This software is released under the Revised BSD License. By using this software, you are implicitly accepting the terms of the license.
RBFOpt is a Python library for black-box optimization (also known as derivative-free optimization). It is developed for Python 3 but currently runs on Python 2.7 as well. This README contains installation instructions and a brief overview. More details can be found in the user manual.
Contents of this directory:
- AUTHORS: Authors of the library.
- CHANGELOG: Changelog.
- LICENSE: Licensing information.
- MANIFEST.in: List of additional files to be included in archives.
- README.rst: This file.
- VERSION: Version of the library.
- manual.pdf: User manual.
- requirements.txt: List of dependencies for this project.
- setup.cfg: Configuration file for setup.py.
- setup.py: Setup file.
- tox.ini: Configuration file for tox.
- bin/
- rbfopt_cl_interface.py: Script for the command-line interface, to run the library on a user-defined black-box function implemented in a user-specified file.
- rbfopt_test_interface.py: Script to test the library on a global optimization test set.
- src/
- rbfopt/
- rbfopt_black_box.py: Description of an abstract black-box function.
- rbfopt_algorithm.py: Main optimization algorithm, both serial and parallel.
- rbfopt_aux_problems.py: Interface for the auxiliary problems solved during the optimization process.
- rbfopt_degreeX_models.py: PyOmo models for the auxiliary problems necessary for RBF functions with minimum required polynomial degree X.
- rbfopt_refinement: Routines for refinement phase.
- rbfopt_settings.py: Global and algorithmic settings.
- rbfopt_test_functions.py: Mathematical test functions.
- rbfopt_user_black_box.py: A black-box class constructed from user data.
- rbfopt_utils.py: Utility routines.
- doc/
- conf.py: Configuration file for Sphinx.
- Makefile: Makefile (for Linux/Mac) to build the documentation.
- make.bat: Batch file (for Windows) to build the documentation.
- *.rst: ReStructured Text files for the documentation.
- examples/
- rbfopt_black_box_example.py: Example of an implementation of a simple black-box function.
- rbfopt/
- tests/
- context.py: Configuration file for nose.
- test_functions.py: Global optimization test functions.
- test_rbfopt_algorithm.py: Testing module for rbfopt_algorithm.py (regular unit tests).
- slow_test_rbfopt_algorithm.py: Testing module for rbfopt_algorithm.py (additional, slow tests).
- test_rbfopt_aux_problems.py: Testing module for rbfopt_aux_problems.py.
- test_rbfopt_degreeX_models.py: Testing module for rbfopt_degreeX_models.py.
- test_rbfopt_env.py: Environment variables for testing environment.
- test_rbfopt_mwe.py: Test the minimal working example given in the documentation.
- test_rbfopt_refinement: Testing module for rbfopt_refinement.py
- test_rbfopt_settings.py: Testing module for rbfopt_settings.py.
- test_rbfopt_utils.py: Testing module for rbfopt_utils.py.
This package requires the following software:
- Python version >= 3.7
- NumPy version >= 1.11.0
- SciPy version >= 0.17.0
- Pyomo version >= 5.1.1
The software has been tested with the versions indicated above. It may work with earlier version and should work with subsequent version, if they are backward compatible. In particular, the software is known to work with Pyomo version 4 and earlier versions of Scipy.
The code is developed for Python 3.7, but it currently also runs on Python 2.7. Since Python 2.7 has reached end-of-life in January 2020, we recommend using Python 3.7 or higher.
The easiest, and recommended, way to install the package is via the Python module manager pip. The code is on PyPI, therefore it can be installed from PyPI using:
pip install rbfopt
You can install from source, downloading an archive or cloning from git (for example if you want to use a development version that is not released on PyPI yet), using the command:
pip install .
You may need the -e switch to install in a virtual environment. To build the documentation, you also need numpydoc:
pip install numpydoc
On Windows systems, we recommend WinPython, which comes with NumPy, SciPy and pip already installed. After installing WinPython, it is typically necessary to update the PATH environment variable. The above command using pip to install missing libraries has been successfully tested on a fresh WinPython installation.
RBFOpt requires the solution of convex and nonconvex nonlinear programs (NLPs), as well as nonconvex mixed-integer nonlinear programs (MINLPs) if some of the decision variables (design parameters) are constrained to be integer. Solution of these subproblems is performed through Pyomo, which in principle supports any solver with an AMPL interface (.nl file format). The code is setup to employ Bonmin and Ipopt, that are open-source, with a permissive license, and available through the COIN-OR repository. The end-users are responsible for checking that they have the right to use these solvers. To use different solvers, a few lines of the source code have to be modified: ask for help on GitHub or on the mailing list, see below.
To obtain pre-compiled binaries for Bonmin and Ipopt for several platforms, we suggest having a look at the AMPL opensource solvers (also here) for static binaries. Note: These binaries might be outdated: better performance can sometimes be obtained compiling Bonmin from scratch (Bonmin contains Ipopt as well), especially if compiling with a different solver for linear systems rather than the default Mumps, e.g., ma27. Bonmin and Ipopt must be compiled with ASL support.
In case any of the packages indicated above is missing, some features may be disabled, not function properly, or the software may not run at all.
Install the package with pip as indicated above. This will install the two executable Python scripts rbfopt_cl_interface.py and rbfopt_test_interface.py in your bin/ directory (whatever is used by pip for this purpose), as well as the module files in your site-packages directory.
Make sure Bonmin and Ipopt are in your path; otherwise, use the options minlp_solver_path and nlp_solver_path in RbfoptSettings to indicate the full path to the solvers. If you use RBFOpt as a library and create your own RbfoptSettings object, these options can be given as:
import rbfopt settings = rbfopt.RbfoptSettings(minlp_solver_path='full/path/to/bonmin', nlp_solver_path='full/path/to/ipopt')
If you use the command-line tools, you can simply provide the option preceded by double hyphen, as in:
rbfopt_test_interface.py --minlp_solver_path='full/path/to/bonmin' branin
Enjoy!
You can test the installation by running:
rbfopt_test_interface.py branin
See:
rbfopt_test_interface.py --help
for more details on command-line options for the testing tool.
Many more test functions, with different characteristics, are implemented in the file rbfopt_test_functions.py. They can all be used for testing.
Unit tests for the library can be executed by running:
nose2
or:
python setup.py test
from the current (main) directory. If some of the tests fail, the library may or may not work correctly. Some of the test failures are relatively harmless. You are advised to contact the mailing list (see below) if you are unsure about some test failure.
Additional slow tests, that check if various parametrizations of the optimization algorithm can solve some global optimization problems, are found in the file slow_test_rbfopt_algorithm.py, which is ignored by nose by default. To execute these tests, run:
nose2 tests.slow_test_rbfopt_algorithm
After installation, the easiest way to optimize a function is to use the RbfoptUserBlackBox class to define a black-box, and execute RbfoptAlgorithm on it. This is a minimal example to optimize the 3-dimensional function defined below:
import rbfopt import numpy as np def obj_funct(x): return x[0]*x[1] - x[2] bb = rbfopt.RbfoptUserBlackBox(3, np.array([0] * 3), np.array([10] * 3), np.array(['R', 'I', 'R']), obj_funct) settings = rbfopt.RbfoptSettings(max_evaluations=50) alg = rbfopt.RbfoptAlgorithm(settings, bb) val, x, itercount, evalcount, fast_evalcount = alg.optimize()
Another possibility is to define your own class derived from RbfoptBlackBox in a separate file, and execute the command-line interface on the file. An example is provided under src/rbfopt/examples, in the file rbfopt_black_box_example.py. This can be executed with:
rbfopt_cl_interface.py src/rbfopt/examples/rbfopt_black_box_example.py
RBFOpt supports asynchronous parallel optimization using Python's multiprocessing library. This mode is enabled whenever the parameter num_cpus is set to a value greater than 1. Black-box function evaluations as well as some of the heaviest computatations carried out by the algorithm will then be executed in parallel. Since the parallel computations are asynchronous, determinism cannot be guaranteed: in other words, if you execute the parallel optimizer twice in a row, you may (and often will) get different results, even if you provide the same random seed. This is because the order in which the computations will be completed may change, and this may impact the course of the algorithm.
The default parameters of the algorithm are optimized for the serial optimization mode. For recommendations on what parameters to use with the parallel optimizer, feel free to ask on the mailing list.
Note that the parallel optimizer is oblivious of the system-wide settings for executing linear algebra routines (BLAS) in parallel. We recommend setting the number of threads for BLAS to 1 when using the parallel optimizer, see the next section.
We are aware of an issue when launching multiple distinct processes that use RBFOpt and the NumPy implementation is configured to use OpenBLAS in parallel: in this case, on rare occasions we have observed that some processes may get stuck forever when computing matrix-vector multiplications. The problem can be fixed by setting the number of threads for OpenBLAS to 1. We do not know if the same issue occurs with other parallel implementations of BLAS.
For this reason, and because parallel BLAS uses resources suboptimally when used in conjunction with the parallel optimizer of RBFOpt (if BLAS runs in parallel, each thread of the parallel optimizer would spawn multiple threads to run BLAS, therefore disregarding the option num_cpus), RBFOpt attempts to set the number of BLAS threads to 1 at run time.
All scripts (rbfopt_cl_interface.py and rbfopt_test_interface.py) set the environment variables OMP_NUM_THREADS to 1. Furthermore, the rbfopt module does the same when imported for the first time.
Note that these settings are only effective if the environment variable is set before NumPy is imported; otherwise, they are ignored. If you are facing the same issue, we recommend setting environment variable OMP_NUM_THREADS to 1. In Python, this can be done with:
import os os.environ['OMP_NUM_THREADS'] = '1'
The documentation for the code can be built using Sphinx with the numpydoc extension. numpydoc can be installed with pip:
pip install numpydoc
After that, the directory src/rbfopt/doc/ contains a Makefile (on Windows, use make.bat) and the Sphinx configuration file conf.py.
You can build the HTML documentation (recommended) with:
make html
The output will be located in _build/html/ and the index can be found in _build/html/index.html.
A PDF version of the documentation (much less readable than the HTML version) can be built using the command:
make latexpdf
An online version of the documentation for the latest master branch of the code, and for the latest stable release, are available on ReadTheDocs for the latest and stable version.
If you use RBFOpt in one of your projects or papers, please cite the following papers (this is the only way in which the authors get credit):
- A. Costa and G. Nannicini. RBFOpt: an open-source library for black-box optimization with costly function evaluations. Mathematical Programming Computation, 10(4):597–629, 2018. (The paper can be downloaded as: Optimization Online paper 4538)
- G. Nannicini. On the implementation of a global optimization method for mixed-variable problems. Open Journal of Mathematical Optimization, 2(1), 2021. (Download link: OJMO)
RBFOpt is used in IBM Watson Studio AutoAI. For a discussion on the application of RBFOpt to hyperparameter optimization in machine learning, besides the aforementioned paper published in OJMO, see the paper:
- G. I. Diaz, A. Fokoue-Nkoutche, G. Nannicini and H. Samulowitz. An effective algorithm for hyperparameter optimization of neural networks. IBM Journal of Research and Development 61, no. 4/5 (2017): 9-1. (Download link: IBM Journal of R&D)
If you believe there is a bug or an issue, please open an issue on GitHub. If you have a general question, please use GitHub's "Discussions" feature (the tab can be opened at the top of the page).