- Please pay attention to the version of SC2 you are using for your experiments.
- Performance is *not* always comparable between versions.
- The results in SMAC (https://arxiv.org/abs/1902.04043) use SC2.4.6.2.69232 not SC2.4.10.
SMAC is WhiRL's environment for research in the field of collaborative multi-agent reinforcement learning (MARL) based on Blizzard's StarCraft II RTS game. SMAC makes use of Blizzard's StarCraft II Machine Learning API and DeepMind's PySC2 to provide a convenient interface for autonomous agents to interact with StarCraft II, getting observations and performing actions. Unlike the PySC2, SMAC concentrates on decentralised micromanagement scenarios, where each unit of the game is controlled by an individual RL agent.
Please refer to the accompanying paper and blogpost for the outline of our motivation for using SMAC as a testbed for MARL research and the initial experimental results.
Together with SMAC we also release PyMARL - our PyTorch framework for MARL research, which includes implementations of several state-of-the-art algorithms, such as QMIX and COMA.
Should you have any question, please reach to mikayel@samvelyan.com or tabish.rashid@cs.ox.ac.uk.
Data from the runs used in the paper is included here. These runs are outdated based on recent changes in StarCraft II. If you ran your experiments using the current version of SMAC, you mustn't compare your results with the ones provided here.
You can install SMAC by using the following command:
pip install git+https://github.com/oxwhirl/smac.git
Alternatively, you can clone the SMAC repository and then install smac
with its dependencies:
git clone https://github.com/oxwhirl/smac.git
pip install -e smac/
NOTE: If you want to extend SMAC, please install the package as follows:
git clone https://github.com/oxwhirl/smac.git
cd smac
pip install -e ".[dev]"
pre-commit install
You may also need to upgrade pip: pip install --upgrade pip
for the install to work.
SMAC is based on the full game of StarCraft II (versions >= 3.16.1). To install the game, follow the commands bellow.
Please use the Blizzard's repository to download the Linux version of StarCraft II. By default, the game is expected to be in ~/StarCraftII/
directory. This can be changed by setting the environment variable SC2PATH
.
Please install StarCraft II from Battle.net. The free Starter Edition also works. PySC2 will find the latest binary should you use the default install location. Otherwise, similar to the Linux version, you would need to set the SC2PATH
environment variable with the correct location of the game.
SMAC is composed of many combat scenarios with pre-configured maps. Before SMAC can be used, these maps need to be downloaded into the Maps
directory of StarCraft II.
Download the SMAC Maps and extract them to your $SC2PATH/Maps
directory. If you installed SMAC via git, simply copy the SMAC_Maps
directory from smac/env/starcraft2/maps/
into $SC2PATH/Maps
directory.
To see the list of SMAC maps, together with the number of ally and enemy units and episode limit, run:
python -m smac.bin.map_list
Users can extend SMAC by adding new maps/scenarios. To this end, one needs to:
- Design a new map/scenario using StarCraft II Editor:
- Please take a close look at the existing maps to understand the basics that we use (e.g. Triggers, Units, etc),
- We make use of special RL units which never automatically start attacking the enemy. Here is the step-by-step guide on how to create new RL units based on existing SC2 units,
- Add the map information in smac_maps.py,
- The newly designed RL units have new ids which need to be handled in starcraft2.py. Specifically, for heterogenious maps containing more than one unit types, one needs to manually set the unit ids in the
_init_ally_unit_types()
function.
Please run the following command to make sure that smac
and its maps are properly installed.
python -m smac.examples.random_agents
If you’ve using our PyMARL framework for multi-agent RL, here’s what needs to be done:
- Saving models: We run experiments on Linux servers with
save_model = True
(alsosave_model_interval
is relevant) setting so that we have training checkpoints (parameters of neural networks) saved (click here for more details). - Loading models: Learnt models can be loaded using the
checkpoint_path
parameter. If you run PyMARL on MacOS (or Windows) while also settingsave_replay=True
, this will save a .SC2Replay file fortest_nepisode
episodes on the test mode (no exploration) in the Replay directory of StarCraft II. (click here for more details).
If you want to save replays without using PyMARL, simply call the save_replay()
function of SMAC's StarCraft2Env in your training/testing code. This will save a replay of all epsidoes since the launch of the StarCraft II client.
The easiest way to save and later watch a replay on Linux is to use Wine.
You can watch the saved replay directly within the StarCraft II client on MacOS/Windows by clicking on the corresponding Replay file.
You can also watch saved replays by running:
python -m pysc2.bin.play --norender --replay <path-to-replay>
This works for any replay as long as the map can be found by the game.
For more information, please refer to PySC2 documentation.
For the detailed description of the environment, read the SMAC documentation.
The initial results of our experiments using SMAC can be found in the accompanying paper.
If you use SMAC in your research, please cite the SMAC paper.
M. Samvelyan, T. Rashid, C. Schroeder de Witt, G. Farquhar, N. Nardelli, T.G.J. Rudner, C.-M. Hung, P.H.S. Torr, J. Foerster, S. Whiteson. The StarCraft Multi-Agent Challenge, CoRR abs/1902.04043, 2019.
In BibTeX format:
@article{samvelyan19smac,
title = {{The} {StarCraft} {Multi}-{Agent} {Challenge}},
author = {Mikayel Samvelyan and Tabish Rashid and Christian Schroeder de Witt and Gregory Farquhar and Nantas Nardelli and Tim G. J. Rudner and Chia-Man Hung and Philiph H. S. Torr and Jakob Foerster and Shimon Whiteson},
journal = {CoRR},
volume = {abs/1902.04043},
year = {2019},
}
Below is a small code example which illustrates how SMAC can be used. Here, individual agents execute random policies after receiving the observations and global state from the environment.
If you want to try the state-of-the-art algorithms (such as QMIX and COMA) on SMAC, make use of PyMARL - our framework for MARL research.
from smac.env import StarCraft2Env
import numpy as np
def main():
env = StarCraft2Env(map_name="8m")
env_info = env.get_env_info()
n_actions = env_info["n_actions"]
n_agents = env_info["n_agents"]
n_episodes = 10
for e in range(n_episodes):
env.reset()
terminated = False
episode_reward = 0
while not terminated:
obs = env.get_obs()
state = env.get_state()
# env.render() # Uncomment for rendering
actions = []
for agent_id in range(n_agents):
avail_actions = env.get_avail_agent_actions(agent_id)
avail_actions_ind = np.nonzero(avail_actions)[0]
action = np.random.choice(avail_actions_ind)
actions.append(action)
reward, terminated, _ = env.step(actions)
episode_reward += reward
print("Total reward in episode {} = {}".format(e, episode_reward))
env.close()
You can also run SMAC environments in RLlib, which includes scalable algorithms such as PPO and IMPALA. Check out the example code here.
Thanks to Rodrigo de Lazcano, SMAC now supports PettingZoo API and PyGame environment rendering. Check out the example code here.