Difference between revisions of "ML4T Software Setup"

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== Updates ==
+
== Notice ==
* Wed 24 Aug 2016 - All assignments will need to be submitted through [https://t-square.gatech.edu T-square] by the deadline. The feedback provided on the <tt>buffet0x</tt> machines is still provided as a courtesy, but '''you must submit your assignments to t-square'''. We will also run the autograding feedback system on all of the <tt>buffet0x</tt> machines, instead of only <tt>buffet04</tt>, since this feedback no longer has to be kept consistent across systems for grading purposes. These changes have been reflected in the instructions below.
+
The repository has been made private for the Fall 2017 semester, and so the links to the repository below will no longer be visible for you. A zip file containing the grading script and any template code or data will be linked off of each assignment's individual wiki page. A zip file containing the <tt>grading</tt> and <tt>util</tt> modules, as well as the data, is available here: [[Media:ML4T_2020Spring.zip]]. The instructions on running the test scripts provided below still applies.
  
 
== Overview ==
 
== Overview ==
  
As of Fall 2016, this class has implemented an automated assignment feedback process which requires students to use the servers provided by Georgia Tech. Since these servers have already been configured with all necessary libraries, setup has been reduced to simply checking out a single git repository, which will be covered below. For students with sporadic internet access who would like a local installation of the software, the instructions from previous semesters are available here: [[ML4T_Software_Installation]].
+
Most of the projects in this class will be graded automatically. As of the summer 2017 semester, we are providing the grading scripts with the template code for each of the projects, so that students can test their code to make sure they are API compatible. Georgia Tech also provides access to four servers that have been configured to be identical to the grading environment, specifically in terms of operating system and library versions. Since these servers have already been configured with all necessary libraries, setup has been greatly simplified.
  
 
===Important Notes===
 
===Important Notes===
* Your code '''MUST''' run properly on the Georgia Tech provided servers, and your code must be submitted to T-square. If you do not test your code on the provided machines it may not run correctly in our auto grader.  If your code fails to run on the provided servers, you will not get credit for the assignment.  So it is very important that you ensure that you have access to, and that your code runs correctly on, these machines.
+
 
 +
* Your code '''MUST''' run properly on the Georgia Tech provided servers, and your code must be submitted to Canvas. If you do not test your code on the provided machines it may not run correctly when we test it.  If your code fails to run on the provided servers, you will not get credit for the assignment.  So it is very important that you ensure that you have access to, and that your code runs correctly on, these machines. If you would like to develop on your personal machine and are comfortable installing libraries by hand, you can follow the instructions here: [[ML4T_Software_Environment]]. Note that these instructions are from an earlier version of the class, but should work reasonably well.
 
* We use a specific, static dataset for this course, which is provided as part of the repository detailed below. If you download your own data from Yahoo (or elsewhere), you will get wrong answers on assignments.
 
* We use a specific, static dataset for this course, which is provided as part of the repository detailed below. If you download your own data from Yahoo (or elsewhere), you will get wrong answers on assignments.
 +
* We reserve the right to modify the grading script while maintaining API compatibility with what is described on the project pages. This includes modifying or withholding test cases, changing point values to match the given rubric, and changing timeout limits to accommodate grading deadlines. The scripts are provided as a convenience to help students avoid common pitfalls or mistakes, and are intended to be used as a sanity check. '''Passing all tests does not guarantee full credit on the assignment, and should be considered a necessary but not sufficient condition for completing an assignment.'''
 +
* Using github.gatech.edu to back up your work is a very good idea which we encourage, however make sure that you '''do not''' make your solutions to the assignments public. It's easy to accidentally do this, so please be careful:
 +
** '''Do not''' put your solutions in a '''public''' repository. Repositories on github.com are public by default. The Georgia Tech github, github.gatech.edu, provides the same interface and allows for free private repos for students.
 +
* '''Do not''' make use of or generate any files (whether through automated tools, like IDEs, or manually), related to the assignments, in the /tmp partition under any circumstances.  Failure to comply with this may result in lost work or a possible violation of student integrity policies. 
 +
** Many IDEs/tools offer a remote synchronization option that creates artifacts in /tmp by default.  Unless you are certain you know what you're doing, do not make use of these remote synchronization options.
  
 
==Access to machines at Georgia Tech==
 
==Access to machines at Georgia Tech==
  
There are 4 machines that will be accessible to students enrolled in the ML4T class via [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Secure_Shell <tt>ssh</tt>]. These machines may not be available until the second week of class; we will make an announcement once they are ready, and if at that time you are still unable to log in, please contact us. If you are using a Unix based operating system, such as Ubuntu or Mac OS X, you already have an ssh client, and you can connect to one of the servers by opening up a terminal and typing:
+
There are 3 machines that will be accessible to students enrolled in the ML4T class via [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Secure_Shell <tt>ssh</tt>]. These machines may not be available until the second week of class; we will make an announcement once they are ready, and if at that time you are still unable to log in, please contact us. If you are using a Unix based operating system, such as Ubuntu or Mac OS X, you already have an ssh client, and you can connect to one of the servers by opening up a terminal and typing:
  
 
  xhost +
 
  xhost +
 
  ssh -X gtname@buffet0X.cc.gatech.edu
 
  ssh -X gtname@buffet0X.cc.gatech.edu
  
replacing the <tt>X</tt> in <tt>buffet0X</tt> with 1-4, as detailed below. You will then be asked for your password and be logged in. Windows users may have to install an ssh client such as [http://www.putty.org/ putty]. In order to distribute workload across the machines, please use the specific machines as follows:
+
replacing the <tt>X</tt> in <tt>buffet0X</tt> with 1, 3 or 4, as detailed below and replacing <tt>gtname</tt> with your actual gtname. You will then be asked for your password and be logged in. Windows users may have to install an ssh client such as [http://www.putty.org/ putty]. In order to distribute workload across the machines, please use the specific machines as follows:
  
* buffet01.cc.gatech.edu if your last name begins with A-G
+
* <s>buffet01.cc.gatech.edu if your last name begins with A-G</s> buffet01.cc.gatech.edu if your last name begins with A-I
* buffet02.cc.gatech.edu if your last name begins with H-N
+
* <s>buffet02.cc.gatech.edu if your last name begins with H-N</s>
* buffet03.cc.gatech.edu if your last name begins with O-U
+
* <s>buffet03.cc.gatech.edu if your last name begins with O-U</s> buffet03.cc.gatech.edu if your last name begins with J-R
* buffet04.cc.gatech.edu if your last name begins with V-Z
+
* <s>buffet04.cc.gatech.edu if your last name begins with V-Z</s> buffet04.cc.gatech.edu if your last name begins with S-Z
  
 
These machines use your GT login credentials.  
 
These machines use your GT login credentials.  
  
'''NOTE:''' We reserve the right to limit login access or terminate processes to avoid resource contention with the autograder after assignment due dates, although we will endeavor to limit such interruptions.
+
The xhost command and the -X argument to ssh are only necessary if you want to interactively draw plots directly to your screen while running code remotely on buffet. If you have any problems doing this, just forgo xhost and the -X argument and instead plot to a file using the Agg backend of matplotlib and the savefig() function. These require no "screen" access.
 +
 
 +
'''NOTE:''' We reserve the right to limit login access or terminate processes to avoid resource contention during grading, although we will endeavor to limit such interruptions.
  
After you've successfully logged in, you will need to clone the following git repository containing all of the template code and data into your home directory: [https://github.gatech.edu/tb34/ML4T_2016Fall/]. You can do this with the following command:
+
==Getting code templates==
  
git clone https://github.gatech.edu/tb34/ML4T_2016Fall.git
+
As of Spring 2018, code for each of the individual assignments is provided in zip files, linked to on the individual project page. The data, grading module, and util.py, which are common across all assignments, are available here [[Media:ML4T_2020Spring.zip]] (<span style="color:red">same file as above</span>).
  
again providing your GT login credentials when asked for. Make sure you check out the repository into your home directory (not any sub-directory), and that you do not change the name of the folder.
+
== Running the grading scripts ==
  
'''NOTE:''' If you change or rename directory structure, the autograder will not be able to find your assignments and you will not get any feedback.
+
The above zip files contain the grading scripts, data, and util.py for all assignments. Some project page will also have a link to a zip file containing a directory with some template code, which you should extract in the same directory that contains the <tt>data/</tt> and <tt>grading/</tt> directories, and <tt>util.py</tt>, (<tt>ML4T_2020Spring/</tt>). To complete the assignments you'll need to modify the templates according to the assignment description. You can do this on the <tt>buffet0X</tt> machines directly using a text editor such as <tt>gedit</tt>, <tt>nano</tt>, or <tt>vim</tt>. Or you can copy the file to your local machine, edit them in your favorite text editor or IDE, and upload them back to the server. Make sure to test run your code on the server after making changes to catch any typos or other bugs.
  
== Getting feedback from the auto grader ==
+
To test your code, you'll need to set up your PYTHONPATH to include the <tt>grading</tt> module and the utility module <tt>util.py</tt>, which are both one directory up from the project directories. Here's an '''example''' of how to run the grading script for the optional (deprecated) assignment Assess Portfolio (note, grade_anlysis.py is included in the template zip file for Assess Portfolio):
  
The repository you've just cloned contains the data and template code for all assignments. To complete the assignments you'll need to modify the templates according to the assignment description. You can do this on the <tt>buffet0X</tt> machines directly using a text editor such as <tt>gedit</tt>, <tt>nano</tt>, or <tt>vim</tt>. Or you can copy the file to your local machine, edit them in your favorite text editor or IDE, and upload them back to the server. Make sure to test run your code on the server after making changes to catch any typos or other bugs.
+
PYTHONPATH=../:. python grade_analysis.py
  
After you are satisfied that your program contains no obvious errors, you can have it tested by our auto grading script to make sure it passes all of our test cases. To do this, simply create an empty text file named '<tt>GRADEME.txt</tt>' ('''case sensitive''') in the directory of the assignment you would like graded.
+
which assumes you're typing from the folder '''ML4T_2020Spring/assess_portfolio/'''. This will print out a lot of information, and will also produce two text files: <tt>points.txt</tt> and <tt>comments.txt</tt>. It will probably be helpful to scan through all of the output printed out in order to trace errors to your code, while <tt>comments.txt</tt> will contain a succinct summary of which test cases failed and the specific errors (without the backtrace). Here's an example of the contents of <tt>comments.txt</tt> for the first assignment using the unchanged template:
  
The auto grader runs periodically, and if it finds the <tt>GRADEME.txt</tt> file in a students assignment directory, it will run the auto grader on that assignment, provide a <tt>score.txt</tt> and <tt>comments.txt</tt> file with more detailed information in the '''feedback/''' sub-directory of the assignment, and remove the <tt>GRADEME.txt</tt> file.
+
&lt;pre&gt;--- Summary ---
 +
Tests passed: 0 out of 3
 +
 +
--- Details ---
 +
Test #0: failed
 +
Test case description: Wiki example 1
 +
IncorrectOutput: One or more stats were incorrect.
 +
  Inputs:
 +
    start_date: 2010-01-01 00:00:00
 +
    end_date: 2010-12-31 00:00:00
 +
    symbols: ['GOOG', 'AAPL', 'GLD', 'XOM']
 +
    allocs: [0.2, 0.3, 0.4, 0.1]
 +
    start_val: 1000000
 +
  Wrong values:
 +
    cum_ret: 0.25 (expected: 0.255646784534)
 +
    avg_daily_ret: 0.001 (expected: 0.000957366234238)
 +
    sharpe_ratio: 2.1 (expected: 1.51819243641)
 +
 +
Test #1: failed
 +
Test case description: Wiki example 2
 +
...
  
'''NOTE:''' The autograder will only remove the <tt>GRADEME.txt</tt> file once it has completed its run and copied it's files into the '''feedback/''' directory, so if you modify your code before this happens, the feedback may correspond to an earlier version of your code.
+
The <tt>comments.txt</tt> file will contain a summary of which tests were passed or failed, and any error messages. The <tt>points.txt</tt> file reports the score from the autograder, used by the teaching staff to automate grading submitted code in a batch run, and can be safely ignored by students.

Latest revision as of 15:42, 28 January 2020

Notice

The repository has been made private for the Fall 2017 semester, and so the links to the repository below will no longer be visible for you. A zip file containing the grading script and any template code or data will be linked off of each assignment's individual wiki page. A zip file containing the grading and util modules, as well as the data, is available here: Media:ML4T_2020Spring.zip. The instructions on running the test scripts provided below still applies.

Overview

Most of the projects in this class will be graded automatically. As of the summer 2017 semester, we are providing the grading scripts with the template code for each of the projects, so that students can test their code to make sure they are API compatible. Georgia Tech also provides access to four servers that have been configured to be identical to the grading environment, specifically in terms of operating system and library versions. Since these servers have already been configured with all necessary libraries, setup has been greatly simplified.

Important Notes

  • Your code MUST run properly on the Georgia Tech provided servers, and your code must be submitted to Canvas. If you do not test your code on the provided machines it may not run correctly when we test it. If your code fails to run on the provided servers, you will not get credit for the assignment. So it is very important that you ensure that you have access to, and that your code runs correctly on, these machines. If you would like to develop on your personal machine and are comfortable installing libraries by hand, you can follow the instructions here: ML4T_Software_Environment. Note that these instructions are from an earlier version of the class, but should work reasonably well.
  • We use a specific, static dataset for this course, which is provided as part of the repository detailed below. If you download your own data from Yahoo (or elsewhere), you will get wrong answers on assignments.
  • We reserve the right to modify the grading script while maintaining API compatibility with what is described on the project pages. This includes modifying or withholding test cases, changing point values to match the given rubric, and changing timeout limits to accommodate grading deadlines. The scripts are provided as a convenience to help students avoid common pitfalls or mistakes, and are intended to be used as a sanity check. Passing all tests does not guarantee full credit on the assignment, and should be considered a necessary but not sufficient condition for completing an assignment.
  • Using github.gatech.edu to back up your work is a very good idea which we encourage, however make sure that you do not make your solutions to the assignments public. It's easy to accidentally do this, so please be careful:
    • Do not put your solutions in a public repository. Repositories on github.com are public by default. The Georgia Tech github, github.gatech.edu, provides the same interface and allows for free private repos for students.
  • Do not make use of or generate any files (whether through automated tools, like IDEs, or manually), related to the assignments, in the /tmp partition under any circumstances. Failure to comply with this may result in lost work or a possible violation of student integrity policies.
    • Many IDEs/tools offer a remote synchronization option that creates artifacts in /tmp by default. Unless you are certain you know what you're doing, do not make use of these remote synchronization options.

Access to machines at Georgia Tech

There are 3 machines that will be accessible to students enrolled in the ML4T class via ssh. These machines may not be available until the second week of class; we will make an announcement once they are ready, and if at that time you are still unable to log in, please contact us. If you are using a Unix based operating system, such as Ubuntu or Mac OS X, you already have an ssh client, and you can connect to one of the servers by opening up a terminal and typing:

xhost +
ssh -X gtname@buffet0X.cc.gatech.edu

replacing the X in buffet0X with 1, 3 or 4, as detailed below and replacing gtname with your actual gtname. You will then be asked for your password and be logged in. Windows users may have to install an ssh client such as putty. In order to distribute workload across the machines, please use the specific machines as follows:

  • buffet01.cc.gatech.edu if your last name begins with A-G buffet01.cc.gatech.edu if your last name begins with A-I
  • buffet02.cc.gatech.edu if your last name begins with H-N
  • buffet03.cc.gatech.edu if your last name begins with O-U buffet03.cc.gatech.edu if your last name begins with J-R
  • buffet04.cc.gatech.edu if your last name begins with V-Z buffet04.cc.gatech.edu if your last name begins with S-Z

These machines use your GT login credentials.

The xhost command and the -X argument to ssh are only necessary if you want to interactively draw plots directly to your screen while running code remotely on buffet. If you have any problems doing this, just forgo xhost and the -X argument and instead plot to a file using the Agg backend of matplotlib and the savefig() function. These require no "screen" access.

NOTE: We reserve the right to limit login access or terminate processes to avoid resource contention during grading, although we will endeavor to limit such interruptions.

Getting code templates

As of Spring 2018, code for each of the individual assignments is provided in zip files, linked to on the individual project page. The data, grading module, and util.py, which are common across all assignments, are available here Media:ML4T_2020Spring.zip (same file as above).

Running the grading scripts

The above zip files contain the grading scripts, data, and util.py for all assignments. Some project page will also have a link to a zip file containing a directory with some template code, which you should extract in the same directory that contains the data/ and grading/ directories, and util.py, (ML4T_2020Spring/). To complete the assignments you'll need to modify the templates according to the assignment description. You can do this on the buffet0X machines directly using a text editor such as gedit, nano, or vim. Or you can copy the file to your local machine, edit them in your favorite text editor or IDE, and upload them back to the server. Make sure to test run your code on the server after making changes to catch any typos or other bugs.

To test your code, you'll need to set up your PYTHONPATH to include the grading module and the utility module util.py, which are both one directory up from the project directories. Here's an example of how to run the grading script for the optional (deprecated) assignment Assess Portfolio (note, grade_anlysis.py is included in the template zip file for Assess Portfolio):

PYTHONPATH=../:. python grade_analysis.py

which assumes you're typing from the folder ML4T_2020Spring/assess_portfolio/. This will print out a lot of information, and will also produce two text files: points.txt and comments.txt. It will probably be helpful to scan through all of the output printed out in order to trace errors to your code, while comments.txt will contain a succinct summary of which test cases failed and the specific errors (without the backtrace). Here's an example of the contents of comments.txt for the first assignment using the unchanged template:

<pre>--- Summary ---
Tests passed: 0 out of 3

--- Details ---
Test #0: failed
Test case description: Wiki example 1
IncorrectOutput: One or more stats were incorrect.
  Inputs:
    start_date: 2010-01-01 00:00:00
    end_date: 2010-12-31 00:00:00
    symbols: ['GOOG', 'AAPL', 'GLD', 'XOM']
    allocs: [0.2, 0.3, 0.4, 0.1]
    start_val: 1000000
  Wrong values:
    cum_ret: 0.25 (expected: 0.255646784534)
    avg_daily_ret: 0.001 (expected: 0.000957366234238)
    sharpe_ratio: 2.1 (expected: 1.51819243641)

Test #1: failed
Test case description: Wiki example 2
...

The comments.txt file will contain a summary of which tests were passed or failed, and any error messages. The points.txt file reports the score from the autograder, used by the teaching staff to automate grading submitted code in a batch run, and can be safely ignored by students.