
You can try them without any work, by downloading the latest LC0 June 4 build at https://crem.xyz/lc0/ dubbed experimental.
Moderator: Ras
Instead of running meaningless "tuning" try at least beating the default version with your "magnificent" tuned parameters.Albert Silver wrote: ↑Mon Jun 04, 2018 9:02 pm In view of the many settings in LC0, I ran a deep CLOP on three big ones at the same time. CLOP is designed to tune for the best playing performance, not best tactics or anything. The old default settings were nearly catastrophic giving NN369 a mere 109/200 solved in my corrected WAC set. The new settings yield... 159/200.
You can try them without any work, by downloading the latest LC0 June 4 build at https://crem.xyz/lc0/ dubbed experimental.
What exactly are these settings you're describing? I can't run a gpu based LC0 (yet).Albert Silver wrote: ↑Mon Jun 04, 2018 9:02 pm In view of the many settings in LC0, I ran a deep CLOP on three big ones at the same time. CLOP is designed to tune for the best playing performance, not best tactics or anything. The old default settings were nearly catastrophic giving NN369 a mere 109/200 solved in my corrected WAC set. The new settings yield... 159/200.
You can try them without any work, by downloading the latest LC0 June 4 build at https://crem.xyz/lc0/ dubbed experimental.
Great! You mean your settings are the default settings of the latest LC0 experimental? And the test was at 10s/position?Albert Silver wrote: ↑Mon Jun 04, 2018 9:02 pm In view of the many settings in LC0, I ran a deep CLOP on three big ones at the same time. CLOP is designed to tune for the best playing performance, not best tactics or anything. The old default settings were nearly catastrophic giving NN369 a mere 109/200 solved in my corrected WAC set. The new settings yield... 159/200.
You can try them without any work, by downloading the latest LC0 June 4 build at https://crem.xyz/lc0/ dubbed experimental.
Sounds great, but hoping not to be called too negative or nosy in a thing, I still don't understand anything better than before, I yet ponder, if LCZero should not be called somewhat else but Zero since a little while already?Laskos wrote: ↑Tue Jun 05, 2018 5:01 am The default (31 May) LC0 tested in Poliglot on these suites was:
WAC200: 106/200
Openings200: 124/200
My "extreme tactical" LC0 (31 May) tested as:
WAC200: 156/200
Openings200: 106/200
Your settings with LC0 (4 June) experimental:
WAC200: 154/200
Openings200: 120/200
So, it seems that your settings from CLOP are not degrading positionally significantly, improving tactically greatly.
...
Thanks for your efforts with CLOP!
Done.Milos wrote: ↑Mon Jun 04, 2018 10:13 pmInstead of running meaningless "tuning" try at least beating the default version with your "magnificent" tuned parameters.Albert Silver wrote: ↑Mon Jun 04, 2018 9:02 pm In view of the many settings in LC0, I ran a deep CLOP on three big ones at the same time. CLOP is designed to tune for the best playing performance, not best tactics or anything. The old default settings were nearly catastrophic giving NN369 a mere 109/200 solved in my corrected WAC set. The new settings yield... 159/200.
You can try them without any work, by downloading the latest LC0 June 4 build at https://crem.xyz/lc0/ dubbed experimental.
The only "zero" thing is AlphaZero (if you believe that crappy preprint anyway) was NN. Everything else was tuned extensively. Even NN was trained multiple times from scratch and only the best training result has been shown in that "paper".peter wrote: ↑Tue Jun 05, 2018 7:19 am Hi Kai!Sounds great, but hoping not to be called too negative or nosy in a thing, I still don't understand anything better than before, I yet ponder, if LCZero should not be called somewhat else but Zero since a little while already?Laskos wrote: ↑Tue Jun 05, 2018 5:01 am The default (31 May) LC0 tested in Poliglot on these suites was:
WAC200: 106/200
Openings200: 124/200
My "extreme tactical" LC0 (31 May) tested as:
WAC200: 156/200
Openings200: 106/200
Your settings with LC0 (4 June) experimental:
WAC200: 154/200
Openings200: 120/200
So, it seems that your settings from CLOP are not degrading positionally significantly, improving tactically greatly.
...
Thanks for your efforts with CLOP!
I mean, if human input is now to change Clop and other "Settings" daily, where is the big difference to AB- engines you add and change patches in the programming code manually to get better results?
Again, no offence meant, especially I enjoy seeing that even test position- testing has become modern again to adapt an engine to, not only to eng-eng-matches anymore.
Yet I have to remind to an old wording about test positions in German "Stellungstests testen die Teststellungen", which never ever was something negative to me, yet you always have to take care not to be too selective as for the test positions chosen, wanting to find the very best ones for the very best result for a special engine. That's the classical bias called self-fulfilling prophecy.
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That looks ok but I am confused which options did you use, since difference between yours June 4 and "default" June 2 version is basically just FPUR increased from 0.2 to 0.9, which is totally opposite direction from before and very mild increase of PCUT from 3.1 to 3.4 or something.Albert Silver wrote: ↑Tue Jun 05, 2018 7:29 amDone.Milos wrote: ↑Mon Jun 04, 2018 10:13 pmInstead of running meaningless "tuning" try at least beating the default version with your "magnificent" tuned parameters.Albert Silver wrote: ↑Mon Jun 04, 2018 9:02 pm In view of the many settings in LC0, I ran a deep CLOP on three big ones at the same time. CLOP is designed to tune for the best playing performance, not best tactics or anything. The old default settings were nearly catastrophic giving NN369 a mere 109/200 solved in my corrected WAC set. The new settings yield... 159/200.
You can try them without any work, by downloading the latest LC0 June 4 build at https://crem.xyz/lc0/ dubbed experimental.
Here is first match played at 30s+0.5s with default values:
Score of lc0-june2 vs Protector 1.9: 31 - 46 - 23 [0.425]
Elo difference: -52.51 +/- 60.80
100 of 100 games finished.
Here is score with the new settings:
Score of lc0-june4-utk vs Protector 1.9: 36 - 33 - 31 [0.515]
Elo difference: 10.43 +/- 57.01
100 of 100 games finished.
No, there is a third you did not notice which has a similarly strong effect: Policy Softmax Temperature. I myself did not know it until its author brought it to my attention in Discord.Milos wrote: ↑Tue Jun 05, 2018 2:01 pmThat looks ok but I am confused which options did you use, since difference between yours June 4 and "default" June 2 version is basically just FPUR increased from 0.2 to 0.9, which is totally opposite direction from before and very mild increase of PCUT from 3.1 to 3.4 or something.Albert Silver wrote: ↑Tue Jun 05, 2018 7:29 amDone.
Here is first match played at 30s+0.5s with default values:
Score of lc0-june2 vs Protector 1.9: 31 - 46 - 23 [0.425]
Elo difference: -52.51 +/- 60.80
100 of 100 games finished.
Here is score with the new settings:
Score of lc0-june4-utk vs Protector 1.9: 36 - 33 - 31 [0.515]
Elo difference: 10.43 +/- 57.01
100 of 100 games finished.
Anyway difference is still within error margins so could be just luck or it just worked against particular engine. What I've thought you did is to test it against default LC0 settings for PCUT and FPUG which are for cudnn version something like 1.7 and 0.0.
Did the author say in depth what this does, beyond what we can guess from the words?Albert Silver wrote: ↑Tue Jun 05, 2018 2:30 pm there is a third which has a similarly strong effect: Policy Softmax Temperature. I myself did not know it until its author brought it to my attention.