# Model Routing Service Demo Plano is an AI-native proxy and data plane for agentic apps — with built-in orchestration, safety, observability, and intelligent LLM routing. ``` ┌───────────┐ ┌─────────────────────────────────┐ ┌──────────────┐ │ Client │ ───► │ Plano │ ───► │ OpenAI │ │ (any │ │ │ │ Anthropic │ │ language)│ │ Arch-Router (1.5B model) │ │ Any Provider│ └───────────┘ │ analyzes intent → picks model │ └──────────────┘ └─────────────────────────────────┘ ``` - **One endpoint, many models** — apps call Plano using standard OpenAI/Anthropic APIs; Plano handles provider selection, keys, and failover - **Intelligent routing** — a lightweight 1.5B router model classifies user intent and picks the best model per request - **Platform governance** — centralize API keys, rate limits, guardrails, and observability without touching app code - **Runs anywhere** — single binary; self-host the router for full data privacy ## How Routing Works Routing is configured in top-level `routing_preferences` (requires `version: v0.4.0`): ```yaml version: v0.4.0 routing_preferences: - name: complex_reasoning description: complex reasoning tasks, multi-step analysis, or detailed explanations models: - openai/gpt-4o - openai/gpt-4o-mini - name: code_generation description: generating new code, writing functions, or creating boilerplate models: - anthropic/claude-sonnet-4-20250514 - openai/gpt-4o ``` When a request arrives, Plano: 1. Sends the conversation + route descriptions to Arch-Router for intent classification 2. Looks up the matched route and returns its candidate models 3. Returns an ordered list — client uses `models[0]`, falls back to `models[1]` on 429/5xx ``` 1. Request arrives → "Write binary search in Python" 2. Arch-Router classifies → route: "code_generation" 3. Response → models: ["anthropic/claude-sonnet-4-20250514", "openai/gpt-4o"] ``` No match? Arch-Router returns `null` route → client falls back to the model in the original request. The `/routing/v1/*` endpoints return the routing decision **without** forwarding to the LLM — useful for testing routing behavior before going to production. ## Setup Make sure you have Plano CLI installed (`pip install planoai` or `uv tool install planoai`). ```bash export OPENAI_API_KEY= export ANTHROPIC_API_KEY= ``` Start Plano: ```bash planoai up demos/llm_routing/model_routing_service/config.yaml ``` ## Run the demo ```bash ./demo.sh ``` ## Endpoints All three LLM API formats are supported: | Endpoint | Format | |---|---| | `POST /routing/v1/chat/completions` | OpenAI Chat Completions | | `POST /routing/v1/messages` | Anthropic Messages | | `POST /routing/v1/responses` | OpenAI Responses API | ## Example ```bash curl http://localhost:12000/routing/v1/chat/completions \ -H "Content-Type: application/json" \ -d '{ "model": "gpt-4o-mini", "messages": [{"role": "user", "content": "Write a Python function for binary search"}] }' ``` Response: ```json { "models": ["anthropic/claude-sonnet-4-20250514", "openai/gpt-4o"], "route": "code_generation", "trace_id": "c16d1096c1af4a17abb48fb182918a88" } ``` The response contains the model list — your client should try `models[0]` first and fall back to `models[1]` on 429 or 5xx errors. ## Kubernetes Deployment (Self-hosted Arch-Router on GPU) To run Arch-Router in-cluster using vLLM instead of the default hosted endpoint: **0. Check your GPU node labels and taints** ```bash kubectl get nodes --show-labels | grep -i gpu kubectl get node -o jsonpath='{.spec.taints}' ``` GPU nodes commonly have a `nvidia.com/gpu:NoSchedule` taint — `vllm-deployment.yaml` includes a matching toleration. If you have multiple GPU node pools and need to pin to a specific one, uncomment and set the `nodeSelector` in `vllm-deployment.yaml` using the label for your cloud provider. **1. Deploy Arch-Router and Plano:** ```bash # arch-router deployment kubectl apply -f vllm-deployment.yaml # plano deployment kubectl create secret generic plano-secrets \ --from-literal=OPENAI_API_KEY=$OPENAI_API_KEY \ --from-literal=ANTHROPIC_API_KEY=$ANTHROPIC_API_KEY kubectl create configmap plano-config \ --from-file=plano_config.yaml=config_k8s.yaml \ --dry-run=client -o yaml | kubectl apply -f - kubectl apply -f plano-deployment.yaml ``` **3. Wait for both pods to be ready:** ```bash # Arch-Router downloads the model (~1 min) then vLLM loads it (~2 min) kubectl get pods -l app=arch-router -w kubectl rollout status deployment/plano ``` **4. Test:** ```bash kubectl port-forward svc/plano 12000:12000 ./demo.sh ``` To confirm requests are hitting your in-cluster Arch-Router (not just health checks): ```bash kubectl logs -l app=arch-router -f --tail=0 # Look for POST /v1/chat/completions entries ``` **Updating the config:** ```bash kubectl create configmap plano-config \ --from-file=plano_config.yaml=config_k8s.yaml \ --dry-run=client -o yaml | kubectl apply -f - kubectl rollout restart deployment/plano ```