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GitHub - vitchyr/rlkit: Collection of reinforcement learning algorithms

 5 years ago
source link: https://github.com/vitchyr/rlkit
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README.md

rlkit

Reinforcement learning framework and algorithms implemented in PyTorch.

Some implemented algorithms:

To get started, checkout the example scripts, linked above.

What's New

12/04/2018

  • Add RIG implementation

12/03/2018

  • Add HER implementation
  • Add doodad support

10/16/2018

  • Upgraded to PyTorch v0.4
  • Added Twin Soft Actor Critic Implementation
  • Various small refactor (e.g. logger, evaluate code)

Installation

  1. Copy config_template.py to config.py:
cp rlkit/launchers/config_template.py rlkit/launchers/config.py
  1. Install and use the included Ananconda environment
$ conda env create -f environment/[linux-cpu|linux-gpu|mac]-env.yml
$ source activate rlkit
(rlkit) $ python examples/ddpg.py

Choose the appropriate .yml file for your system. These Anaconda environments use MuJoCo 1.5 and gym 0.10.5. You'll need to get your own MuJoCo key if you want to use MuJoCo.

DISCLAIMER: the mac environment has only been tested without a GPU.

For an even more portable solution, try using the docker image provided in environment/docker. The Anaconda env should be enough, but this docker image addresses some of the rendering issues that may arise when using MuJoCo 1.5 and GPUs. The docker image supports GPU, but it should work without a GPU. To use a GPU with the image, you need to have nvidia-docker installed.

Visualizing a policy and seeing results

During training, the results will be saved to a file called under

LOCAL_LOG_DIR/<exp_prefix>/<foldername>
  • LOCAL_LOG_DIR is the directory set by rlkit.launchers.config.LOCAL_LOG_DIR. Default name is 'output'.
  • <exp_prefix> is given either to setup_logger.
  • <foldername> is auto-generated and based off of exp_prefix.
  • inside this folder, you should see a file called params.pkl. To visualize a policy, run
(rlkit) $ python scripts/sim_policy.py LOCAL_LOG_DIR/<exp_prefix>/<foldername>/params.pkl

If you have rllab installed, you can also visualize the results using rllab's viskit, described at the bottom of this page

tl;dr run

python rllab/viskit/frontend.py LOCAL_LOG_DIR/<exp_prefix>/

to visualize all experiments with a prefix of exp_prefix. To only visualize a single run, you can do

python rllab/viskit/frontend.py LOCAL_LOG_DIR/<exp_prefix>/<folder name>

Alternatively, if you don't want to clone all of rllab, a repository containing only viskit can be found here. You can similarly visualize results with.

python viskit/viskit/frontend.py LOCAL_LOG_DIR/<exp_prefix>/

This viskit repo also has a few extra nice features, like plotting multiple Y-axis values at once, figure-splitting on multiple keys, and being able to filter hyperparametrs out.

Visualizing a TDM/HER policy

To visualize a TDM policy, run

(rlkit) $ python scripts/sim_tdm_policy.py LOCAL_LOG_DIR/<exp_prefix>/<foldername>/params.pkl

To visualize a HER policy, run

(rlkit) $ python scripts/sim_goal_conditioned_policy.py
LOCAL_LOG_DIR/<exp_prefix>/<foldername>/params.pkl

Launching jobs with doodad

The run_experiment function makes it easy to run Python code on Amazon Web Services (AWS) or Google Cloud Platform (GCP) by using doodad.

It's as easy as:

from rlkit.launchers.launcher_util import run_experiment

def function_to_run(variant):
    learning_rate = variant['learning_rate']
    ...

run_experiment(
    function_to_run,
    exp_prefix="my-experiment-name",
    mode='ec2',  # or 'gcp'
    variant={'learning_rate': 1e-3},
)

You will need to set up parameters in config.py (see step one of Installation). This requires some knowledge of AWS and/or GCP, which is beyond the scope of this README. To learn more, more about doodad, go to the repository.

Credits

A lot of the coding infrastructure is based on rllab. The serialization and logger code are basically a carbon copy of the rllab versions.

The Dockerfile is based on the OpenAI mujoco-py Dockerfile.

TODOs

  • Include policy-gradient algorithms.
  • Include model-based algorithms.

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