Specifications: The missing link to making the development of LLM systems an engineering discipline

November 25, 2024 Β· Declared Dead Β· πŸ› arXiv.org

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Authors Ion Stoica, Matei Zaharia, Joseph Gonzalez, Ken Goldberg, Koushik Sen, Hao Zhang, Anastasios Angelopoulos, Shishir G. Patil, Lingjiao Chen, Wei-Lin Chiang, Jared Q. Davis arXiv ID 2412.05299 Category cs.SE: Software Engineering Cross-listed cs.AI, cs.CL Citations 17 Venue arXiv.org Last Checked 4 months ago
Abstract
Despite the significant strides made by generative AI in just a few short years, its future progress is constrained by the challenge of building modular and robust systems. This capability has been a cornerstone of past technological revolutions, which relied on combining components to create increasingly sophisticated and reliable systems. Cars, airplanes, computers, and software consist of components-such as engines, wheels, CPUs, and libraries-that can be assembled, debugged, and replaced. A key tool for building such reliable and modular systems is specification: the precise description of the expected behavior, inputs, and outputs of each component. However, the generality of LLMs and the inherent ambiguity of natural language make defining specifications for LLM-based components (e.g., agents) both a challenging and urgent problem. In this paper, we discuss the progress the field has made so far-through advances like structured outputs, process supervision, and test-time compute-and outline several future directions for research to enable the development of modular and reliable LLM-based systems through improved specifications.
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