MLOps framework
Project description
MLOps Framework
This is a framework for MLOps that deploys models as functions in Cognite Data Fusion or api's in Google Cloud Run.
User Guide
Getting Started:
Follow these steps:
- Install package:
pip install akerbp.mlops
- Set up pipeline file
bitbucket-pipelines.yml
and config filemlops_settings.yaml
by running this command from your repo's root folder:python -m akerbp.mlops.deployment.setup
- Fill in user settings and then validate them by running this (from repo root):
from akerbp.mlops.core.config import validate_user_settings validate_user_settings()
alternatively, run the setup again:python -m akerbp.mlops.deployment.setup
- Commit the pipeline and settings files to your repo
- Become familiar with the model template (see folder
model_code
) and make sure your model follows the same interface and file structure (described later) - Follow or request the Bitbucket setup (described later)
A this point every git push in master branch will trigger a deployment in the test environment. More information about the deployments pipelines is provided later.
Updating MLOps
Follow these steps:
- Install a new version using pip, e.g.
pip install akerbp.mlops==x
- Run this command from your repo's root folder:
python -m akerbp.mlops.deployment.setup
That will update the pipeline and validate your settings. Commit changes and you're ready to go!
General Guidelines
Users should consider the following general guidelines:
- Model artifacts should not be committed to the repo. Folder
model_artifact
does store model artifacts for the model defined inmodel_code
, but it is just to help users understand the framework - Follow the recommended file and folder structure (described later)
- There can be several models in your repo: they need to be registered in the settings, and then they need to have their own model and test files
- Follow the import guidelines (described later)
- Make sure the prediction service gets access to model artifacts (described later)
Configuration
MLOps configuration is stored in mlops_settings.yaml
. Example for a project
with a single model:
model_name: model1
model_file: model_code/model1.py
req_file: model_code/requirements.model
artifact_folder: model_artifact
test_file: model_code/test_model1.py
platform: cdf
info:
prediction: &desc
description: 'Description prediction service, model1'
owner: data@science.com
training:
<< : *desc
description: 'Description training service, model1'
Field description:
- model_name: a suitable name for your model. No spaces allowed.
- model_file: model file path relative to the repo's root folder. All required
model code should be under the top folder in that path (
model_code
in the example above). - req_file: model requirement file. Do not use
.txt
extension! - artifact_folder: model artifact folder. It can be the name of an existing local folder (note that it should not be committed to the repo). In that case it will be used in local deployment. It still needs to be uploaded so that it can be used in Test or Prod. If the folder does not exist locally, the framework will try to create that folder and download the artifacts there.
- test_file: test file to use. Set to
null
for no testing before deployment (not recommended). - platform: deployment platforms, either
cdf
(Cognite) orgc
(Google). - info: description and owner information for the prediction and training services. Training field can be discarded if there's no such service. Note: all paths should be unix style, regardless of the platform.
If there are multiple models, model configuration should be separated using
---
. Example:
model_name: model1
model_file: model_code/model1.py
(...)
--- # <- this separates model1 and model2 :)
model_name: model2
model_file: model_code/model2.py
(...)
Files and Folders Structure
All the model code and files should be under a single folder, e.g. model_code
.
Required files in this folder:
model.py
: implements the standard model interfacetest_model.py
: tests to verify that the model code is correct and to verify correct deploymentrequirements.model
: libraries needed (with specific version numbers), can't be calledrequirements.txt
. Add the MLOps framework like this:# requirements.model (...) # your other reqs akerbp.mlops==MLOPS_VERSION
During deploymentMLOPS_VERSION
will be automatically replaced by the specific version that you have installed.
The following structure is recommended for projects with multiple models:
model_code/model1/
model_code/model2/
model_code/common_code/
This is because when deploying a model, e.g. model1
, the top folder in the
path (model_code
in the example above) is copied and deployed, i.e.
common_code
folder (assumed to be needed by model1
) is included. Note that
model2
folder would also be deployed (this is assumed to be unnecessary but
harmless).
Import Guidelines
The repo's root folder is the base folder when importing. For example, assume you have these files in the folder with model code:
model_code/model.py
model_code/helper.py
model_code/data.csv
If model.py
needs to import helper.py
, use: import model_code.helper
. If
model.py
needs to read data.csv
, the right path is
os.path.join('model_code', 'data.csv')
.
It's of course possible to import from the Mlops package, e.g. its logger:
from akerbp.mlops.core import logger
logging=logger.get_logger("logger_name")
logging.debug("This is a debug log")
Deployment Platform
Model services (described below) can be deployed to either CDF or GCR, independently.
Services
We consider two types of services: prediction and training.
Deployed services can be called with
from akerbp.mlops.xx.helpers import call_function
output = call_function(function_name, data)
Where xx
is either 'cdf'
or 'gc'
, and function_name
follows the
structure model-service-env
:
model
: model name given by the user (settings file)service
: eithertraining
orprediction
env
: eitherdev
,test
orprod
(depending on the deployment environment)
The output has a status field (ok
or error
). If they are 'ok', they have
also a prediction
or training
field (depending on the type of service). The
former is determined by the predict
method of the model, while the latter
combines artifact metadata and model metadata produced by the train
function.
Prediction services have also a model_id
field to keep track of which model
was used to predict.
Model Artifacts for the Prediction Service
Prediction services are deployed with model artifacts so that they are available at prediction time (downloading would require waiting time, and files written during run time consume ram memory).
Model artifacts are segregated by environment (e.g. only production models can be deployed to production). Model artifacts are versioned and stored in CDF Files together with user-defined metadata. Uploading a new model increases the version count by 1 for that model and environment. It's important not to delete model files manually, since that would mess with the model manager. When deploying a model service, the latest model version is chosen (however, we can discuss the possibility of deploying specific versions or filtering by metadata).
The general rule is that model artifacts have to be uploaded manually before deployment. If there are multiple models, you need to do this one at at time. Code example:
import akerbp.mlops.model_manager as mm
metadata = train(model_dir, secrets) # or define it directly
mm.setup()
folder_info = mm.upload_new_model_version(
model_name,
env,
folder_path,
metadata
)
This requires COGNITE_API_KEY_*
environmental variables (see next section) or
you can give a suitable key to the model manager setup function. Note that
model_name
corresponds to one of the elements in model_names
defined in
mlops_settings.py
, env
is the target environment (where the model should be
available), folder_path
is the local model artifact folder and metadata
is a
dictionary with artifact metadata, e.g. performance, git commit, etc. Each model
update adds a new version (environment dependent) and note that updating a model
doesn't modify the models used in existing prediction services.
Recommended process to update a model:
- New model features implemented in a feature branch
- New artifact generated and uploaded to test environment
- Feature branch merged with master
- Test deployment is triggered automatically: prediction service is deployed to test with the latest artifacts
- Prediction service in test is verified, and if things go well
- New artifact uploaded to prod environment
- Production deployment is triggered manually: prediction service is deployed to prod with the latest artifacts
However, in projects with a training service, you can rely on it to upload a first version of the model. The first prediction service deployment will fail, but you can deploy again after the training service has produced a model.
Another exception is that, when you deploy from the development environment
(covered later in this document), the model artifacts in the settings file can
point to existing local folders. These will then be used for the deployment.
Version is then fixed to model_name/dev/1
. Note that these artifacts are not
uploaded to CDF Files.
Local Testing and Deployment
It's possible to tests the functions locally, which can help you debug errors quickly. This is recommended before a deployment.
Define the following environmental variables (e.g. in .bashrc
):
export ENV=dev
export COGNITE_API_KEY_PERSONAL=xxx
export COGNITE_API_KEY_FUNCTIONS=$COGNITE_API_KEY_PERSONAL
export COGNITE_API_KEY_DATA=$COGNITE_API_KEY_PERSONAL
export COGNITE_API_KEY_FILES=$COGNITE_API_KEY_PERSONAL
export GOOGLE_PROJECT_ID=xxx # If deploying to Google Cloud Run
From your repo's root folder:
python -m pytest model_code
(replacemodel_code
by your model code folder name)deploy_prediction_service.sh
deploy_training_service.sh
(if there's a training service)
The first one will run your model tests. The last two run model tests but also the service tests implemented in the framework and simulate deployment.
If you really want to deploy from your development environment, you can run
this: LOCAL_DEPLOYMENT=True deploy_prediction_service.sh
Automated Deployments from Bitbucket
Deployments to the test environment are triggered by commits (you need to push them). Deployments to the production environment are enabled manually from the Bitbucket pipeline dashboard. Branches that match 'deploy/*' behave as master.
It is assumed that most projects won't include a training service. A branch that matches 'mlops/*' deploys both prediction and training services. If a project includes both services, the pipeline file could instead be edited so that master deployed both services.
It is possible to schedule the training service in CDF, and then it can make sense to schedule the deployment pipeline of the model service (as often as new models are trained)
Bitbucket Setup
The following environments need to be defined in repository settings > deployments
:
- test deployments:
test-prediction
andtest-training
, each withENV=test
- production deployments:
production-prediction
andproduction-training
, each withENV=prod
The following need to be defined in respository settings > repository variables
: COGNITE_API_KEY_DATA
, COGNITE_API_KEY_FUNCTIONS
,
COGNITE_API_KEY_FILES
(these should be CDF keys with access to data, functions
and files). If deployment to GCR is needed, you need in addition:
ENABLE_GC_DEPLOYMENT
(set to True
), GOOGLE_SERVICE_ACCOUNT_FILE
(content
of the service account id file) and GOOGLE_PROJECT_ID
(name of the project)
The pipeline needs to be enabled.
Developer/Admin Guide
MLOps Files and Folders
These are the files and folders in the MLOps repo:
src
contains the MLOps framework packagemlops_settings.yaml
contains the user settings for the dummy modelmodel_code
is a model template included to show the model interface. It is not needed by the framework, but it is recommended to become familiar with it.model_artifact
stores the artifacts for the model shown inmodel_code
. This is to help to test the model and learn the framework.bitbucket-pipelines.yml
describes the deployment pipeline in Bitbucketbuild.sh
is the script to build and upload the packagesetup.py
is used to build the packageLICENSE
is the package's license
Build and Upload Package
Create an account in pypi, then create a token and a $HOME/.pypirc
file. Edit setup.py
file and note the following:
- Dependencies need to be registered
- Bash scripts will be installed in a
bin
folder in thePATH
.
The pipeline is setup to build the library from Bitbucket, but it's possible to build and upload the library from the development environment as well:
bash build.sh
In general this is required before LOCAL_DEPLOYMENT=True bash deploy_xxx_service.sh
. The exception is if local changes affect only the
deployment part of the library, and the library has been installed in developer
mode with:
pip install -e .
In this mode, the installed package links to the source code, so that it can be modified without the need to reinstall).
Bitbucket Setup
In addition to the user setup, the following is needed to build the package:
test-pypi
:ENV=test
,TWINE_USERNAME=__token__
andTWINE_PASSWORD
(token generated from pypi)prod-pypi
:ENV=prod
,TWINE_USERNAME=__token__
andTWINE_PASSWORD
(token generated from pypi, can be the same as above)
Google Cloud Setup
In order to deploy to Google Cloud Run, you need to create a service account with the following rights:
- Cloud Build Service Account
- Service Account Admin
- Service Account User
- Cloud Run Admin
- Viewer
You also need to create the CDF secret mlops-cdf-keys
. It's a string that can
be evaluated in python to get a dictionary (same used in the cdf helpers file).
This is because:
- It needs to be passed to prediction and training services
- Model registry uses CDF Files in its
Calling FastApi services
Bash: install httpie, then:
http -v POST http://127.0.0.1:8000/train data='{"x": [1,-1],"y":[1,0]}'
Python: challenging when posting nested json with requests. This works:
import requests, json
data = {"x":[1,-1], "y":[1,0]}
requests.post(model_api, json={'data': json.dumps(data)})
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