University of Siena Reinforcement Learning library - SAILab
Project description
This is a python 3.6 and above library for Reinforcement Learning (RL) experiments.
The idea behind this library is to generate an intuitive yet versatile system to generate RL agents, experiments, models, etc. The library is modular, and allow for easy experiment iterations and validation. It is currently used in my research and it was built first for that purpose.
Note: this is not meant to be an entry level framework. Users are expected to be at least somewhat experienced in both python and reinforcement learning. The framework is easy to extend but almost all the agent-related and environment-related work should be done by yourself.
Features
Included in package:
Model, Agent, Environment, Experiment, Exploration Policy abstract classes with their interrelationships hidden inside the implementation
- Utility functions to run the same experiment in multiple equal iterations with automated folder setup and organization, registering the following metrics:
Average total reward (reward in one episode) over training, validation and test
Average scaled reward (reward per step) over training, validation and test
Mean and standard deviation of average total and scaled reward over test in all experiment iterations (if more than one)
Mean and standard deviation of maximum total and scaled reward over test in all experiment iterations (if more than one)
Mean and standard deviation of minimum training episodes over test in all experiment iterations (if more than one)
Experiment iteration achieving best results in each one of the metrics described above
- Many state-of-the-art algorithms already implemented in pre-defined models, including:
Tabular Temporal Difference Q-Learning, SARSA, Expected SARSA with Prioritized Experience Replay memory buffer
Deep Temporal Difference Q-Learning (DQN), SARSA, Expected SARSA with Prioritized Experience Replay memory buffer
Double Deep Temporal Difference Q-Learning (DDQN) with Prioritized Experience Replay memory buffer
Dueling Temporal Difference Q-Learning (DDDQN) with Prioritized Experience Replay memory buffer
Vanilla Policy Gradient (VPG) with General Advantage Estimate buffer using rewards-to-go
- Many state-of-the-art exploration policies, including:
Epsilon Greedy with tunable decay rate, start value and end value
Boltzmann sampling with tunable temperature decay rate, start value and end value
Config class to define the hidden layers of all Tensorflow graphs (including the CNN)
Default Pass-Through interface class to allow communications between agents and environments
Not included in package:
Extensive set of benchmarks for each algorithm in the OpenAI gym environment
Default agents, OpenAI gym environment and benchmark experiment classes to test the benchmarks by yourself
License
BSD 3-Clause License
For additional information check the provided license file.
How to install
If you only need to use the framework, just download the pip package usienarl and import the package in your scripts.
When installing, make sure to choose the version suiting your computing capabilities. If you have CUDA installed, the gpu version is advised. Otherwise, just use the cpu version. To choose a version, specify your extra require during install:
pip install usienarl[tensorflow-gpu] to install the tensorflow-gpu version
pip install usienarl[tensorflow] to install the tensorflow using cpu version
Note: failure in specifying the extra require will cause tensorflow to not be installed, and as such the library won’t be usable at all. For instance, this is not allowed, unless you already have tensorflow installed:
pip install usienarl
If you want to improve/modify/extends the framework, or even just try my own benchmarks at home, download or clone the git repository. You are welcome to open issues or participate in the project. Note that the benchmarks are built to run using tensorflow-gpu.
How to use
For a simple use case, refer to benchmark provided in the repository. For advanced use, refer to the built-in documentation and to the provided source code in the repository.
Current issues
The watch functionality of the experiment is yet untested. It could be useful to implement an easy way to pass a metagraph without the need to redefine the entire agent (maybe serializing the agent somehow?).
An experiment can right now work only in a specific environment. It could be interesting to test multiple environments both from a curriculum learning perspective (it can still be done using multiple subsequent experiments, however) and from a generalization perspective (train one one, validate on another, etc).
A way to check if environments are compatible one another would be required too if what said above is implemented.
Minor issue but yet worth addressing, the results.log file output of the run_experiment method has a bad format in the table of results. A way to improve the spacing between elements would be great!
Also, the amount of algorithms is still limited, and some implementations could fail in some specific settings. Further addition of models and refining of algorithms (for example, return normalization, etc) is very much welcome.
Finally, the Trust Region Policy Optimization algorithm implementation is still under alpha development.
Changelog
Added support for checkpoint path to allow retraining in run experiment function
Fixed wrong percentage computation in run experiment function
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