Mercurial > pylearn
changeset 1260:a565c20a39d7
general file to talk about the different approaches
author | Razvan Pascanu <r.pascanu@gmail.com> |
---|---|
date | Sun, 26 Sep 2010 14:10:33 -0400 |
parents | 6f76ecef869e |
children | 93e1c7c9172b |
files | doc/v2_planning/architecture_discussion.txt |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 97 insertions(+), 0 deletions(-) [+] |
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--- /dev/null Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000 +++ b/doc/v2_planning/architecture_discussion.txt Sun Sep 26 14:10:33 2010 -0400 @@ -0,0 +1,97 @@ +Arnaud: + +From what I recall for the meeting last Friday, we saw three +propositions for a runtime architecture for the experiments in +pylearn. + +The thing I noticed was that none of the three propositions was +addressing the same problem. So not only do we have to choose which +one(s) we want, but we also have to decide upon what do we need. + +The proposals and the problems they address are outlined below, please +comment if you see inaccuracies: + +- PL's proposal, the hooks thing, was about enabling hooks to be +registered at predefined points in functions and giving them access to +the local variables. This addresses nicely the problem of collecting +stats and printing progress. + +- OB's proposal, the checkpoints thing, was about enabling the saving +and loading of state at predefined points in the function. Other +actions could also be performed at these points. + +- JB's proposal, the new language thing, was about expressing +algorithms with a control structure made of classes so that its state +and structure could be preserved. It could also define new control +structure to run things in parallel, over multiple machines or not. + +Razvan: + + I would add the following observations: + + #1 +--- + +This might be an artificial created issue, but I will write it down anyhow. +We can decide later if we care about it. + + Imagine you have some function provided by the library that implements +some (complicated) pattern. Let say deeplearning ( the pretraining followed +by finetuning). You instantiate this somehow : + +instance = deeplearning(..) + +Now you want to add some function to a given hook, checkpoint or whatever +to calculate some statistics. You of course can do that ( the documentation +can tell you how those hooks are named), but what the function will get is +the locals defined in deeplearning. So you need to open up the file that +implements that deeplearning and understand the code to figure out what +variable does what. + +Secondly if you need to execute a function in a unforseen place by the +deeplearning,you can only do that by hacking the file implementing +deeplearning function, i.e. by hacking the library. One can make sure that +does not happen by overpopulating the code with hooks, but then we need +a name for each hook. + +I can add that probably in most cases the logic that goes into this is +simple enough that the issues above are insignificant, but I might be wrong. + + + #2 +--- + +I think it is much healthier to think of James proposal as a glorified +pipeline and not as a new language. You have components that you add in +you pipeline. A CALL is such a component. You run the program by executing +the pipeline ( which goes from one component to the other and calls it) + +We are dealing with a glorified pipeline because : + - when running the pipeline you can loop over a certain segment of the + pipeline if you need to + - you can, at run time, swtich between two possible terminations of the + pipeline (the if command) + - you can have two pipelines running in paralel, by running one + component from one pipeline and then going to the other + +You can also think of what James proposes as sort of the same as +Olivier's with the following differences: + - Olivier makes this entire mechanism invisible to the eye while in + James' case it is explicit + - James has inplicit checkpoints between any component, in Olivier's + case you can define pipelines at different points ( maybe even more + finely grained that what James mechanism offers) + - One can imagine how, though Olivier did not exactly explained + how you could have hooks in a template such that you do not actually need + to hack that code. + +James proposal also offers a way of expressing the distributed part in +your main program. Is the same as having two pipelines between which you +switch. Just think now each pipeline runs on a different machine +independently and you just wait as the server for them to return. This +is just one possibility. + +In this proposal you can also see how you would solve the unforseen hooks +problem, by having a special function that could alter the pipeline in some +way (for example by introducing new components). +