Jaynes, A Utility for training ML models on AWS, GCE, SLURM, with or without docker
|Downloads|
Overview
The reality of ML training in universities is that we use what ever
hardware we are given (for free). This means that we might have a few
beefy GPU machines, an HPC cluster, plus some GCE/AWS credits that we
get through grants. Jaynes <https://github.com/episodeyang/jaynes>
__
is a well-designed python package that makes running across these
inhomogenous hardward resources a pleasure.
install (requires unix operating system.)
.. code-block:: bash
pip install jaynes
The best way to get started with jaynes is to take a look at one of the
example projects in the
[geyang/jaynes-starter-kit] <https://github.com/geyang/jaynes-starter-kit>
__.
For a rough idea, here is how to use jaynes to launch a training
function:
To run locally:
.. code-block:: python
import jaynes
def training(arg_1, key_arg=None, key_arg_2=None):
print(f'training is running! (arg_1={arg_1}, key_arg={key_arg})')
jaynes.config(mode="local", arg_1=10, key_arg=0.3)
jaynes.run(training)
jaynes.listen()
We recommend setting up a main
training function with the following
sinature:
.. code-block:: python
from params_proto import ParamsProto
class Args(ParamsProto):
seed = 100
lr = 3e-4
# ...
def main(**deps):
from ml_logger import logger
Args._update(deps)
logger.log_params(Args=vars(Args))
# ... your main training steps
This way you can call the main fn directly for local debugging, but
launch it as an entry point at scale.
Setup
Jaynes has gone through a large number of iterations. This version
incorporates best practices we learned from other open-source
communities. You can specify a jaynes.yml
config file (copy one from our sample project to get started! <example_projects>
__) for the
type of hosts (ssh/docker/singularity) and launchers
(ssh/ec2/gce/slurm), so that none of those settings need to appear in
your ML python script. When called from python, Jaynes automatically
traverses the file tree to find the root of the project, the same way as
git.
For example, to run your code-block on a remote computer via ssh:
.. code-block:: yaml
your_project/jaynes.yml
version: 0
verbose: true
run: # this is specific to each launch, and is dynamically overwritten in-memory
mounts:
- !mounts.S3Code
s3_prefix: s3://ge-bair/jaynes-debug
local_path: .
host_path: /home/ubuntu/
container_path: /Users/geyang/learning-to-learn
pypath: true
excludes: "--exclude='pycache' --exclude='.git' --exclude='.idea' --exclude='.egg-info' --exclude='*.pkl'"
compress: true
runner:
!runners.Docker
name: # not implemented yet
image: "episodeyang/super-expert"
startup: "yes | pip install jaynes ml-logger -q"
work_directory: "{mounts[0].container_path}"
ipc: host
host:
envs: "LANG=utf-8"
pre_launch: "pip install jaynes ml-logger -q"
launch:
type: ssh
ip:
username: ubuntu
pem: ~/.ssh/your_rsa_key
In python (your code-block):
.. code-block:: python
your_project/launch.py
import jaynes
def training(arg_1, key_arg=None):
print(f'training is running! (arg_1={arg_1}, key_arg={key_arg})')
jaynes.run(training)
Using Modes
A lot of times you want to setup a different run modes so it is easy
to switch between them during development.
.. code-block:: yaml
your_project/jaynes.yml
version: 0
mounts: # mount configurations Available keys: NOW, UUID,
- !mounts.S3Code &code-block_mount
s3_prefix: s3://ge-bair/jaynes-debug
local_path: .
host_path: /home/ubuntu/jaynes-mounts/{NOW:%Y-%m-%d}/{NOW:%H%M%S.%f}
# container_path: /Users/geyang/learning-to-learn
pypath: true
excludes: "--exclude='pycache' --exclude='.git' --exclude='.idea' --exclude='.egg-info' --exclude='*.pkl'"
compress: true
hosts:
hodor: &hodor
ip:
username: ubuntu
pem: ~/.ssh/incrementium-berkeley
runners:
- !runners.Docker &ssh_docker
name: "some-job" # only for docker
image: "episodeyang/super-expert"
startup: yes | pip install jaynes ml-logger -q
envs: "LANG=utf-8"
pypath: "{mounts[0].container_path}"
launch_directory: "{mounts[0].container_path}"
ipc: host
use_gpu: false
modes: # todo: add support to modes.
hodor:
mounts:
- *code-block_mount
runner: *ssh_docker
launch:
type: ssh
<<: *hodor
now run in python
.. code-block:: python
your_project/launch.py
import jaynes
def training(arg_1, key_arg=None):
print(f'training is running! (arg_1={arg_1}, key_arg={key_arg})')
jaynes.config(mode="hodor")
jaynes.run(training)
ToDos
- ☐ more documentation
- ☐ singularity support
- ☐ GCE support
- ☐ support using non-s3 code-block repo.
Done
- ☒ get the initial template to work
Installation
------------
.. code-block:: bash
pip install jaynes
Usage (**Show me the Mo-NAY!! :moneybag::money_with_wings:**)
-------------------------------------------------------------
Check out the `test_projects <example_projects>`__ folder for projects
that you can run.
To Develop
----------
.. code-block:: bash
git clone https://github.com/episodeyang/jaynes.git
cd jaynes
make dev
To test, run
.. code-block:: bash
make test
This ``make dev`` command should build the wheel and install it in your
current python environment. Take a look at the
`https://github.com/episodeyang/jaynes/blob/master/Makefile <https://github.com/episodeyang/jaynes/blob/master/Makefile>`__ for details.
**To publish**, first update the version number, then do:
.. code-block:: bash
make publish
Acknowledgements
----------------
This code-block is inspired by @justinfu’s
`doodad <https://github.com/justinjfu/doodad>`__, which is in turn built
on top of Peter Chen’s script.
This code-block is written from scratch to allow a more permissible
open-source license (BSD). Go bears :bear: !!
.. |Downloads| image:: http://pepy.tech/badge/jaynes
:target: http://pepy.tech/project/jaynes