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Flexible optimization of arbitrary problems in Python.
The goal of this package is to provide advanced algorithmic support for arbitrary optimization problems (simulations/control systems) with minimal required coding. Users can easily connect arbitrary evaluation functions to advanced algorithms with minimal coding with support for multi-threaded or MPI-enabled execution.
Currenty Xopt provides:
- Optimization algorithms:
- Genetic algorithms
-
cnsga
Continuous NSGA-II with constraints
-
- Bayesian optimization (BO) algorithms:
-
upper_confidence_bound
BO using Upper Confidence Bound acquisition function (w/ or w/o constraints, serial or parallel) -
expected_improvement
BO using Expected Improvement acquisition function (w/ or w/o constraints, serial or parallel) -
mobo
Multi-objective BO (w/ or w/o constraints, serial or parallel) -
bayesian_exploration
Autonomous function characterization using Bayesian Exploration -
mggpo
Parallelized hybrid Multi-Generation Multi-Objective Bayesian optimization -
multi_fidelity
Multi-fidelity single or multi objective optimization -
BAX
Bayesian algorithm execution using virtual measurements - BO customization:
- Trust region BO
- Heteroskedastic noise specification
- Multiple acquisition function optimization stratigies
-
-
extremum_seeking
Extremum seeking time-dependent optimization -
rcds
Robust Conjugate Direction Search (RCDS) -
neldermead
Nelder-Mead Simplex
- Genetic algorithms
- Sampling algorithms:
-
random
Uniform random sampling
-
- Convenient YAML/JSON based input format
- Driver programs:
-
xopt.mpi.run
Parallel MPI execution using this input format
-
Xopt does not provide:
- your custom simulation or experimental measurement via an
evaluate
function.
Installing xopt
from the conda-forge
channel can be achieved by adding conda-forge
to your channels with:
conda config --add channels conda-forge
Once the conda-forge
channel has been enabled, xopt
can be installed with:
conda install xopt
It is possible to list all of the versions of xopt
available on your platform with:
conda search xopt --channel conda-forge
Xopt runs can be specified via a YAML file or dictonary input. This requires generator
, evaluator
, and vocs
to be specified, along with optional general options such as max_evaluations
. An example to run a multi-objective optimiation of a user-defined function my_function
is:
generator:
name: cnsga
population_size: 64
population_file: test.csv
output_path: .
evaluator:
function: my_function
function_kwargs:
my_arguments: 42
vocs:
variables:
x1: [0, 3.14159]
x2: [0, 3.14159]
objectives:
y1: MINIMIZE
y2: MINIMIZE
constraints:
c1: [GREATER_THAN, 0]
c2: [LESS_THAN, 0.5]
constants: {a: dummy_constant}
max_evaluations: 6400
Xopt can also be used through a simple Python interface.
import math
from xopt.vocs import VOCS
from xopt.evaluator import Evaluator
from xopt.generators.bayesian import UpperConfidenceBoundGenerator
from xopt import Xopt
# define variables and function objectives
vocs = VOCS(
variables={"x": [0, 2 * math.pi]},
objectives={"f": "MINIMIZE"},
)
# define the function to optimize
def sin_function(input_dict):
return {"f": math.sin(input_dict["x"])}
# create Xopt evaluator, generator, and Xopt objects
evaluator = Evaluator(function=sin_function)
generator = UpperConfidenceBoundGenerator(vocs=vocs)
X = Xopt(evaluator=evaluator, generator=generator, vocs=vocs)
# call X.random_evaluate() to generate + evaluate 3 initial points
X.random_evaluate(3)
# run optimization for 10 steps
for i in range(10):
X.step()
# view collected data
print(X.data)
Xopt can interface with arbitrary evaluate functions (defined in Python) with the following form:
def evaluate(inputs: dict) -> dict:
""" your code here """
Evaluate functions must accept a dictionary object that at least has the keys
specified in variables, constants
and returns a dictionary
containing at least the
keys contained in objectives, constraints
. Extra dictionary keys are tracked and
used in the evaluate function but are not modified by xopt.
Example MPI run, with xopt.yaml
as the only user-defined file:
mpirun -n 64 python -m mpi4py.futures -m xopt.mpi.run xopt.yaml
If you use Xopt
for your research, please consider adding the following
citation to your publications.
R. Roussel., et al., "Xopt: A simplified framework for optimization of accelerator problems using advanced algorithms",
in Proc. IPAC'23, Venezia.doi:https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-14th International Particle Accelerator Conference-THPL164
BibTex entry:
@inproceedings{Xopt,
title = {Xopt: A simplified framework for optimization of accelerator problems using advanced algorithms},
author = {R. Roussel and A. Edelen and A. Bartnik and C. Mayes},
year = 2023,
month = {05},
booktitle = {Proc. IPAC'23},
publisher = {JACoW Publishing, Geneva, Switzerland},
series = {IPAC'23 - 14th International Particle Accelerator Conference},
number = 14,
pages = {4796--4799},
doi = {doi:10.18429/jacow-ipac2023-thpl164},
isbn = {978-3-95450-231-8},
issn = {2673-5490},
url = {https://indico.jacow.org/event/41/contributions/2556},
paper = {THPL164},
venue = {Venezia},
language = {english}
}
Particular versions of Xopt can be cited from Zenodo
Clone this repository with a truncated git history (recommended):
git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/xopt-org/xopt.git
Or, clone this repository with the full git history (> 970 MB):
git clone https://github.com/xopt-org/xopt.git
Create an environment xopt-dev
with all the dependencies:
conda env create -f environment.yml
Install as editable:
conda activate xopt-dev
pip install --no-dependencies -e .
Install pre-commit hooks:
pre-commit install
The pre-commit hooks perform autoformatting and report style-compliance errors.
- ufmt formats files w.r.t. black a strict style enforcer, and μsort, which sorts imports in Python modules.
- flake8 confirms compliance. Occasionally black misses long-line comments/docstrings and they require manual format.
Pre-commit runs the hooks against your files. If the commit fails, correct the reported errors and then re-add the file with git add my_file.py
.
The source control integration packaged with VSCode requires additional configuration. Git commands are run in the integrated terminal, which does not inherit the Python interpreter configured with the VSCode project thus breaking the pre-commit hooks. The integration terminal can be configured to use the conda Python environment by including a .env
file in your project repository:
#!/usr/bin/bash
source /path/to/xopt-dev/bin/activate