Paramit was recently renamed from Haipera to Paramit. Make sure you pip uninstall haipera
first.
Automatically track hyperparameters for your ML models without the boilerplate, and run 100s of experiments all at once, with 1 command.
Built by Haipera.
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Paramit is an open-source framework to take scripts and notebooks and make them production ready.
- 🦥 Config files without any code. Automatically probes the source code to generate reproducible config files.
- 🤖 Grid search from CLI. Use the command line to directly iterate through hyperparameters.
- 🪵 Automatic experiment logging. Automatically generates per-experiment output folders with reproducible configs.
- ☁️ Scale to the Cloud (coming soon!). Run everything locally, or send your model to Haipera Cloud or your own Cloud for parallel experimentation.
Other general features:
- supports running
.ipynb
notebook files as scripts - supports running a notebook server (with configs)
- debug as usual with
pdb
- supports Windows, Linux, OSX
- saves console logs along with configs
- artifacts (images, models, etc) are also saved to separate experiment folders
- bring-your-own-cloud GPU training infrastructure
- automatic logging
- automatic GPU profiling instrumentation
- dashboard for GPU profile analytics w/ LLMs
- experiment management web dashboard
Let us know at [email protected] if you have opinions - or if you have dying problems or needs that you want us to hear! We're all ears.
Install Paramit:
pip install paramit
If you want to use the notebook hosting, you can do
pip install "paramit[notebook]"
On Linux, you'll have to install a venv
package, like:
apt install python3.10-venv
Make sure you have a requirements.txt
file where script.py
or any Python script you want to run is (or alternatively, somewhere in the Git repo for the script).
In a typical project, you may set up a script like:
import numpy
num_apples = 100
apple_price = 3.0
print("# apples: ", num_apples)
print("price of an apple: ", apple_price)
price = num_apples * apple_price
print("total: ", price)
And in the same folder, you may have a requirements.txt
that lists the dependencies:
numpy
Say you want to start experimenting with code like this. You'll probably adjust num_apples
and apple_price
manually at first, but eventually you'll lose track of what changes caused the differences in the results.
To properly keep track of things, you may write code to load these variables from command line interfaces, set up a notebook, write dense JSON or YAML files, log the outputs in a logging service, save the outputs / configs in a separate experiment folder, etc. There's a lot of grunt work involved in making experimentation reproducible.
Paramit is designed to solve this. With paramit you can edit variables on the fly, which you can view with:
paramit run script.py --help
By default, paramit will try to use the default python3
interpreter to run your code. If you want to specify a speciifc Python interpreter to use, set the environment variable:
PARAMIT_PYTHON_PATH=/path/to/your/python/interpreter
When you run paramit, you can pass in arguments without ever setting up argparse
:
paramit run script.py --num-apples 30
This will also generate a script.toml
configuration file.
You can run these generated config files directly:
paramit run script.toml
You can also set up grid searches over parameters by:
paramit run script.py --num-apples 30,60 --apple-price 1.0,2.0
Running paramit
will also generate a reports
folder where you run paramit
from, with isolated experiment outputs in that folder.
You can then re-run existing configs reproducibly with:
paramit run reports/experiment/script.toml
You can even run paramit with Jupyter notebooks! Using paramit run
on a notebook file will run the notebook as a script. This is convenient when you want to develop your script inside a notebook environment, but then scale out your runs across a bunch of parameters.
paramit run script.ipynb --num-apples 30,40,50
If you instead want to spin up a notebook with your chosen config, and have it run in an isolated environment (inside the generated reports
folder), you can simply run the notebook with paramit notebook
:
paramit notebook script.ipynb --num-apples 30
This will start a notebook server as usual with the provided configs, inside a dedicated folder inside reports
.
This turns out to be a convenient way to do versioning for notebooks- if you have a notebook that you want to use for different data or different examples, instead of cloning 8 versions of the same notebook, you can just have a single notebook and 8 different config files for those notebooks!
You can also run a Python script as a notebook, although usually there are probably not great reasons to do this.
You can also try our Google Colab version which allows you to run Paramit in the cloud. Check out our Colab demo using the following notebook:
See https://github.com/haipera/haipera-samples for more complex examples that you can try running paramit on.
Haipera is still in its early stages, so it'll likely to have bugs. We're actively developing haipera, so if you file a GitHub issue or comment in the Discord server or drop us a line at [email protected] we will try to resolve them ASAP!