© 2018-2022, Anyscale. All Rights Reserved
Welcome to the Anyscale Academy tutorials on Ray, the system for scaling your Python and ML applications from a laptop to a cluster.
This README tells you how to set up the tutorials and decide which content is best for your interests.
IMPORTANT NOTE: Modules and materials in this Academy have been updated and tested with Ray release 1.11
and supported Python 3.8
. Older
modules and tutorials have been retired into their respective retired
directories. Hence, current material content will not match
the Ray Summit 2020 tutorial.
Also, the setup process has been streamlined and Python dependencies and packages reduced.
Tips:
- How to Contact us for more information.
- Please report any issues or suggestions:
- GitHub issues
- The #tutorial channel on the Ray Slack Click here to join.
- If you are attending a live tutorial event, please follow the setup instructions provided in advance. It will take too long to do these instructions during the event.
- For troubleshooting help, see the Troubleshooting, Tips, and Tricks notebook.
Read the appropriate setup section that follows, then jump to Launching the Tutorials.
There is nothing you need to setup, as the hosted environment will provide everything.
However, consider cloning or downloading a release of the tutorial notebooks and supporting software from the Academy repo, so you have a local copy of everything.
Tip: If you modify any notebooks during the hosted session, make sure you download them to save those changes.
Note: Ray support for Windows is new. See these release notes for details.
Follow these instructions to use the tutorials. Note that some commands can take a while to finish.
Clone the Academy GitHub repo or download the latest release.
Now install the dependencies using either Anaconda or pip
in your Python environment. We recommend using Anaconda.
Python 3.7+ is recommended. While Ray supports Python 3.8, some dependencies used in RLlib
(the Ray reinforcement library) are not yet
supported for 3.8, at the time of this writing.
If you need to install Anaconda, follow the instructions here. If you already have Anaconda installed, consider running conda upgrade --all
.
Run the following commands in the root directory of this project. First, use conda
to install the other dependencies, including Ray. Then activate the newly-created environment, named anyscale-academy
. Finally, run the provided tools/fix-jupyter.sh
script to install a graphing library extension in Jupyter Lab and perform other tasks.
conda create -n anyscale-academy python=3.8
conda activate anyscale-academy
python3 -m pip install -r requirements.txt
python3 -m pip install typing-extensions --upgrade
tools/fix-jupyter.sh
If you are using Windows, see the Fixing Jupyter Lab on Windows below for an alternative to using tools/fix-jupyter.sh
.
Note that Python 3.8.is used. Ignore the similar-looking environment-docker.yml
file. It is used to build Docker images.
You can delete the environment later with the following command:
conda env remove --name anyscale-academy
If you don't use Anaconda, you'll have to install these prerequisites first:
- Python 3.7:
- See notes above about problems with 3.6 and 3.8. Don't use 3.8, but 3.6 may work for you.
- The version of Python that comes with your operating system is probably too old. Try
python --version
to see what you have. - Installation instructions are at python.org.
- Pip: A recent version - consider upgrading if it's not the latest version.
- Installation instructions are at pip.pypa.io.
- Node.js: Required for some of the Jupyter Lab graphics extensions we use.
- Installation instructions are here.
- SWIG: Required for building dependencies.
- Use the package manager of your system (e.g.
apt
on Ubuntu,brew
on MacOS) to install, or download here.
- Use the package manager of your system (e.g.
Next, run the following commands in the root directory of this project to complete the setup. First, run the pip
command to install the rest of the libraries required for these tutorials, including Ray. Then, run the provided script to install a graphing library extension in Jupyter Lab and perform other tasks.
python3 -m pip install -r requirements.txt
python3 -m pip install typing-extensions --upgrade
tools/fix-jupyter.sh
If you are using Windows, see the Fixing Jupyter Lab on Windows below for an alternative to using tools/fix-jupyter.sh
.
The tools/fix-jupyter.sh
shell script runs the following commands. If you are using Windows, run them yourself as shown here.
First, see if the following pyviz
extension is installed:
jupyter labextension check --installed "@pyviz/jupyterlab_pyviz"
If not, run this command:
jupyter labextension install "@pyviz/jupyterlab_pyviz"
Finally, run these commands:
jupyter labextension update --all
jupyter lab build
jupyter labextension list
Note: A Windows and Mac M1 version are experimental in Ray 1.8.
The previous steps installed Jupyter Lab, the notebook-based environment we'll use for all the lessons. To start run the following command in the project root directory:
jupyter lab
It should automatically open a browser window with the lab environment, but if not, the console output will show the URL you should use.
Tip: If you get an error that
jupyter
can't be found and you are using the Anaconda setup, make sure you activated theanyscale-academy
environment, as shown above.
Here is a recommended reading list, based on your interests:
You Are... | Best Tutorials |
---|---|
A developer who is new to Ray | First, Ray Crash Course, then Advanced Ray |
A developer who is experienced with Ray | Advanced Ray |
A developer or data scientist interested in Reinforcement Learning | Ray RLlib |
A developer or data scientist interested in Hyperparameter Tuning | Ray Tune |
A developer or data scientist interested in distributed training models in PyTorch or TensorFlow | Ray Train(renamed from Ray SGD) |
A developer or data scientist interested in model serving | Ray Serve |
A DevOps engineer interested in managing Ray clusters | Ray Cluster Launcher (forthcoming) |
See the Overview notebook for detailed, up-to-date descriptions for each tutorial and the lessons it contains.
See the Troubleshooting, Tips, and Tricks notebook.
For details on the Ray API and the ML libraries, see the Ray Docs. For other information, see ray.io, including the Ray blog.
Ray started at U.C. Berkeley RISELab. It is now developed in artisanal, small batches at Anyscale.