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Hyperparameter tuning a model with Azure Machine Learning (v1)

APPLIES TO: Azure CLI ml extension v1

Important

Some of the Azure CLI commands in this article use the azure-cli-ml, or v1, extension for Azure Machine Learning. Support for the v1 extension will end on September 30, 2025. You will be able to install and use the v1 extension until that date.

We recommend that you transition to the ml, or v2, extension before September 30, 2025. For more information on the v2 extension, see Azure ML CLI extension and Python SDK v2.

Automate efficient hyperparameter tuning by using Azure Machine Learning (v1) HyperDrive package. Learn how to complete the steps required to tune hyperparameters with the Azure Machine Learning SDK:

  1. Define the parameter search space
  2. Specify a primary metric to optimize
  3. Specify early termination policy for low-performing runs
  4. Create and assign resources
  5. Launch an experiment with the defined configuration
  6. Visualize the training runs
  7. Select the best configuration for your model

What is hyperparameter tuning?

Hyperparameters are adjustable parameters that let you control the model training process. For example, with neural networks, you decide the number of hidden layers and the number of nodes in each layer. Model performance depends heavily on hyperparameters.

Hyperparameter tuning, also called hyperparameter optimization, is the process of finding the configuration of hyperparameters that results in the best performance. The process is typically computationally expensive and manual.

Azure Machine Learning lets you automate hyperparameter tuning and run experiments in parallel to efficiently optimize hyperparameters.

Define the search space

Tune hyperparameters by exploring the range of values defined for each hyperparameter.

Hyperparameters can be discrete or continuous, and has a distribution of values described by a parameter expression.

Discrete hyperparameters

Discrete hyperparameters are specified as a choice among discrete values. choice can be:

  • one or more comma-separated values
  • a range object
  • any arbitrary list object
    {
        "batch_size": choice(16, 32, 64, 128)
        "number_of_hidden_layers": choice(range(1,5))
    }

In this case, batch_size one of the values [16, 32, 64, 128] and number_of_hidden_layers takes one of the values [1, 2, 3, 4].

The following advanced discrete hyperparameters can also be specified using a distribution:

  • quniform(low, high, q) - Returns a value like round(uniform(low, high) / q) * q
  • qloguniform(low, high, q) - Returns a value like round(exp(uniform(low, high)) / q) * q
  • qnormal(mu, sigma, q) - Returns a value like round(normal(mu, sigma) / q) * q
  • qlognormal(mu, sigma, q) - Returns a value like round(exp(normal(mu, sigma)) / q) * q

Continuous hyperparameters

The Continuous hyperparameters are specified as a distribution over a continuous range of values:

  • uniform(low, high) - Returns a value uniformly distributed between low and high
  • loguniform(low, high) - Returns a value drawn according to exp(uniform(low, high)) so that the logarithm of the return value is uniformly distributed
  • normal(mu, sigma) - Returns a real value that's normally distributed with mean mu and standard deviation sigma
  • lognormal(mu, sigma) - Returns a value drawn according to exp(normal(mu, sigma)) so that the logarithm of the return value is normally distributed

An example of a parameter space definition:

    {    
        "learning_rate": normal(10, 3),
        "keep_probability": uniform(0.05, 0.1)
    }

This code defines a search space with two parameters - learning_rate and keep_probability. learning_rate has a normal distribution with mean value 10 and a standard deviation of 3. keep_probability has a uniform distribution with a minimum value of 0.05 and a maximum value of 0.1.

Sampling the hyperparameter space

Specify the parameter sampling method to use over the hyperparameter space. Azure Machine Learning supports the following methods:

  • Random sampling
  • Grid sampling
  • Bayesian sampling

Random sampling

Random sampling supports discrete and continuous hyperparameters. It supports early termination of low-performance runs. Some users do an initial search with random sampling and then refine the search space to improve results.

In random sampling, hyperparameter values are randomly selected from the defined search space.

from azureml.train.hyperdrive import RandomParameterSampling
from azureml.train.hyperdrive import normal, uniform, choice
param_sampling = RandomParameterSampling( {
        "learning_rate": normal(10, 3),
        "keep_probability": uniform(0.05, 0.1),
        "batch_size": choice(16, 32, 64, 128)
    }
)

Grid sampling

Grid sampling supports discrete hyperparameters. Use grid sampling if you can budget to exhaustively search over the search space. Supports early termination of low-performance runs.

Grid sampling does a simple grid search over all possible values. Grid sampling can only be used with choice hyperparameters. For example, the following space has six samples:

from azureml.train.hyperdrive import GridParameterSampling
from azureml.train.hyperdrive import choice
param_sampling = GridParameterSampling( {
        "num_hidden_layers": choice(1, 2, 3),
        "batch_size": choice(16, 32)
    }
)

Bayesian sampling

Bayesian sampling is based on the Bayesian optimization algorithm. It picks samples based on how previous samples did, so that new samples improve the primary metric.

Bayesian sampling is recommended if you have enough budget to explore the hyperparameter space. For best results, we recommend a maximum number of runs greater than or equal to 20 times the number of hyperparameters being tuned.

The number of concurrent runs has an impact on the effectiveness of the tuning process. A smaller number of concurrent runs may lead to better sampling convergence, since the smaller degree of parallelism increases the number of runs that benefit from previously completed runs.

Bayesian sampling only supports choice, uniform, and quniform distributions over the search space.

from azureml.train.hyperdrive import BayesianParameterSampling
from azureml.train.hyperdrive import uniform, choice
param_sampling = BayesianParameterSampling( {
        "learning_rate": uniform(0.05, 0.1),
        "batch_size": choice(16, 32, 64, 128)
    }
)

Specify primary metric

Specify the primary metric you want hyperparameter tuning to optimize. Each training run is evaluated for the primary metric. The early termination policy uses the primary metric to identify low-performance runs.

Specify the following attributes for your primary metric:

  • primary_metric_name: The name of the primary metric needs to exactly match the name of the metric logged by the training script
  • primary_metric_goal: It can be either PrimaryMetricGoal.MAXIMIZE or PrimaryMetricGoal.MINIMIZE and determines whether the primary metric will be maximized or minimized when evaluating the runs.
primary_metric_name="accuracy",
primary_metric_goal=PrimaryMetricGoal.MAXIMIZE

This sample maximizes "accuracy".

Log metrics for hyperparameter tuning

The training script for your model must log the primary metric during model training so that HyperDrive can access it for hyperparameter tuning.

Log the primary metric in your training script with the following sample snippet:

from azureml.core.run import Run
run_logger = Run.get_context()
run_logger.log("accuracy", float(val_accuracy))

The training script calculates the val_accuracy and logs it as the primary metric "accuracy". Each time the metric is logged, it's received by the hyperparameter tuning service. It's up to you to determine the frequency of reporting.

For more information on logging values in model training runs, see Enable logging in Azure Machine Learning training runs.

Specify early termination policy

Automatically end poorly performing runs with an early termination policy. Early termination improves computational efficiency.

You can configure the following parameters that control when a policy is applied:

  • evaluation_interval: the frequency of applying the policy. Each time the training script logs the primary metric counts as one interval. An evaluation_interval of 1 will apply the policy every time the training script reports the primary metric. An evaluation_interval of 2 will apply the policy every other time. If not specified, evaluation_interval is set to 1 by default.
  • delay_evaluation: delays the first policy evaluation for a specified number of intervals. This is an optional parameter that avoids premature termination of training runs by allowing all configurations to run for a minimum number of intervals. If specified, the policy applies every multiple of evaluation_interval that is greater than or equal to delay_evaluation.

Azure Machine Learning supports the following early termination policies:

Bandit policy

Bandit policy is based on slack factor/slack amount and evaluation interval. Bandit ends the runs when the primary metric isn't within the specified slack factor/slack amount of the most successful run.

Note

Bayesian sampling does not support early termination. When using Bayesian sampling, set early_termination_policy = None.

Specify the following configuration parameters:

  • slack_factor or slack_amount: the slack allowed with respect to the best performing training run. slack_factor specifies the allowable slack as a ratio. slack_amount specifies the allowable slack as an absolute amount, instead of a ratio.

    For example, consider a Bandit policy applied at interval 10. Assume that the best performing run at interval 10 reported a primary metric is 0.8 with a goal to maximize the primary metric. If the policy specifies a slack_factor of 0.2, any training runs whose best metric at interval 10 is less than 0.66 (0.8/(1+slack_factor)) will be terminated.

  • evaluation_interval: (optional) the frequency for applying the policy

  • delay_evaluation: (optional) delays the first policy evaluation for a specified number of intervals

from azureml.train.hyperdrive import BanditPolicy
early_termination_policy = BanditPolicy(slack_factor = 0.1, evaluation_interval=1, delay_evaluation=5)

In this example, the early termination policy is applied at every interval when metrics are reported, starting at evaluation interval 5. Any run whose best metric is less than (1/(1+0.1) or 91% of the best performing run will be terminated.

Median stopping policy

Median stopping is an early termination policy based on running averages of primary metrics reported by the runs. This policy computes running averages across all training runs and stops runs whose primary metric value is worse than the median of the averages.

This policy takes the following configuration parameters:

  • evaluation_interval: the frequency for applying the policy (optional parameter).
  • delay_evaluation: delays the first policy evaluation for a specified number of intervals (optional parameter).
from azureml.train.hyperdrive import MedianStoppingPolicy
early_termination_policy = MedianStoppingPolicy(evaluation_interval=1, delay_evaluation=5)

In this example, the early termination policy is applied at every interval starting at evaluation interval 5. A run is stopped at interval 5 if its best primary metric is worse than the median of the running averages over intervals 1:5 across all training runs.

Truncation selection policy

Truncation selection cancels a percentage of lowest performing runs at each evaluation interval. Runs are compared using the primary metric.

This policy takes the following configuration parameters:

  • truncation_percentage: the percentage of lowest performing runs to terminate at each evaluation interval. An integer value between 1 and 99.
  • evaluation_interval: (optional) the frequency for applying the policy
  • delay_evaluation: (optional) delays the first policy evaluation for a specified number of intervals
  • exclude_finished_jobs: specifies whether to exclude finished jobs when applying the policy
from azureml.train.hyperdrive import TruncationSelectionPolicy
early_termination_policy = TruncationSelectionPolicy(evaluation_interval=1, truncation_percentage=20, delay_evaluation=5, exclude_finished_jobs=true)

In this example, the early termination policy is applied at every interval starting at evaluation interval 5. A run terminates at interval 5 if its performance at interval 5 is in the lowest 20% of performance of all runs at interval 5 and will exclude finished jobs when applying the policy.

No termination policy (default)

If no policy is specified, the hyperparameter tuning service lets all training runs execute to completion.

policy=None

Picking an early termination policy

  • For a conservative policy that provides savings without terminating promising jobs, consider a Median Stopping Policy with evaluation_interval 1 and delay_evaluation 5. These are conservative settings, that can provide approximately 25%-35% savings with no loss on primary metric (based on our evaluation data).
  • For more aggressive savings, use Bandit Policy with a smaller allowable slack or Truncation Selection Policy with a larger truncation percentage.

Create and assign resources

Control your resource budget by specifying the maximum number of training runs.

  • max_total_runs: Maximum number of training runs. Must be an integer between 1 and 1000.
  • max_duration_minutes: (optional) Maximum duration, in minutes, of the hyperparameter tuning experiment. Runs after this duration are canceled.

Note

If both max_total_runs and max_duration_minutes are specified, the hyperparameter tuning experiment terminates when the first of these two thresholds is reached.

Additionally, specify the maximum number of training runs to run concurrently during your hyperparameter tuning search.

  • max_concurrent_runs: (optional) Maximum number of runs that can run concurrently. If not specified, all runs launch in parallel. If specified, must be an integer between 1 and 100.

Note

The number of concurrent runs is gated on the resources available in the specified compute target. Ensure that the compute target has the available resources for the desired concurrency.

max_total_runs=20,
max_concurrent_runs=4

This code configures the hyperparameter tuning experiment to use a maximum of 20 total runs, running four configurations at a time.

Configure hyperparameter tuning experiment

To configure your hyperparameter tuning experiment, provide the following:

  • The defined hyperparameter search space
  • Your early termination policy
  • The primary metric
  • Resource allocation settings
  • ScriptRunConfig script_run_config

The ScriptRunConfig is the training script that runs with the sampled hyperparameters. It defines the resources per job (single or multi-node), and the compute target to use.

Note

The compute target used in script_run_config must have enough resources to satisfy your concurrency level. For more information on ScriptRunConfig, see Configure training runs.

Configure your hyperparameter tuning experiment:

from azureml.train.hyperdrive import HyperDriveConfig
from azureml.train.hyperdrive import RandomParameterSampling, BanditPolicy, uniform, PrimaryMetricGoal

param_sampling = RandomParameterSampling( {
        'learning_rate': uniform(0.0005, 0.005),
        'momentum': uniform(0.9, 0.99)
    }
)

early_termination_policy = BanditPolicy(slack_factor=0.15, evaluation_interval=1, delay_evaluation=10)

hd_config = HyperDriveConfig(run_config=script_run_config,
                             hyperparameter_sampling=param_sampling,
                             policy=early_termination_policy,
                             primary_metric_name="accuracy",
                             primary_metric_goal=PrimaryMetricGoal.MAXIMIZE,
                             max_total_runs=100,
                             max_concurrent_runs=4)

The HyperDriveConfig sets the parameters passed to the ScriptRunConfig script_run_config. The script_run_config, in turn, passes parameters to the training script. The above code snippet is taken from the sample notebook Train, hyperparameter tune, and deploy with PyTorch. In this sample, the learning_rate and momentum parameters will be tuned. Early stopping of runs will be determined by a BanditPolicy, which stops a run whose primary metric falls outside the slack_factor (see BanditPolicy class reference).

The following code from the sample shows how the being-tuned values are received, parsed, and passed to the training script's fine_tune_model function:

# from pytorch_train.py
def main():
    print("Torch version:", torch.__version__)

    # get command-line arguments
    parser = argparse.ArgumentParser()
    parser.add_argument('--num_epochs', type=int, default=25,
                        help='number of epochs to train')
    parser.add_argument('--output_dir', type=str, help='output directory')
    parser.add_argument('--learning_rate', type=float,
                        default=0.001, help='learning rate')
    parser.add_argument('--momentum', type=float, default=0.9, help='momentum')
    args = parser.parse_args()

    data_dir = download_data()
    print("data directory is: " + data_dir)
    model = fine_tune_model(args.num_epochs, data_dir,
                            args.learning_rate, args.momentum)
    os.makedirs(args.output_dir, exist_ok=True)
    torch.save(model, os.path.join(args.output_dir, 'model.pt'))

Important

Every hyperparameter run restarts the training from scratch, including rebuilding the model and all the data loaders. You can minimize this cost by using an Azure Machine Learning pipeline or manual process to do as much data preparation as possible prior to your training runs.

Submit hyperparameter tuning experiment

After you define your hyperparameter tuning configuration, submit the experiment:

from azureml.core.experiment import Experiment
experiment = Experiment(workspace, experiment_name)
hyperdrive_run = experiment.submit(hd_config)

Warm start hyperparameter tuning (optional)

Finding the best hyperparameter values for your model can be an iterative process. You can reuse knowledge from the five previous runs to accelerate hyperparameter tuning.

Warm starting is handled differently depending on the sampling method:

  • Bayesian sampling: Trials from the previous run are used as prior knowledge to pick new samples, and to improve the primary metric.
  • Random sampling or grid sampling: Early termination uses knowledge from previous runs to determine poorly performing runs.

Specify the list of parent runs you want to warm start from.

from azureml.train.hyperdrive import HyperDriveRun

warmstart_parent_1 = HyperDriveRun(experiment, "warmstart_parent_run_ID_1")
warmstart_parent_2 = HyperDriveRun(experiment, "warmstart_parent_run_ID_2")
warmstart_parents_to_resume_from = [warmstart_parent_1, warmstart_parent_2]

If a hyperparameter tuning experiment is canceled, you can resume training runs from the last checkpoint. However, your training script must handle checkpoint logic.

The training run must use the same hyperparameter configuration and mounted the outputs folders. The training script must accept the resume-from argument, which contains the checkpoint or model files from which to resume the training run. You can resume individual training runs using the following snippet:

from azureml.core.run import Run

resume_child_run_1 = Run(experiment, "resume_child_run_ID_1")
resume_child_run_2 = Run(experiment, "resume_child_run_ID_2")
child_runs_to_resume = [resume_child_run_1, resume_child_run_2]

You can configure your hyperparameter tuning experiment to warm start from a previous experiment or resume individual training runs using the optional parameters resume_from and resume_child_runs in the config:

from azureml.train.hyperdrive import HyperDriveConfig

hd_config = HyperDriveConfig(run_config=script_run_config,
                             hyperparameter_sampling=param_sampling,
                             policy=early_termination_policy,
                             resume_from=warmstart_parents_to_resume_from,
                             resume_child_runs=child_runs_to_resume,
                             primary_metric_name="accuracy",
                             primary_metric_goal=PrimaryMetricGoal.MAXIMIZE,
                             max_total_runs=100,
                             max_concurrent_runs=4)

Visualize hyperparameter tuning runs

You can visualize your hyperparameter tuning runs in the Azure Machine Learning studio, or you can use a notebook widget.

Studio

You can visualize all of your hyperparameter tuning runs in the Azure Machine Learning studio. For more information on how to view an experiment in the portal, see View run records in the studio.

  • Metrics chart: This visualization tracks the metrics logged for each hyperdrive child run over the duration of hyperparameter tuning. Each line represents a child run, and each point measures the primary metric value at that iteration of runtime.

    Hyperparameter tuning metrics chart

  • Parallel Coordinates Chart: This visualization shows the correlation between primary metric performance and individual hyperparameter values. The chart is interactive via movement of axes (select and drag by the axis label), and by highlighting values across a single axis (select and drag vertically along a single axis to highlight a range of desired values). The parallel coordinates chart includes an axis on the rightmost portion of the chart that plots the best metric value corresponding to the hyperparameters set for that run instance. This axis is provided in order to project the chart gradient legend onto the data in a more readable fashion.

    Hyperparameter tuning parallel coordinates chart

  • 2-Dimensional Scatter Chart: This visualization shows the correlation between any two individual hyperparameters along with their associated primary metric value.

    Hyparameter tuning 2-dimensional scatter chart

  • 3-Dimensional Scatter Chart: This visualization is the same as 2D but allows for three hyperparameter dimensions of correlation with the primary metric value. You can also select and drag to reorient the chart to view different correlations in 3D space.

    Hyparameter tuning 3-dimensional scatter chart

Notebook widget

Use the Notebook widget to visualize the progress of your training runs. The following snippet visualizes all your hyperparameter tuning runs in one place in a Jupyter notebook:

from azureml.widgets import RunDetails
RunDetails(hyperdrive_run).show()

This code displays a table with details about the training runs for each of the hyperparameter configurations.

Hyperparameter tuning table

You can also visualize the performance of each of the runs as training progresses.

Find the best model

Once all of the hyperparameter tuning runs have completed, identify the best performing configuration and hyperparameter values:

best_run = hyperdrive_run.get_best_run_by_primary_metric()
best_run_metrics = best_run.get_metrics()
parameter_values = best_run.get_details()['runDefinition']['arguments']

print('Best Run Id: ', best_run.id)
print('\n Accuracy:', best_run_metrics['accuracy'])
print('\n learning rate:',parameter_values[3])
print('\n keep probability:',parameter_values[5])
print('\n batch size:',parameter_values[7])

Sample notebook

Refer to train-hyperparameter-* notebooks in this folder:

Learn how to run notebooks by following the article Use Jupyter notebooks to explore this service.

Next steps