Note: this page autoupdates while a run is in progress
(see end of log file)
5h0m
76M
CollaborativeFiltering
Log file
Usage: "run learn trainingFileName" OR "run predict testFileName predictionFileName"
===== MAIN: learn based on training data =====
=== START program1: ./run learn ../dataset2/train
Worker killed run: Current time usage 5h0m exceeds allowed 5h0m
Run specification
supervised-learning: Main entry for supervised learning for training and testing a program on a dataset.
(dataset:Dataset) movielens100k: 100K MovieLens movie ratings dataset from http://www.grouplens.org/. 100,000 ratings (1-5) from 943 users on 1682 movies. Test set contains exactly 10 ratings per user.
See included README.txt for more information.
(stripper:Program[Strip]) collaborativefiltering-utils: Validates, inspects, and evaluates a dataset in CollaborativeFiltering format.
(evaluator:Program[Evaluate]) collaborativefiltering-utils: Validates, inspects, and evaluates a dataset in CollaborativeFiltering format.
When you generate a run, you can set a time limit for the run (no more than 24 hours). After that point, we will terminate the program.
Your program can use 1.5GB of memory. More information here.
Go to the page for the run and look at the log file for signs of the responsible error.
You can also download the run and run it locally on your machine (a README file should
be included in the download which provides more information).
We said that a run was simply a program/dataset pair, but that's not the full story.
A run actually includes other helper programs such as the evaluation program and
various programs for reductions (e.g., one-versus-all, hyperparameter tuning).
More formally, a run is a given by a run specification,
which can be found on the page for any run.
A run specification is a tree where each internal node represents a program
and its children represents the arguments to be passed into its constructor.
For example, the one-versus-all program takes your binary classification program
as a constructor argument and behaves like a multiclass classification program.
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