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A simple tool for benchamrking and tracking machine learning models and experiments.

Project description

Xetrack

xetrack is a lightweight package to track experiments and benchmarks data using duckdb. It looks and feels like pandas and is very easy to use.

Each instance of the tracker has a "track_id" which is a unique identifier for a single run.

Features

  • Simple
  • Embedded
  • Fast
  • Pandas-like
  • SQL-like
  • Multiprocessing reads and writes

Installation

pip install xetrack

Quickstart

from xetrack import Tracker

tracker = Tracker('database.db',
                  params={'model': 'resnet18'}
                  )
tracker.log(accuracy=0.9, loss=0.1, epoch=1)
{'accuracy': 0.9, 'loss': 0.1, 'epoch': 1, 'model': 'resnet18', 'timestamp': '18-08-2023 11:02:35.162360',
 'track_id': 'cd8afc54-5992-4828-893d-a4cada28dba5'}

tracker.latest
{'accuracy': 0.9, 'loss': 0.1, 'epoch': 1, 'model': 'resnet18', 'timestamp': '18-08-2023 11:02:35.162360',
 'track_id': 'cd8afc54-5992-4828-893d-a4cada28dba5'}


tracker.to_df(all=True)  # as dataframe
                    timestamp                              track_id     model  loss  epoch  accuracy
0  26-09-2023 12:17:00.342814  398c985a-dc15-42da-88aa-6ac6cbf55794  resnet18   0.1      1       0.9
1  26-09-2023 12:17:29.771021  398c985a-dc15-42da-88aa-6ac6cbf55794  resnet18   0.1      2       0.9

Params are values which are added to every future row:

tracker.set_params({'model': 'resnet18', 'dataset': 'cifar10'})
tracker.log(accuracy=0.9, loss=0.1, epoch=2)
{'accuracy': 0.9, 'loss': 0.1, 'epoch': 2, 'model': 'resnet18', 'dataset': 'cifar10', 
 'timestamp': '26-09-2023 12:18:40.151756', 'track_id': '398c985a-dc15-42da-88aa-6ac6cbf55794'}

You can also set a value to an entire run with set_value ("back in time"):

tracker.set_value('test_accuracy', 0.9)
tracker.to_df()

                    timestamp                              track_id     model  loss  epoch  accuracy  dataset  test_accuracy
0  26-09-2023 12:17:00.342814  398c985a-dc15-42da-88aa-6ac6cbf55794  resnet18   0.1      1       0.9      NaN            0.9
2  26-09-2023 12:18:40.151756  398c985a-dc15-42da-88aa-6ac6cbf55794  resnet18   0.1      2       0.9  cifar10            0.9

Track functions

You can track any function.

  • The return value is logged before returned
tracker = Tracker('database.db', log_system_params=True, log_network_params=True, measurement_interval=0.1)
image = tracker.track(read_image, *args, **kwargs)
tracker.latest
{'result': 571084, 'name': 'read_image', 'time': 0.30797290802001953, 'error': '', 'disk_percent': 0.6,
 'p_memory_percent': 0.496507, 'cpu': 0.0, 'memory_percent': 32.874608, 'bytes_sent': 0.0078125,
 'bytes_recv': 0.583984375}

Or with a wrapper:

@tracker.wrap(params={'name':'foofoo'})
def foo(a: int, b: str):
    return a + len(b)
result = foo(1, 'hello')
tracker.latest
{'function_name': 'foo', 'args': "[1, 'hello']", 'kwargs': '{}', 'error': '', 'function_time': 4.0531158447265625e-06, 
 'function_result': 6, 'name': 'foofoo', 'disk_percent': 0, 'p_memory_percent': 0, 'cpu': 0, 'memory_percent': 0, 
 'bytes_sent': 0.0, 'bytes_recv': 0.0, 'model': 'resnet18', 'dataset': 'cifar10', 'timestamp': '26-09-2023 12:21:02.200245', 
 'track_id': '398c985a-dc15-42da-88aa-6ac6cbf55794'}

Logger integration

import logging
logging.basicConfig(level=logging.INFO)

logger = logging.getLogger() # or loguru.logger
tracker = Tracker(db=database.db, logger=logger)
info = tracker.log(x='x')

INFO:root:x=x	timestamp=26-09-2023 12:26:36.564740	track_id=beb17e36-b646-4049-aff1-fd0e1574eb9e

Pandas-like

print(tracker)
                                    _id                              track_id                 date    b    a  accuracy
0  48154ec7-1fe4-4896-ac66-89db54ddd12a  fd0bfe4f-7257-4ec3-8c6f-91fe8ae67d20  16-08-2023 00:21:46  2.0  1.0       NaN
1  8a43000a-03a4-4822-98f8-4df671c2d410  fd0bfe4f-7257-4ec3-8c6f-91fe8ae67d20  16-08-2023 00:24:21  NaN  NaN       1.0

tracker['accuracy'] # get accuracy column
tracker.to_df() # get pandas dataframe of current run

SQL-like

You can filter the data using SQL-like syntax using duckdb:

  • The sqlite database is attached as db and the table is events
tracker.conn.execute(f"SELECT * FROM db.events WHERE accuracy > 0.8").fetchall()

Analysis

To get the data of all runs in the database for analysis:
Use this for further analysis and plotting.

  • This works even while a another process is writing to the database.
from xetrack import Reader
df = Reader('database.db').to_df() 

Merge two databases

If you have two databases, and you want to merge them into one, you can use the copy function:

python -c 'from xetrack import copy; copy(source="db1.db", target="db2.db")'

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