Machine Learning workflow automatization
Project description
Python machine learning infrastructure project. The idea of MLizard is to make it easy to run lots of different experiments on lots of different options, constantly changing or exchanging parts of the process, without loosing track of what you did, when you did it, how you did it, what came out of it, which files are connected to it and so on. So this is how it looks like:
""" # for this demo we use the docstring as config alpha = 0.7 beta = 7 gamma = "Foo" """ # at the beginning of the file we create an experiment from mlizard.experiment import createExperiment ex = createExperiment("Demo", config_string=__doc__) @ex.stage def part0(rnd): return rnd.randint(10) @ex.stage def part1(X, alpha, beta, logger): X -= alpha X *= beta logger.info("multiplied by %f and added %f", alpha, beta) return X @main def mainFunction(): # this is the main method, here we put everything together X = part0() # note that we do not need to pass rnd X = part1(X) # and no alpha, beta, and logger
So we have to create an experiment and decorate all of our functions. But what do we get for this?
automatic option passing (alpha, beta)
a logger
a random number generator that is seeded by the experiment
automatic caching of intermediate results
Magic Arguments
The experiment can automatically pass options to it’s stages. This helps to change many parameters of your experiment without having to pass them around manually. This feature can also be used to easily try different sets of options or do whole option-sweeps automatically. There are also two special arguments called rnd, and logger that the experiment generates. But lets see an simple example first.
Simple example
If you call a stage you can leave some of the parameters unfilled, and the experiment will try to fill them using it’s own options dictionary:
from mlizard.experiment import createExperiment ex = createExperiment() @ex.stage def foo(some_option): print some_option foo() # TypeError: foo() is missing value(s) for ['some_option'] ex.options["some_option"] = 5 foo() # will print 5 foo(7) # will print 7
This will run just fine and print “5” because that is the value of “some_option” in the experiments options. Note however, that those options will typically come from a config file, or config string.
Argument Priority
The experiment will resolve conflicting arguments according to the following priority:
positional and keyword arguments passed by the caller
options from the experiment
default-values
This is illustrated by the following example:
@ex.stage def foo(a, b, c, d=400, e=500): print a, b, c, d, e ex.options = dict(a=10, b=20, c=30, d=40) foo(1, c=3) # prints 1, 20, 3, 40, 500
Special arguments
The experiment also provides two special arguments called logger and rnd.
The logger helps you with two things: first it can be used to print out some messages that get logged as you’d expect. Secondly it can be used to report some intermediate results such that you can use them for live-plots. (See section Logger)
The second one (rnd) is a numpy RandomState object, that you can use to generate random data. The important fact about this is, that if you provide a seed to the experiment then all rnd objects will be deterministically seeded. This means you can easily reproduce an experiment run even though it depended on randomness.
Roadmap
easy option sweeps
report file
online results view
database of runs/options/results
git integration (track version of code for every result)
License
The MLizard project is published under the Gnu General Public License Version 3.
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