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ML-Logger, A Simple and Scalable Logging Utility With a Beautiful Visualization Dashboard That Is Super Fast

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<img alt="fast" src="figures/ml-dash-v3.gif" align="right" width="50%"/>

ML-Logger makes it easy to:

And ml-logger does all of these with minimal configuration — you can use the same logging code both locally and remotely with no code change.

ML-logger is highly performant -- the remote writes are asynchronous. For this reason it doesn't slow down your training even with 100+ metric keys.

Why did we built this, you might ask? Because we want to make it easy for people in ML to use the same logging code in all of they projects, so that it is easy to get started with someone else's baseline.

Getting Started!

To install ml_logger, do:

pip install ml-logger

The landscape of python modules is a lot messier than that of javascript. The most up-to-date graphene requires the following versions:

pip install sanic==20.9.0
pip install sanic-cors==0.10.0.post3
pip install sanic-graphql==1.1.0
yes | pip install graphene==2.1.3
yes | pip install graphql-core==2.1
yes | pip install graphql-relay==0.4.5
yes | pip install graphql-server-core==1.1.1

Add the following to your ~/.zshrc

export ML_LOGGER_ROOT=<your-logging-server-address>
export ML_LOGGER_USER=<your-handle> # make sure it is the same on the cluster.

Now you can rock!

from ml_logger import logger

print(logger)
# ~> logging data to /tmp/ml-logger-debug

Log key/value pairs, and metrics:

for i in range(1):
    logger.log(metrics={'some_val/smooth': 10, 'status': f"step ({i})"}, reward=20, timestep=i)
    ### flush the data, otherwise the value would be overwritten with new values in the next iteration.
    logger.flush()
# outputs ~>
# ╒════════════════════╤════════════════════════════╕
# │       reward       │             20             │
# ├────────────────────┼────────────────────────────┤
...

Simple Logging Example

In your project files, do:

from params_proto import ParamsProto, Proto, Flag

class Args(ParamsProto):
    """ CLI Args for the program
    Try:
        python3 example.py --help
    And it should print out the help strings
    """
    seed = Proto(1, help="random seed")
    D_lr = 5e-4
    G_lr = 1e-4
    Q_lr = 1e-4
    T_lr = 1e-4
    plot_interval = 10
    verbose = Flag("the verbose flag")

if __name__ == '__main__':
    import scipy
    import numpy as np
    from ml_logger import logger, LOGGER_USER

    # Put in your ~/.bashrc
    # export ML_LOGGER_ROOT = "http://<your-logging-server>:8081"
    # export ML_LOGGER_USER = $USER
    logger.configure(prefix=f"{LOGGER_USER}/scratch/your-experiment-prefix!")


    logger.log_params(Args=vars(Args))
    logger.upload_file(__file__)

    for epoch in range(10):
        logger.log(step=epoch, D_loss=0.2, G_loss=0.1, mutual_information=0.01)
        logger.log_key_value(epoch, 'some string key', 0.0012)
        # when the step index updates, logger flushes all of the key-value pairs to file system/logging server

    logger.flush()

    # Images
    face = scipy.misc.face()
    face_bw = scipy.misc.face(gray=True)
    logger.save_image(face, "figures/face_rgb.png")
    logger.save_image(face_bw, "figures/face_bw.png")
    image_bw = np.zeros((64, 64, 1))
    image_bw_2 = scipy.misc.face(gray=True)[::4, ::4]

    logger.save_video([face] * 5, "videos/face.mp4")

And it should print out

✓ created a new logging client
Dashboard: http://app.dash.ml/user-name/your-experiment-prefix!
Log_directory: http://<your-server-ip>:8080
══════════════════════════════════════════
        Args        
────────────────────┬─────────────────────
        seed        │ 1                   
        D_lr        │ 0.0005              
        G_lr        │ 0.0001              
        Q_lr        │ 0.0001              
        T_lr        │ 0.0001              
   plot_interval    │ 10                  
════════════════════╧═════════════════════
╒════════════════════╤════════════════════╕
│        step        │         9          │
├────────────────────┼────────────────────┤
│       D loss       │       0.200        │
├────────────────────┼────────────────────┤
│       G loss       │       0.100        │
├────────────────────┼────────────────────┤
│ mutual information │       0.010        │
╘════════════════════╧════════════════════╛


Process finished with exit code 0

To View the Results

ML-Logger Dashboard

Note, the jwt based access control has not been implemented yet. So you should leave the token field empty.

Logging to a Server

Skip this if you just want to log locally. When training in parallel, you want to kickstart an logging server (Instrument Server). To do so, run:

python -m ml_logger.server

Use ssh tunnel if you are running on a managed cluster (with SLURM for instance). Important: to set allow remote logging, you need to pass in --host=0.0.0.0 so that the server accepts non-localhost connections.

python -m ml_logger.server --host=0.0.0.0

Asynchronously log the summary of LOTs of training metrics

A common scenario is you only want to upload averaged statistics of your metrics. A pattern that @jachiam uses is the following: store_metrics(), peak_stored_metrics(), and log_metrics_summary()

# You log lots of metrics during training.
for i in range(100):
    logger.store_metrics(metrics={'some_val/smooth': 10}, some=20, timestep=i)
# you can peak what's inside the cache and print out a table like this: 
logger.peek_stored_metrics(len=4)
# outputs ~>
#      some      |   timestep    |some_val/smooth
# ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━┿━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━┿━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
#       20       |       0       |      10
#       20       |       1       |      10
#       20       |       2       |      10
#       20       |       3       |      10

# The metrics are stored in-memory. Now we need to actually log the summaries:
logger.log_metrics_summary(silent=True)
# outputs ~> . (data is now logged to the server)

Table of Contents

How to Develop

First clone repo, install dev dependencies, and install the module under evaluation mode.

git clone https://github.com/episodeyang/ml_logger.git
cd ml_logger && cd ml_logger && pip install -r requirements-dev.txt
pip install -e .

Testing local-mode (without a server)

You should be inside ml_logger/ml_logger folder

pwd # ~> ml_logger/ml_logger
make test

Testing with a server (You need to do both for an PR)

To test with a live server, first run (in a separate console)

python -m ml_logger.server --data-dir /tmp/ml-logger-debug

or do:

make start-test-server

Then run this test script with the option:

python -m pytest tests --capture=no --data-dir http://0.0.0.0:8081

or do

make test-with-server

Your PR should have both of these two tests working. ToDo: add CI to this repo.

To Publish

You need twine, rst-lint etc, which are included in the requirements-dev.txt file.


Logging Matplotlib pyplots

Configuring The Experiment Folder

from ml_logger import logger, ML_Logger
from datetime import datetime

now = datetime.now()
logger.configure("/tmp/ml-logger-demo", "deep_Q_learning", f"{now:%Y%m%d-%H%M%S}")

This is a singleton pattern similar to matplotlib.pyplot. However, you could also use the logger constructor

logger = ML_Logger(root_dir="/tmp/ml-logger-demo", prefix=f"deep_Q_learning/{now:%Y%m%d-%H%M%S}")

Logging Text, and Metrics

logger.log({"some_var/smooth": 10}, some=Color(0.85, 'yellow', percent), step=3)

colored output: (where the values are yellow)

╒════════════════════╤════════════════════╕
│  some var/smooth   │         10         │
├────────────────────┼────────────────────┤
│        some        │       85.0%        │
╘════════════════════╧════════════════════╛

Logging Matplotlib Figures

We have optimized ML-Logger, so it supports any format that pyplot supports. To save a figure locally or remotely,

import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
import numpy as np

xs = np.linspace(-5, 5)

plt.plot(xs, np.cos(xs), label='Cosine Func')
logger.savefig('cosine_function.pdf')

Logging Videos

It is especially hard to visualize RL training sessions on a remote computer. With ML-Logger this is easy, and super fast. We optimized the serialization and transport process, so that a large stack of video tensor gets first compressed by ffmepg before getting sent over the wire.

The compression rate (and speed boost) can be 2000:1.

import numpy as np

def im(x, y):
    canvas = np.zeros((200, 200))
    for i in range(200):
        for j in range(200):
            if x - 5 < i < x + 5 and y - 5 < j < y + 5:
                canvas[i, j] = 1
    return canvas

frames = [im(100 + i, 80) for i in range(20)]

logger.log_video(frames, "test_video.mp4")

Saving PyTorch Modules

PyTorch has a very nice module saving and loading API that has inspired the one in Keras. We make it easy to save this state dictionary (state_dict) to a server, and load it. This way you can load from 100+ of your previous experiments, without having to download those weights to your code repository.

# save a module
logger.save_module(cnn, "FastCNN.pkl")

# load a module
logger.load_module(cnn, f"FastCNN.pkl")

Saving Tensorflow Models

The format tensorflow uses to save the models is opaque. I prefer to save model weights in pickle as a dictionary. This way the weight files are transparent. ML_Logger offers easy helper functions to save and load from checkpoints saved in this format:

## To save checkpoint
from ml_logger import logger
import tensorflow as tf

logger.configure(log_directory="/tmp/ml-logger-demos")

x = tf.get_variable('x', shape=[], initializer=tf.constant_initializer(0.0))
y = tf.get_variable('y', shape=[], initializer=tf.constant_initializer(10.0))
c = tf.Variable(1000)

sess = tf.InteractiveSession()
sess.run(tf.global_variables_initializer())

trainables = tf.trainable_variables()
logger.save_variables(trainables, path="variables.pkl", namespace="checkpoints")

which creates a file checkpoints/variables.pkl under /tmp/ml-logger-demos.

Visualization

An idea visualization dashboard would be

  1. Fast, instantaneous. On an AWS headless server? View the plots as if they are on your local computer.
  2. Searchable, performantly. So that you don't have to remember where an experiment is from last week.
  3. Answer Questions, from 100+ Experiments. We make available Google's internal hyperparameter visualization tool, on your own computer.

Searching for Hyper Parameters

Experiments are identified by the metrics.pkl file. You can log multiple times to the same metrics.pkl file, and the later parameter values overwrites earlier ones with the same key. We enforce namespace in this file, so each key/value argument you pass into the logger.log_parameters function call has to be a dictionary.

Args = dict(
    learning_rate=10,
    hidden_size=200
)
logger.log_parameters(Args=Args)

How to launch the Vis App

This requires node.js and yarn dev environment at the moment. We will streamline this process without these requirements soon.

  1. download this repository
  2. go to ml-vis-app folder
  3. Install the dev dependencies
    1. install node: Installation
    2. install yarn: Installation
    3. install the dependencies of this visualization app:
      1. yarn install
  4. in that folder, run yarn.

The IP address of the server is currently hard coded here. To use this with your own instrumentation server, over-write this line. I'm planning on making this configuration more accessible.

Full Logging API

from ml_logger import logger, Color, percent

logger.log_params(G=dict(some_config="hey"))
logger.log(some=Color(0.1, 'yellow'), step=0)
logger.log(some=Color(0.28571, 'yellow', lambda v: "{:.5f}%".format(v * 100)), step=1)
logger.log(some=Color(0.85, 'yellow', percent), step=2)
logger.log({"some_var/smooth": 10}, some=Color(0.85, 'yellow', percent), step=3)
logger.log(some=Color(10, 'yellow'), step=4)

colored output: (where the values are yellow)

╒════════════════════╤════════════════════╕
│        some        │        0.1         │
╘════════════════════╧════════════════════╛
╒════════════════════╤════════════════════╕
│        some        │     28.57100%      │
╘════════════════════╧════════════════════╛
╒════════════════════╤════════════════════╕
│        some        │       85.0%        │
╘════════════════════╧════════════════════╛
╒════════════════════╤════════════════════╕
│  some var/smooth   │         10         │
├────────────────────┼────────────────────┤
│        some        │       85.0%        │
╘════════════════════╧════════════════════╛

This version of logger also prints out a tabular printout of the data you are logging to your stdout.

A typical print out of this logger look like the following:

from ml_logger import ML_Logger

logger = ML_Logger(root_dir=f"/mnt/bucket/deep_Q_learning/{datetime.now(%Y%m%d-%H%M%S.%f):}")

logger.log_params(G=vars(G), RUN=vars(RUN), Reporting=vars(Reporting))

outputs the following

═════════════════════════════════════════════════════
              G               
───────────────────────────────┬─────────────────────
           env_name            │ MountainCar-v0      
             seed              │ None                
      stochastic_action        │ True                
         conv_params           │ None                
         value_params          │ (64,)               
        use_layer_norm         │ True                
         buffer_size           │ 50000               
      replay_batch_size        │ 32                  
      prioritized_replay       │ True                
            alpha              │ 0.6                 
          beta_start           │ 0.4                 
           beta_end            │ 1.0                 
    prioritized_replay_eps     │ 1e-06               
      grad_norm_clipping       │ 10                  
           double_q            │ True                
         use_dueling           │ False               
     exploration_fraction      │ 0.1                 
          final_eps            │ 0.1                 
         n_timesteps           │ 100000              
        learning_rate          │ 0.001               
            gamma              │ 1.0                 
        learning_start         │ 1000                
        learn_interval         │ 1                   
target_network_update_interval │ 500                 
═══════════════════════════════╧═════════════════════
             RUN              
───────────────────────────────┬─────────────────────
        log_directory          │ /mnt/slab/krypton/machine_learning/ge_dqn/2017-11-20/162048.353909-MountainCar-v0-prioritized_replay(True)
          checkpoint           │ checkpoint.cp       
           log_file            │ output.log          
═══════════════════════════════╧═════════════════════
          Reporting           
───────────────────────────────┬─────────────────────
     checkpoint_interval       │ 10000               
        reward_average         │ 100                 
        print_interval         │ 10                  
═══════════════════════════════╧═════════════════════
╒════════════════════╤════════════════════╕
│      timestep      │        1999        │
├────────────────────┼────────────────────┤
│      episode       │         10         │
├────────────────────┼────────────────────┤
│    total reward    │       -200.0       │
├────────────────────┼────────────────────┤
│ total reward/mean  │       -200.0       │
├────────────────────┼────────────────────┤
│  total reward/max  │       -200.0       │
├────────────────────┼────────────────────┤
│time spent exploring│       82.0%        │
├────────────────────┼────────────────────┤
│    replay beta     │        0.41        │
╘════════════════════╧════════════════════╛

TODO:

Visualization (Preview):boom:

In addition, ml-logger also comes with a powerful visualization dashboard that beats tensorboard in every aspect.

ml visualization dashboard

An Example Log from ML-Logger

<img alt="example_real_log_output" src="figures/example_log_output.png" align="right"></img>

A common pain that comes after getting to launch ML training jobs on AWS is a lack of a good way to manage and visualize your data. So far, a common practice is to upload your experiment data to aws s3 or google cloud buckets. Then one quickly realizes that downloading data from s3 can be slow. s3 does

not offer diffsync like gcloud-cli's g rsync. This makes it hard to sync a large collection of data that is constantly appended to.

So far the best way we have found for organizing experimental data is to have a centralized instrumentation server. Compared with managing your data on S3, a centralized instrumentation server makes it much easier to move experiments around, run analysis that is co-located with your data, and hosting visualization dashboards on the same machine. To download data locally, you can use sshfs, smba, rsync or a variety of remote disks. All faster than s3.

ML-Logger is the logging utility that allows you to do this. To make ML_logger easy to use, we made it so that you can use ml-logger with zero configuration, logging to your local hard-drive by default. When the logging directory field logger.configure(log_directory= <your directory>) is an http end point, the logger will instantiate a fast, future based logging client that launches http requests in a separate thread. We optimized the client so that it won't slow down your training code.

API wise, ML-logger makes it easy for you to log textual printouts, simple scalars, numpy tensors, image tensors, and pyplot figures. Because you might also want to read data from the instrumentation server, we also made it possible to load numpy, pickle, text and binary files remotely.

In the future, we will start building an integrated dashboard with fast search, live figure update and markdown-based reporting/dashboarding to go with ml-logger.

Now give this a try, and profit!