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More tuning advice
Browse files- docs/tuning.md +1 -1
docs/tuning.md
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@@ -13,7 +13,7 @@ I run from IPython on the head node of a slurm cluster. Passing `cluster_manager
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3. Set `niterations` to some very large value, so it just runs for a week until my job finishes. If the equation looks good, I quit the job early.
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4. Increase `populations` to `3*num_cores`.
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5. Set `ncyclesperiteration` to maybe `5000` or so, until the head node occupation is under `10%`.
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6. Set `constraints` and `nested_constraints` as strict as possible. These can help quite a bit with exploration. Typically, if I am using `pow`, I would set `constraints={"pow": (9, 1)}`, so that power laws can only have a variable or constant as their exponent. If I am using `sin` and `cos`, I also like to set `nested_constraints={"sin": {"sin": 0, "cos": 0}, "cos": {"sin": 0, "cos": 0}}`, so that sin and cos can't be nested
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7. Set `maxsize` a bit larger than the final size you want. e.g., if you want a final equation of size `30`, you might set this to `35`, so that it has a bit of room to explore.
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8. Set `maxdepth` strictly, but leave a bit of room for exploration. e.g., if you want a final equation limited to a depth of `5`, you might set this to `6` or `7`, so that it has a bit of room to explore.
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9. Set `parsimony` equal to about the minimum loss you would expect, divided by 5-10. e.g., if you expect the final equation to have a loss of `0.001`, you might set `parsimony=0.0001`.
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3. Set `niterations` to some very large value, so it just runs for a week until my job finishes. If the equation looks good, I quit the job early.
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4. Increase `populations` to `3*num_cores`.
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5. Set `ncyclesperiteration` to maybe `5000` or so, until the head node occupation is under `10%`.
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16 |
+
6. Set `constraints` and `nested_constraints` as strict as possible. These can help quite a bit with exploration. Typically, if I am using `pow`, I would set `constraints={"pow": (9, 1)}`, so that power laws can only have a variable or constant as their exponent. If I am using `sin` and `cos`, I also like to set `nested_constraints={"sin": {"sin": 0, "cos": 0}, "cos": {"sin": 0, "cos": 0}}`, so that sin and cos can't be nested, which seems to happen frequently. (Although in practice I would just use `sin`, since the search could always add a phase offset!)
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7. Set `maxsize` a bit larger than the final size you want. e.g., if you want a final equation of size `30`, you might set this to `35`, so that it has a bit of room to explore.
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8. Set `maxdepth` strictly, but leave a bit of room for exploration. e.g., if you want a final equation limited to a depth of `5`, you might set this to `6` or `7`, so that it has a bit of room to explore.
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9. Set `parsimony` equal to about the minimum loss you would expect, divided by 5-10. e.g., if you expect the final equation to have a loss of `0.001`, you might set `parsimony=0.0001`.
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