Mercurial > pylearn
view doc/v2_planning/plugin.txt @ 1326:1b97fae7ea0d
added the parameter noise_value to binomial_noise formula.
author | Frederic Bastien <nouiz@nouiz.org> |
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date | Wed, 13 Oct 2010 15:04:42 -0400 |
parents | a1957faecc9b |
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====================================== Plugin system for iterative algorithms ====================================== I would like to propose a plugin system for iterative algorithms in Pylearn. Basically, it would be useful to be able to sandwich arbitrary behavior in-between two training iterations of an algorithm (whenever applicable). I believe many mechanisms are best implemented this way: early stopping, saving checkpoints, tracking statistics, real time visualization, remote control of the process, or even interlacing the training of several models and making them interact with each other. So here is the proposal: essentially, a plugin would be a (schedule, timeline, function) tuple. Schedule ======== The schedule is some function that takes two "times", t1 and t2, and returns True if the plugin should be run in-between these times. The indices refer to a "timeline" unit described below (e.g. "real time" or "iterations"). The reason why we check a time range [t1, t2] rather than some discrete time t is that we do not necessarily want to schedule plugins on iteration numbers. For instance, we could want to run a plugin every second, or every minute, and then [t1, t2] would be the start time and end time of the last iteration - and then we run the plugin whenever a new second started in that range (but still on training iteration boundaries). Alternatively, we could want to run a plugin every n examples seen - but if we use mini-batches, the nth example might be square in the middle of a batch. I've implemented a somewhat elaborate schedule system. `each(10)` produces a schedule that returns true whenever a multiple of 10 is in the time range. `at(17, 153)` produces one that returns true when 17 or 143 is in the time range. Schedules can be combined and negated, e.g. `each(10) & ~at(20, 30)` (execute at each 10, except at 20 and 30). So that gives a lot of flexibility as to when you want to do things. Timeline ======== This would be a string indicating on what "timeline" the schedule is supposed to operate. For instance, there could be a "real time" timeline, an "algorithm time" timeline, an "iterations" timeline, a "number of examples" timeline, and so on. This means you can schedule some action to be executed every actual second, or every second of training time (ignoring time spent executing plugins), or every discrete iteration, or every n examples processed. This might be a bloat feature (it was an afterthought to my original design, anyway), but I think that there are circumstances where each of these options is the best one. Function ======== The plugin function would receive some object containing the time range, a flag indicating whether the training has started, a flag indicating whether the training is done (which they can set in order to stop training), as well as anything pertinent about the model. Implementation ============== I have implemented the feature in plugin.py, in this directory. Simply run python plugin.py to test it. =============== Revised version =============== Taking into account ideas thrown around during the September 16 meeting I (OB) have made the following modifications to my original proposal: Event objects ============= In the revised framework, an Event is a generic object which can contain any attributes you want, with one privileged attribute, the 'type' attribute, which is a string. I expect the following attributes to be used widely: * type: this is a string describing the abstract semantics of this event ("tick", "second", "millisecond", "batch", etc.) * issuer: a pointer to the plugin that issued this event. This allows for fine grained filtering in the case where several plugins can fire the same event type * time: an integer or float index on an abstract timeline. For instance, the "tick" event would have a "time" field, which would be increased by one every time the event is fired. Pretty much all recurrent events should include this. * data: some data associated to the event. presumably it doesn't have to be named "data", and more than one data field could be given. The basic idea is that it should be possible to say: "I want this plugin to be executed every tenth time an event of this type is fired by this plugin", or any subset of these conditions. Matching events =============== When registering a plugin, you specify a sort of "abstract event" that an event must "match" in order to be fed to the plugin. This can be done by simply instantiating an event with the fields you want to match. I think examples would explain best my idea (sch.schedule_plugin = add a plugin to the scheduler): # Print the error on every parameter update (learner given in the event) sch.schedule_plugin(Event("parameter_update"), PrintError()) # Print the reconstruction error of daa0 whenever it does a parameter update sch.schedule_plugin(Event("parameter_update", issuer = daa0), PrintReconstructionError()) # Save the learner every 10 minutes sch.schedule_plugin(Event("minute", time = each(10)), Save(learner)) The events given as first argument to schedule_plugin are not real events: they are "template events" meant to be *matched* against the real events that will be fired. If the terminology is confusing, it would not be a problem to use another class with a better name (for example, On("minute", time = each(10)) could be clearer than Event(...), I don't know). Note that fields in these Event objects can be a special kind of object, a Matcher, which allows to filter events based on arbitrary conditions. My Schedule objects (each, at, etc.) now inherit from Matcher. You could easily have a matcher that allows you to match issuers that are instances of a certain class, or matches every single event (I have an example of the latter in plugin.py). Plugins ======= The plugin class would have the following methods: * attach(scheduler): tell the plugin that it is being scheduled by the scheduler, store the scheduler in self. The method can return self, or a copy of itself. * fire(type, **attributes): adds Event(type, issuer = self, **attributes) to the event queue of self.scheduler Scheduler ========= A Scheduler would have a schedule_plugin(event_template, plugin) method to add plugins, a queue(event) method to queue a new event, and it would be callable. My current version proceeds as follows: * Fire Event("begin"). Somewhat equivalent to "tick" at time 0, but I find it cleaner to have a special event to mark the beginning of the event loop. * Infinite loop * Fire Event("tick", time = <iteration#>) * Loop until the queue is empty * Pop event, execute all plugins that respond to it * Check if event.type == "terminate". If so, stop. Varia ===== I've made a very simple implementation of a DispatchPlugin which, upon reception of an event, dispatches it to its "on_<event.type>" method (or calls a fallback). It seems nice. However, in order for it to work reliably, it has to be registered on all events, and I'm not sure it can scale well to more complex problems where the source of events is important. Implementation ============== See plugin.py.