This is a pure Python implementation of a neural-network based Go AI, using TensorFlow. While inspired by DeepMind's AlphaGo algorithm, this project is not a DeepMind project nor is it affiliated with the official AlphaGo project.
Repeat, this is not the official AlphaGo program by DeepMind. This is an independent effort by Go enthusiasts to replicate the results of the AlphaGo Zero paper ("Mastering the Game of Go without Human Knowledge," Nature), with some resources generously made available by Google.
Minigo is based off of Brian Lee's "MuGo" -- a pure Python implementation of the first AlphaGo paper "Mastering the Game of Go with Deep Neural Networks and Tree Search" published in Nature. This implementation adds features and architecture changes present in the more recent AlphaGo Zero paper, "Mastering the Game of Go without Human Knowledge". More recently, this architecture was extended for Chess and Shogi in "Mastering Chess and Shogi by Self-Play with a General Reinforcement Learning Algorithm". These papers will often be abridged in Minigo documentation as AG (for AlphaGo), AGZ (for AlphaGo Zero), and AZ (for AlphaZero) respectively.
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Provide a clear set of learning examples using Tensorflow, Kubernetes, and Google Cloud Platform for establishing Reinforcement Learning pipelines on various hardware accelerators.
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Reproduce the methods of the original DeepMind AlphaGo papers as faithfully as possible, through an open-source implementation and open-source pipeline tools.
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Provide our data, results, and discoveries in the open to benefit the Go, machine learning, and Kubernetes communities.
An explicit non-goal of the project is to produce a competitive Go program that establishes itself as the top Go AI. Instead, we strive for a readable, understandable implementation that can benefit the community, even if that means our implementation is not as fast or efficient as possible.
While this product might produce such a strong model, we hope to focus on the process. Remember, getting there is half the fun. :)
We hope this project is an accessible way for interested developers to have access to a strong Go model with an easy-to-understand platform of python code available for extension, adaptation, etc.
If you'd like to read about our experiences training models, see RESULTS.md.
To see our guidelines for contributing, see CONTRIBUTING.md.
This project assumes you have the following:
The Hitchhiker's guide to python has a good intro to python development and virtualenv usage. The instructions after this point haven't been tested in environments that are not using virtualenv.
pip3 install virtualenv
pip3 install virtualenvwrapper
First set up and enter your virtualenv and then the shared requirements:
pip3 install -r requirements.txt
Then, you'll need to choose to install the GPU or CPU tensorflow requirements:
- GPU:
pip3 install "tensorflow-gpu>=1.7,<1.8"
.- Note: You must install [CUDA 9.0].(https://developer.nvidia.com/cuda-90-download-archive) for Tensorflow 1.5+.
- CPU:
pip3 install "tensorflow>=1.7,<1.8"
.
You may want to use a cloud project for resources. If so set:
PROJECT=foo-project
Then, running
source cluster/common.sh
will set up other environment variables defaults.
./test.sh
To automatically test PRs, Minigo uses Prow, which is a test framework created by the Kubernetes team for testing changes in a hermetic environment. We use prow for running unit tests, linting our code, and launching our test Minigo Kubernetes clusters.
You can see the status of our automated tests by looking at the Prow and Testgrid UIs:
- Testgrid (Test Results Dashboard): https://k8s-testgrid.appspot.com/sig-big-data
- Prow (Test-runner dashboard): https://prow.k8s.io/?repo=tensorflow%2Fminigo
All commands are compatible with either Google Cloud Storage as a remote file system, or your local file system. The examples here use GCS, but local file paths will work just as well.
To use GCS, set the BUCKET_NAME
variable and authenticate via gcloud login
.
Otherwise, all commands fetching files from GCS will hang.
For instance, this would set a bucket, authenticate, and then look for the most recent model.
export BUCKET_NAME=your_bucket;
gcloud auth application-default login
gsutil ls gs://$BUCKET_NAME/models | tail -3
Which might look like:
gs://$BUCKET_NAME/models/000193-trusty.data-00000-of-00001
gs://$BUCKET_NAME/models/000193-trusty.index
gs://$BUCKET_NAME/models/000193-trusty.meta
These three files comprise the model, and commands that take a model as an
argument usually need the path to the model basename, e.g.
gs://$BUCKET_NAME/models/000193-trusty
You'll need to copy them to your local disk. This fragment copies the latest
model to the directory specified by MINIGO_MODELS
MINIGO_MODELS=$HOME/minigo-models
mkdir -p $MINIGO_MODELS
gsutil ls gs://$BUCKET_NAME/models | tail -3 | xargs -I{} gsutil cp "{}" $MINIGO_MODELS
To watch Minigo play a game, you need to specify a model. Here's an example to play using the latest model in your bucket
python rl_loop.py selfplay --num_readouts=$READOUTS -v 2
where READOUTS
is how many searches to make per move. Timing information and
statistics will be printed at each move. Setting verbosity (-v) to 3 or higher
will print a board at each move.
Minigo uses the GTP Protocol, and you can use any gtp-compliant program with it.
# Latest model should look like: /path/to/models/000123-something
LATEST_MODEL=$(ls -d $MINIGO_MODELS/* | tail -1 | cut -f 1 -d '.')
BOARD_SIZE=19 python3 main.py gtp -l $LATEST_MODEL --num_readouts=$READOUTS -v 3
(If no model is provided, it will initialize one with random values)
After some loading messages, it will display GTP engine ready
, at which point
it can receive commands. GTP cheatsheet:
genmove [color] # Asks the engine to generate a move for a side
play [color] [coordinate] # Tells the engine that a move should be played for `color` at `coordinate`
showboard # Asks the engine to print the board.
One way to play via GTP is to use gogui-display (which implements a UI that speaks GTP.) You can download the gogui set of tools at http://gogui.sourceforge.net/. See also documentation on interesting ways to use GTP.
gogui-twogtp -black 'python3 main.py gtp -l gs://$BUCKET_NAME/models/000000-bootstrap' -white 'gogui-display' -size 19 -komi 7.5 -verbose -auto
Another way to play via GTP is to watch it play against GnuGo, while spectating the games
BLACK="gnugo --mode gtp"
WHITE="python3 main.py gtp -l path/to/model"
TWOGTP="gogui-twogtp -black \"$BLACK\" -white \"$WHITE\" -games 10 \
-size 19 -alternate -sgffile gnugo"
gogui -size 19 -program "$TWOGTP" -computer-both -auto
The following sequence of commands will allow you to do one iteration of reinforcement learning on 9x9. These are the basic commands used to produce the models and games referenced above.
The commands are
- bootstrap: initializes a random model
- selfplay: plays games with the latest model, producing data used for training
- train: trains a new model with the selfplay results from the most recent N generations.
Training works via tf.Estimator; a local directory keeps track of training progress, and the latest checkpoint is periodically exported to GCS, where it gets picked up by selfplay workers.
This command initializes your working directory for the trainer and a random
model. This random model is also exported to --model-save-path
so that
selfplay can immediately start playing with this random model.
If these directories don't exist, bootstrap will create them for you.
export MODEL_NAME=000000-bootstrap
python3 main.py bootstrap \
--working-dir=estimator_working_dir
--model-save-path="gs://$BUCKET_NAME/models/$MODEL_NAME"
This command starts self-playing, outputting its raw game data in a tensorflow-compatible format as well as in SGF form in the directories
gs://$BUCKET_NAME/data/selfplay/$MODEL_NAME/local_worker/*.tfrecord.zz
gs://$BUCKET_NAME/sgf/$MODEL_NAME/local_worker/*.sgf
BOARD_SIZE=19 python3 main.py selfplay gs://$BUCKET_NAME/models/$MODEL_NAME \
--num_readouts 10 \
-v 3 \
--output-dir=gs://$BUCKET_NAME/data/selfplay/$MODEL_NAME/local_worker \
--output-sgf=gs://$BUCKET_NAME/sgf/$MODEL_NAME/local_worker
This command takes a directory of tfexample files from selfplay and trains a new
model, starting from the latest model weights in the estimator_working_dir
parameter.
Run the training job:
BOARD_SIZE=19 python3 main.py train-dir \
estimator_working_dir
gs://$BUCKET_NAME/data/training_chunks \
gs://$BUCKET_NAME/models/000001-somename \
--generation-num=1 \
At the end of training, the latest checkpoint will be exported to the directory with the given name.
Additionally, you can follow along with the training progress with
TensorBoard - if you point TensorBoard at the estimator working dir, it will
find the training log files and display them.
tensorboard --logdir=estimator_working_dir
It can be useful to set aside some games to use as a 'validation set' for
tracking the model overfitting. One way to do this is with the validate
command.
By default, Minigo will hold out 5% of selfplay games for validation, and write
them to gs://$BUCKET_NAME/data/holdout/<model_name>
. This can be changed by
adjusting the holdout-pct
flag on the selfplay
command.
With this setup, python rl_loop.py validate --logdir=estimator_working_dir --
will figure out
the most recent model, grab the holdout data from the fifty models prior to that
one, and calculate the validation error, writing the tensorboard logs to
logdir
.
This might be useful if you have some known set of 'good data' to test your network against, e.g., a set of pro games. Assuming you've got a set of .sgfs with the proper komi & boardsizes, you'll want to preprocess them into the .tfrecord files, by running something similar to
import preprocessing
filenames = [generate a list of filenames here]
for f in filenames:
try:
preprocessing.make_dataset_from_sgf(f, f.replace(".sgf", ".tfrecord.zz"))
except:
print(f)
Once you've collected all the files in a directory, producing validation is as easy as
BOARD_SIZE=19 python main.py validate path/to/validation/files/ --load-file=/path/to/model
--logdir=path/to/tb/logs --num-steps=<number of positions to run validation on>
the main.py validate
command will glob all the .tfrecord.zz files under the
directories given as positional arguments and compute the validation error for
num_steps * TRAINING_BATCH_SIZE
positions from those files.
See more at cluster/README.md