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A Config System designed for experimental purposes

Project description

YAECS (Yet Another Experiment Config System)

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DISCLAIMER: This repository is the public version of a repository that is the property of Reactive Reality. This repository IS NOT OFFICIAL and might not be maintained in the future. Some minor changes * are applied from the official repository (GitLab) (under lesser GNU license).

This package is a Config System which allows easy manipulation of config files for safe, clear and repeatable experiments. In a few words, it is:

  • built for Machine Learning with its constraints in mind, but also usable out-of-the-box for other kinds of projects;
  • built with scalability in mind and can adapt just as easily to large projects investigating hundreds of well-organized parameters across many experiments;
  • designed to encourage good coding practices for research purposes, and if used rigorously will ensure a number of highly desirable properties such that maintenance-less forward-compatibility of old configs, easy reproducibility of any experiment, and extreme clarity of former experiments for your future self or collaborators.

LINK TO DOCUMENTATION

Installation

The package can be installed from pipy: pip install yaecs

Getting started

This package is adapted to a project where you need to run a number of experiments. In this setup, it can be useful to gather all the parameters in the project to a common location, some "config files", so you can access and modify them easily. This package is based on YAML, therefore your config files should be YAML files. One such YAML file could be :

gpu: true
data_path: "./data"
learning_rate: 0.01

Those will be the default values for those three parameters, so we will keep them in the file my_project/configs/default.yaml. Then, we just need to subclass the Configuration class in this package so your project-specific subclass knows where to find the default values for your project. A minimal project-specific subclass looks like:

from yaecs import Configuration

class ProjectSpecific(Configuration):
    @staticmethod
    def get_default_config_path():
        return "./configs/default.yaml"

    def parameters_pre_processing(self):
        return {}

That's all there is to it! Now if we use config = ProjectSpecific.load_config(), we can then call config.data_path or config.learning_rate to get their values as defined in the default config. We don't need to specify where to get the default config because a project should only ever have one default config, which centralizes all the parameters in that project. Since the location of the default config is a project constant, it is defined in your project-specific subclass and there is no need to clutter your main code with it. Now, for example, your main.py could look like:

from project_config import ProjectSpecific

if __name__ == "__main__":
    config = ProjectSpecific.load_config()
    config.merge_from_command_line()
    print(config.details())

Then, calling python main.py --learning_rate=0.001, the call to merge_from_command_line would parse the command line and find the pre-existing parameter learning_rate, then change its value to 0.001. Thus, the printed result would yield:

MAIN CONFIG :
Configuration hierarchy :
> ./configs/default.yaml

 - gpu : true
 - data_path : ./data
 - learning_rate : 0.001

The Configuration hierarchy tells you about the creation history of the config, in this case only the default config was used. Then, all parameters are displayed. There are of course many other features in this package which you can use to organize your parameters, hierarchise your experiments etc. The idea being that once the bare minimum presented above is set up, scaling up is just as simple.

You can learn more about all these features in our DOCUMENTATION.

config_history

The Config History is a side-feature of the main Config System. It can be configured for any project which uses the Config System and provides a flexible framework to easily build graphs representing past experiments. In these graphs, each node represents an experiment, and vertices are drawn between your experiments to visualize easily which parameters changed from one node to another.

The graph can be coloured to show your most successful experiments, or grouped by parameters to see how well they have been explored in your experiment history. This makes it very useful to review your past work, share it with colleagues or make unexpected correlations appear.

Please refer to our DOCUMENTATION to learn more about its setup and usage.

Requirements (will not be installed automatically by pip to keep this lightweight):

  • python>=3.7
  • pygraphviz==1.7
  • scipy
  • numpy
  • sudo apt install graphviz

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