3 family chat models can be deployed to serverless API endpoints with pay-as-you-go billing. This kind of deployment provides a way to consume models as an API without hosting them on your subscription, while keeping the enterprise security and compliance that organizations need.
Deployment to a serverless API endpoint doesn't require quota from your subscription. If your model isn't deployed already, use the Azure Machine Learning studio, Azure Machine Learning SDK for Python, the Azure CLI, or ARM templates to deploy the model as a serverless API.
Deployment to a self-hosted managed compute
Phi-3 family chat models can be deployed to our self-hosted managed inference solution, which allows you to customize and control all the details about how the model is served.
For deployment to a self-hosted managed compute, you must have enough quota in your subscription. If you don't have enough quota available, you can use our temporary quota access by selecting the option I want to use shared quota and I acknowledge that this endpoint will be deleted in 168 hours.
A REST client
Models deployed with the Azure AI model inference API can be consumed using any REST client. To use the REST client, you need the following prerequisites:
- To construct the requests, you need to pass in the endpoint URL. The endpoint URL has the form
https://your-host-name.your-azure-region.inference.ai.azure.com
, whereyour-host-name`` is your unique model deployment host name and
your-azure-region`` is the Azure region where the model is deployed (for example, eastus2). - Depending on your model deployment and authentication preference, you need either a key to authenticate against the service, or Microsoft Entra ID credentials. The key is a 32-character string.
Work with chat completions
In this section, you use the Azure AI model inference API with a chat completions model for chat.
Tip
The Azure AI model inference API allows you to talk with most models deployed in Azure Machine Learning studio with the same code and structure, including Phi-3 family chat models.
Create a client to consume the model
First, create the client to consume the model. The following code uses an endpoint URL and key that are stored in environment variables.
When you deploy the model to a self-hosted online endpoint with Microsoft Entra ID support, you can use the following code snippet to create a client.
Note
Currently, serverless API endpoints do not support using Microsoft Entra ID for authentication.
Get the model's capabilities
The /info
route returns information about the model that is deployed to the endpoint. Return the model's information by calling the following method:
GET /info HTTP/1.1
Host: <ENDPOINT_URI>
Authorization: Bearer <TOKEN>
Content-Type: application/json
The response is as follows:
{
"model_name": "Phi-3.5-Mini-Instruct",
"model_type": "chat-completions",
"model_provider_name": "Microsoft"
}
Create a chat completion request
The following example shows how you can create a basic chat completions request to the model.
{
"messages": [
{
"role": "system",
"content": "You are a helpful assistant."
},
{
"role": "user",
"content": "How many languages are in the world?"
}
]
}
Note
Phi-3.5-Mini-Instruct, Phi-3.5-MoE-Instruct, Phi-3-mini-4k-Instruct, Phi-3-mini-128k-Instruct, Phi-3-small-8k-Instruct, Phi-3-small-128k-Instruct and Phi-3-medium-128k-Instruct don't support system messages (role="system"
). When you use the Azure AI model inference API, system messages are translated to user messages, which is the closest capability available. This translation is offered for convenience, but it's important for you to verify that the model is following the instructions in the system message with the right level of confidence.
The response is as follows, where you can see the model's usage statistics:
{
"id": "0a1234b5de6789f01gh2i345j6789klm",
"object": "chat.completion",
"created": 1718726686,
"model": "Phi-3.5-Mini-Instruct",
"choices": [
{
"index": 0,
"message": {
"role": "assistant",
"content": "As of now, it's estimated that there are about 7,000 languages spoken around the world. However, this number can vary as some languages become extinct and new ones develop. It's also important to note that the number of speakers can greatly vary between languages, with some having millions of speakers and others only a few hundred.",
"tool_calls": null
},
"finish_reason": "stop",
"logprobs": null
}
],
"usage": {
"prompt_tokens": 19,
"total_tokens": 91,
"completion_tokens": 72
}
}
Inspect the usage
section in the response to see the number of tokens used for the prompt, the total number of tokens generated, and the number of tokens used for the completion.
Stream content
By default, the completions API returns the entire generated content in a single response. If you're generating long completions, waiting for the response can take many seconds.
You can stream the content to get it as it's being generated. Streaming content allows you to start processing the completion as content becomes available. This mode returns an object that streams back the response as data-only server-sent events. Extract chunks from the delta field, rather than the message field.
{
"messages": [
{
"role": "system",
"content": "You are a helpful assistant."
},
{
"role": "user",
"content": "How many languages are in the world?"
}
],
"stream": true,
"temperature": 0,
"top_p": 1,
"max_tokens": 2048
}
You can visualize how streaming generates content:
{
"id": "23b54589eba14564ad8a2e6978775a39",
"object": "chat.completion.chunk",
"created": 1718726371,
"model": "Phi-3.5-Mini-Instruct",
"choices": [
{
"index": 0,
"delta": {
"role": "assistant",
"content": ""
},
"finish_reason": null,
"logprobs": null
}
]
}
The last message in the stream has finish_reason
set, indicating the reason for the generation process to stop.
{
"id": "23b54589eba14564ad8a2e6978775a39",
"object": "chat.completion.chunk",
"created": 1718726371,
"model": "Phi-3.5-Mini-Instruct",
"choices": [
{
"index": 0,
"delta": {
"content": ""
},
"finish_reason": "stop",
"logprobs": null
}
],
"usage": {
"prompt_tokens": 19,
"total_tokens": 91,
"completion_tokens": 72
}
}
Explore more parameters supported by the inference client
Explore other parameters that you can specify in the inference client. For a full list of all the supported parameters and their corresponding documentation, see Azure AI Model Inference API reference.
{
"messages": [
{
"role": "system",
"content": "You are a helpful assistant."
},
{
"role": "user",
"content": "How many languages are in the world?"
}
],
"presence_penalty": 0.1,
"frequency_penalty": 0.8,
"max_tokens": 2048,
"stop": ["<|endoftext|>"],
"temperature" :0,
"top_p": 1,
"response_format": { "type": "text" }
}
{
"id": "0a1234b5de6789f01gh2i345j6789klm",
"object": "chat.completion",
"created": 1718726686,
"model": "Phi-3.5-Mini-Instruct",
"choices": [
{
"index": 0,
"message": {
"role": "assistant",
"content": "As of now, it's estimated that there are about 7,000 languages spoken around the world. However, this number can vary as some languages become extinct and new ones develop. It's also important to note that the number of speakers can greatly vary between languages, with some having millions of speakers and others only a few hundred.",
"tool_calls": null
},
"finish_reason": "stop",
"logprobs": null
}
],
"usage": {
"prompt_tokens": 19,
"total_tokens": 91,
"completion_tokens": 72
}
}
Warning
Phi-3 family models don't support JSON output formatting (response_format = { "type": "json_object" }
). You can always prompt the model to generate JSON outputs. However, such outputs are not guaranteed to be valid JSON.
If you want to pass a parameter that isn't in the list of supported parameters, you can pass it to the underlying model using extra parameters. See Pass extra parameters to the model.
Pass extra parameters to the model
The Azure AI Model Inference API allows you to pass extra parameters to the model. The following code example shows how to pass the extra parameter logprobs
to the model.
Before you pass extra parameters to the Azure AI model inference API, make sure your model supports those extra parameters. When the request is made to the underlying model, the header extra-parameters
is passed to the model with the value pass-through
. This value tells the endpoint to pass the extra parameters to the model. Use of extra parameters with the model doesn't guarantee that the model can actually handle them. Read the model's documentation to understand which extra parameters are supported.
POST /chat/completions HTTP/1.1
Host: <ENDPOINT_URI>
Authorization: Bearer <TOKEN>
Content-Type: application/json
extra-parameters: pass-through
{
"messages": [
{
"role": "system",
"content": "You are a helpful assistant."
},
{
"role": "user",
"content": "How many languages are in the world?"
}
],
"logprobs": true
}
The following extra parameters can be passed to Phi-3 family chat models:
Name | Description | Type |
---|---|---|
logit_bias |
Accepts a JSON object that maps tokens (specified by their token ID in the tokenizer) to an associated bias value from -100 to 100. Mathematically, the bias is added to the logits generated by the model prior to sampling. The exact effect will vary per model, but values between -1 and 1 should decrease or increase likelihood of selection; values like -100 or 100 should result in a ban or exclusive selection of the relevant token. | float |
logprobs |
Whether to return log probabilities of the output tokens or not. If true, returns the log probabilities of each output token returned in the content of message . |
int |
top_logprobs |
An integer between 0 and 20 specifying the number of most likely tokens to return at each token position, each with an associated log probability. logprobs must be set to true if this parameter is used. |
float |
n |
How many chat completion choices to generate for each input message. Note that you will be charged based on the number of generated tokens across all of the choices. | int |
Apply content safety
The Azure AI model inference API supports Azure AI content safety. When you use deployments with Azure AI content safety turned on, inputs and outputs pass through an ensemble of classification models aimed at detecting and preventing the output of harmful content. The content filtering (preview) system detects and takes action on specific categories of potentially harmful content in both input prompts and output completions.
The following example shows how to handle events when the model detects harmful content in the input prompt and content safety is enabled.
{
"messages": [
{
"role": "system",
"content": "You are an AI assistant that helps people find information."
},
{
"role": "user",
"content": "Chopping tomatoes and cutting them into cubes or wedges are great ways to practice your knife skills."
}
]
}
{
"error": {
"message": "The response was filtered due to the prompt triggering Microsoft's content management policy. Please modify your prompt and retry.",
"type": null,
"param": "prompt",
"code": "content_filter",
"status": 400
}
}
Tip
To learn more about how you can configure and control Azure AI content safety settings, check the Azure AI content safety documentation.
Note
Azure AI content safety is only available for models deployed as serverless API endpoints.
More inference examples
For more examples of how to use Phi-3 family models, see the following examples and tutorials:
Description | Language | Sample |
---|---|---|
CURL request | Bash | Link |
Azure AI Inference package for JavaScript | JavaScript | Link |
Azure AI Inference package for Python | Python | Link |
Python web requests | Python | Link |
OpenAI SDK (experimental) | Python | Link |
LangChain | Python | Link |
LiteLLM | Python | Link |
Cost and quota considerations for Phi-3 family models deployed as serverless API endpoints
Quota is managed per deployment. Each deployment has a rate limit of 200,000 tokens per minute and 1,000 API requests per minute. However, we currently limit one deployment per model per project. Contact Microsoft Azure Support if the current rate limits aren't sufficient for your scenarios.
Cost and quota considerations for Phi-3 family models deployed to managed compute
Phi-3 family models deployed to managed compute are billed based on core hours of the associated compute instance. The cost of the compute instance is determined by the size of the instance, the number of instances running, and the run duration.
It is a good practice to start with a low number of instances and scale up as needed. You can monitor the cost of the compute instance in the Azure portal.