We introduce RepoHyper, an novel framework transforming code completion into a seamless end-to-end process for use case on real world repositories. Traditional approaches depend on integrating contexts into Code Language Models (CodeLLMs), often presuming these contexts to be inherently accurate. However, we've identified a gap: the standard benchmarks don't always present relevant contexts.
To address this, RepoHyper proposes in three novel steps:
- Construction of a Code Property Graph, establishing a rich source of context.
- A novel Search Algorithm for pinpointing the exact context needed.
- The Expand Algorithm, designed to uncover implicit connections between code elements (akin to the Link Prediction problem on social network mining).
Our comprehensive evaluations reveal that RepoHyper sets a new standard, outperforming other strong baseline on the RepoBench benchmark.
pip install -r requirements.txt
RepoHyper is a two-stage model. The first stage is a search-then-expand algorithm on Repo-level Semantic Graph (RSG) then use GNN link predictor that reranks the retrieved results from KNN search and graph expansion. The second stage is any code LLM model that takes the retrieved context and predicts the next line of code.
We provide the checkpoints for the GNN model here. The GNN model is trained on the RepoBench-R dataset with gold labels. We also provide RepoBench-R RGSs to reproduce the results.
We need to clone Repobench dataset into data/repobench
folder. Then download all the unique repositories used in this dataset
python3 -m scripts.data.download_repos --dataset data/repobench --output data/repobench/repos --num-processes 8
The next step is to generate call graph using PyCG. We use the following command to generate call graph for each repository. 60 processes are used to speed up the process (maximum RAM usage is around 350GB).
python3 -m scripts.data.generate_call_graph --repos data/repobench/repos --output data/repobench/repos_call_graphs --num-processes 60
Now we need to generate embeddings for each node for node embedding as well as create adjacency matrix by aligning Tree-sitter functions, classes, methods with call graph nodes.
python3 -m scripts.data.repo_to_embeddings --repos data/repobench/repos --call-graphs data/repobench/repos_call_graphs --output data/repobench/repos_graphs --num-processes 60
Final step is labeling which node is the most optimal for predicting next line using gold snippet from repobench dataset. In this step, we also generate the training data for GNN training by extracting the subgraph using KNN search and RSG expansion.
python3 -m scripts.data.matching_repobench_graphs -search_policy "knn-pattern" --rsg_path "YOUR RSG PATH" --output data/repobench/repos_graphs_labeled
We can train GNN linker seperately using following script
CUDA_VISIBLE_DEVICES=0 deepspeed train_gnn.py --deepspeed --deepspeed_config ds_config.json --arch GraphSage --layers 1 --data-path data/repobench/repos_graphs_labeled_cosine_radius_unix --output data/repobench/gnn_model --num-epochs 10 --batch-size 16
We can evaluate the model using the following script
python3 scripts/evaluate_llm.py --data data/repobench/repos_graphs_matched_retrieved --model "gpt3.5" --num-workers 8
More details can be found in our paper.
If you're using RepoHyper in your research or applications, please cite using this BibTeX:
@article{phan2024repohyper,
title={Repohyper: Better context retrieval is all you need for repository-level code completion},
author={Phan, Huy N and Phan, Hoang N and Nguyen, Tien N and Bui, Nghi DQ},
journal={arXiv preprint arXiv:2403.06095},
year={2024}
}
If you have any questions, comments or suggestions, please do not hesitate to contact us.
- Website: fpt-aicenter
- Email: bdqnghi@gmail.com