Awesome
checkmate
Checkmate is designed to be a simple drop-in solution for a very common Tensorflow use-case: keeping track of the best model checkpoints during training.
The BestCheckpointSaver is a wrapper around a tf.train.Saver.
The BestCheckpointSaver provides the ability to save the best n checkpoints, whereas the tf.train.Saver can only save the last n checkpoints.
Features
- Save only best n checkpoints
- Compares checkpoints based on a user-provided value
- Can rank checkpoints by highest or lowest values
- Automatically delete outdated checkpoints
- Provide at a glance record of each checkpoint's associated value (the user-provided value obtained from that checkpoint)
Using the BestCheckpointSaver
from checkmate import BestCheckpointSaver
# ...build model...
best_ckpt_saver = BestCheckpointSaver(
save_dir=best_checkpoint_dir,
num_to_keep=3,
maximize=True
)
# train and evaluate
for train_step in range(max_steps):
sess.run(train_op)
if train_step % evaluation_interval == 0:
accuracy = sess.run(eval_op, feed_dict=validation_data)
best_ckpt_saver.handle(accuracy, sess, global_step_tensor)
Loading the best checkpoint
import checkmate
# ...build model...
saver = tf.train.Saver()
saver.restore(sess, checkmate.get_best_checkpoint(best_checkpoint_dir, select_maximum_value=True))
At this stage, the module is no-frills with limited documentation. It is not intended to work in distributed settings or with complex Session/Graph management (i.e. the tf.Estimator framework). Contributions are welcome.