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Optuna: A hyperparameter optimization framework

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🔗 Website | 📃 Docs | ⚙️ Install Guide | 📝 Tutorial | 💡 Examples

Optuna is an automatic hyperparameter optimization software framework, particularly designed for machine learning. It features an imperative, define-by-run style user API. Thanks to our define-by-run API, the code written with Optuna enjoys high modularity, and the user of Optuna can dynamically construct the search spaces for the hyperparameters.

📢 News

  • Aug 20, 2024: We posted an article about ArtifactStore officially supported from Optuna 4.0.
  • Aug 15, 2024: We posted an article about CatCMA, a sampler newly supported in OptunaHub.
  • Aug 7, 2024: We posted an article about the significant (300x) speed up of multi-objective TPESampler in Optuna 4.0.
  • Jul 16, 2024: The beta version of OptunaHub, a feature-sharing platform for Optuna is available! Please check the detail in our article.
  • Jul 12, 2024: The beta version of Optuna 4.0 is available! You can install the beta version by pip install -U --pre optuna. Find the latest here.

🔥 Key Features

Optuna has modern functionalities as follows:

Basic Concepts

We use the terms study and trial as follows:

  • Study: optimization based on an objective function
  • Trial: a single execution of the objective function

Please refer to the sample code below. The goal of a study is to find out the optimal set of hyperparameter values (e.g., regressor and svr_c) through multiple trials (e.g., n_trials=100). Optuna is a framework designed for automation and acceleration of optimization studies.

Sample code with scikit-learn

Open in Colab

import ...

# Define an objective function to be minimized.
def objective(trial):

    # Invoke suggest methods of a Trial object to generate hyperparameters.
    regressor_name = trial.suggest_categorical('regressor', ['SVR', 'RandomForest'])
    if regressor_name == 'SVR':
        svr_c = trial.suggest_float('svr_c', 1e-10, 1e10, log=True)
        regressor_obj = sklearn.svm.SVR(C=svr_c)
    else:
        rf_max_depth = trial.suggest_int('rf_max_depth', 2, 32)
        regressor_obj = sklearn.ensemble.RandomForestRegressor(max_depth=rf_max_depth)

    X, y = sklearn.datasets.fetch_california_housing(return_X_y=True)
    X_train, X_val, y_train, y_val = sklearn.model_selection.train_test_split(X, y, random_state=0)

    regressor_obj.fit(X_train, y_train)
    y_pred = regressor_obj.predict(X_val)

    error = sklearn.metrics.mean_squared_error(y_val, y_pred)

    return error  # An objective value linked with the Trial object.

study = optuna.create_study()  # Create a new study.
study.optimize(objective, n_trials=100)  # Invoke optimization of the objective function.

Note

More examples can be found in optuna/optuna-examples.

The examples cover diverse problem setups such as multi-objective optimization, constrained optimization, pruning, and distributed optimization.

Installation

Optuna is available at the Python Package Index and on Anaconda Cloud.

# PyPI
$ pip install optuna
# Anaconda Cloud
$ conda install -c conda-forge optuna

Important

Optuna supports Python 3.7 or newer.

Also, we provide Optuna docker images on DockerHub.

Integrations

Optuna has integration features with various third-party libraries. Integrations can be found in optuna/optuna-integration and the document is available here.

Supported integration libraries

Web Dashboard

Optuna Dashboard is a real-time web dashboard for Optuna. You can check the optimization history, hyperparameter importance, etc. in graphs and tables. You don't need to create a Python script to call Optuna's visualization functions. Feature requests and bug reports are welcome!

optuna-dashboard

optuna-dashboard can be installed via pip:

$ pip install optuna-dashboard

Tip

Please check out the convenience of Optuna Dashboard using the sample code below.

Sample code to launch Optuna Dashboard

Save the following code as optimize_toy.py.

import optuna


def objective(trial):
    x1 = trial.suggest_float("x1", -100, 100)
    x2 = trial.suggest_float("x2", -100, 100)
    return x1 ** 2 + 0.01 * x2 ** 2


study = optuna.create_study(storage="sqlite:///db.sqlite3")  # Create a new study with database.
study.optimize(objective, n_trials=100)

Then try the commands below:

# Run the study specified above
$ python optimize_toy.py

# Launch the dashboard based on the storage `sqlite:///db.sqlite3`
$ optuna-dashboard sqlite:///db.sqlite3
...
Listening on http://localhost:8080/
Hit Ctrl-C to quit.

OptunaHub

OptunaHub is a feature-sharing platform for Optuna. You can use the registered features and publish your packages.

Use registered features

optunahub can be installed via pip:

$ pip install optunahub

You can load registered module with optunahub.load_module.

import optuna
import optunahub


def objective(trial: optuna.Trial) -> float:
    x = trial.suggest_float("x", 0, 1)

    return x


mod = optunahub.load_module("samplers/simulated_annealing")

study = optuna.create_study(sampler=mod.SimulatedAnnealingSampler())
study.optimize(objective, n_trials=20)

print(study.best_trial.value, study.best_trial.params)

For more details, please refer to the optunahub documentation.

Publish your packages

You can publish your package via optunahub-registry. See the OptunaHub tutorial.

Communication

Contribution

Any contributions to Optuna are more than welcome!

If you are new to Optuna, please check the good first issues. They are relatively simple, well-defined, and often good starting points for you to get familiar with the contribution workflow and other developers.

If you already have contributed to Optuna, we recommend the other contribution-welcome issues.

For general guidelines on how to contribute to the project, take a look at CONTRIBUTING.md.

Reference

If you use Optuna in one of your research projects, please cite our KDD paper "Optuna: A Next-generation Hyperparameter Optimization Framework":

BibTeX
@inproceedings{akiba2019optuna,
  title={{O}ptuna: A Next-Generation Hyperparameter Optimization Framework},
  author={Akiba, Takuya and Sano, Shotaro and Yanase, Toshihiko and Ohta, Takeru and Koyama, Masanori},
  booktitle={The 25th ACM SIGKDD International Conference on Knowledge Discovery \& Data Mining},
  pages={2623--2631},
  year={2019}
}

License

MIT License (see LICENSE).

Optuna uses the codes from SciPy and fdlibm projects (see LICENSE_THIRD_PARTY).