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User_Building a Competition Bundle

Isabelle Guyon edited this page Oct 30, 2017 · 22 revisions

WARNING: this page has not been edited recently. It is based on an earlier version of the Compute Pi example, but it is still useful to understand the basics of building a competition bundle. Other examples can be studied.

Building a competition in CodaLab is possible by uploading a Competition Bundle. A Competition Bundle is a zip archive which contains a YAML file that describes the competition. Other assets are included in the zip archive but won't be used unless they are referenced in the competition.yaml file.

Here are the contents of the example competition.zip bundle:

competition.zip
  |- competition.yaml
  |- data.html
  |- evaluation.html
  |- logo.jpg
  |- overview.html
  |- program.zip
  |- reference.zip
  |- terms_and_conditions.html

Here is an example competition.yaml. If you are not familiar with how competitions look in CodaLab, you might browse competitions before you read the configuration to get a basic understanding of the components of a competition.

This competition is a construed example for illustrative purposes. Assume the competition goal is to compute the value of pi (3.14...). The submission that contains the closest value of pi is the winner, each participant a single float value as their submission.

Here's an annotated competition.yaml, to explain the various configuration elements.

# Build an example competition
---
# The title of the competition
title: Example Competition
# A description of the competition
description: This is a competition to test the competition bundle system. It should be able to create a competition from this bundle. The goal is to compute the closest value of pi possible.
# A logo/image for the competition
image: logo.jpg
# Does this competition require participant approval by the organizer
has_registration: True
# When is this competition finished. It is valid to not include an end_date, which means the competition remains open perpetually.
end_date: 2013-12-31
# You can specify admins here, use their codalab username (CaSe sensitive!) they will automatically be added as participants
admin_names: tony,eric
# Each competition has a set of html pages for potential participants to read and review and for participants to use to interact with the competition. These are the specifications for those pages.
html: 
    # Basic overview (first impression) of the challenge
    overview: overview.html
    # What are the metrics being used for this challenge, how is it being scored.
    evaluation: evaluation.html
    # Terms of participation, including data licensing, results submission, et al
    terms: terms_and_conditions.html
    # Where to find the data, how to download it.
    data: data.html
    # An extra page
    page_name: extra.html
# Competitions are broken up into phases. Every competition has at least one phase, some have multiple phases.
phases:
    # Phase 1
    1:
        # Phase number for ordering
        phasenumber: 1
        # Label or name of this phase
        label: "Training"
        # When this phase starts - this is the first date participants can download the data and submit results
        start_date: 2013-06-30
        # Maximum number of submissions per participant
        max_submissions: 100
        # A bundle containing the program used to evaluate results.
        scoring_program: program.zip
        # A bundle containing reference data to compare submitted data with for scoring.
        reference_data: reference.zip
        # You can select from these colors:
        # white, orange, yellow, green, blue, purple
        color: orange
        # Maximum execution time of the submission (in seconds), default = 300
        execution_time_limit: 300
        # Maximum number of submissions a user can make in a day. default = unlimited
        max_submissions_per_day: 15
        # The datasets used for this phase, all references are URLs to externally stored data
        datasets: 
            # The first data set
            1:
                # Uniquely :) named
                name: Data 1
                # A url to the data
                url: http://spreadsheets.google.com/pub?key=pyj6tScZqmEfbZyl0qjbiRQ&output=xls
                # A brief description to indicate the contents of the data for users
                description: Example Dataset
            # A second data set, there can be any number
            2:
                # Again uniquely named so users can tell what it is
                name: Data 2
                # URL to the actual data
                url: http://spreadsheets.google.com/pub?key=0AgogXXPMARyldGJqTDRfNHBWODJMRWlZaVhNclhNZXc&output=xls 
                # Brief description
                description: Example Dataset
    # Phase 2, the actual competition (in this case)
    2:
        # The second phase.
        phasenumber: 2
        # Phase name/label
        label: "Challenge"
        # When does this phase begin
        start_date: 2013-09-30
        # Maximum submissions this phase
        max_submissions: 3
        # Scoring program for this phase (the same as the previous phase)
        scoring_program: program.zip
        # The reference data for scoring, this could/should/would be different this phase
        reference_data: reference.zip
        # Data sets
        datasets: 
            # Dataset #1
            1:
                # Data set name
                name: Challenge Data
                # URL for the dataset
                url: http://spreadsheets.google.com/pub?key=t9GL1nIZdtxszJbjKErN2Hg&output=xls
                # Data set description
                description: Example challenge data
# Leaderboard / Scoreboard configuration
leaderboard:
    # Collections of scores, ways to slice multi-dimensional scores into "groups"
    # This leaderboard has one result, the difference (difference of the submitted number from Pi)
    leaderboards:
        # The internal key name for the overall results group
        RESULTS: &RESULTS
            # Label for this group
            label: Results
            # Ordering of the groups, starts at 1
            rank: 1
    # Actual scores in the leaderboard
    columns:
        # The internal key for this score
        DIFFERENCE:
            # This is a member of the results group
            leaderboard: *RESULTS
            # The column label for this score
            label: Difference
            # Order of the scores
            rank: 1
            # Sorting ascending instead of descending
            sort: asc

To make this example complete it's important to understand how to build and package the program.zip and reference.zip referred to in the competition.yaml.

The program.zip bundle contains the program that compares the users submission with the reference data (in the reference.zip bundle) to score the submission. In this case the reference data contains the value of pi. The program.zip bundle computes the absolute difference of the submitted value from the reference value.

Here are the contents of the reference.zip file:

reference.zip 
  |- answer.txt (Contains: 3.14159265359)
  |- metadata   (Contains: This is the authoritative result.)

Here are the contents of the program.zip file:

program.zip
  |- evaluate.py (The actual evaluation code to run)
  |- metadata     (Syntax and information needed to run)
  |- readme.txt (Contains notes about the evaluation program)
  |- setup.py (Enables py2exe to build a windows executable of the evaluate.py script)
  |- Supporting modules and libraries (if required).

The program.zip metadata file contains command syntax to use, along with a short description:

command: python $program/evaluate.py $input $output
description: Example competition evaluation program.

Automatic datasets

When you upload a competition the reference_data, scoring_program and input_data all are turned into datasets automatically. You can re-use or share these via the secret key!

Sharing competition before publishing

If you want to share your competition before publishing, you can give users the "Secret Key" url underneath the title of your competition on its main page.

Note

When zipping the competition bundle, make sure not extra directories are created within the zip. For instance, try using something like: zip -j name_of_zipe_file.zip file_to_be_zip. The -j flag will not create extra directories within the zip.

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