/leela-zero

Go engine with no human-provided knowledge, modeled after the AlphaGo Zero paper.

Primary LanguageC++GNU General Public License v3.0GPL-3.0

What

A Go program with no human provided knowledge. Using MCTS (but without Monte Carlo playouts) and a deep residual convolutional neural network stack.

This is a fairly faithful reimplementation of the system described in the Alpha Go Zero paper "Mastering the Game of Go without Human Knowledge". For all intents and purposes, it is an open source AlphaGo Zero.

Wait, what

If you are wondering what the catch is: you still need the network weights. No network weights are in this repository. If you manage to obtain the AlphaGo Zero weights, this program will be about as strong, provided you also obtain a few Tensor Processing Units. Lacking those TPUs, I'd recommend a top of the line GPU - it's not exactly the same, but the result would still be an engine that is far stronger than the top humans.

Gimme the weights

Recomputing the AlphaGo Zero weights will take about 1700 years on commodity hardware, see for example: http://computer-go.org/pipermail/computer-go/2017-October/010307.html

One reason for publishing this program is that we are running a public, distributed effort to repeat the work. Working together, and especially when starting on a smaller scale, it will take less than 1700 years to get a good network (which you can feed into this program, suddenly making it strong).

I want to help

You need a PC with a GPU, i.e. a discrete graphics card made by NVIDIA or AMD, preferably not too old, and with the most recent drivers installed.

Windows

Head to the Github releases page at https://github.com/gcp/leela-zero/releases, download the latest release, unzip, and launch autogtp.exe. It will connect to the server automatically and do its work in the background, uploading results after each game. You can just close the autogtp window to stop it.

macOS and Linux

Follow the instructions below to compile the leelaz binary, then go into the autogtp subdirectory and follow the instructions there to build the autogtp binary. Copy the leelaz binary into the autogtp dir, and launch autogtp.

I just want to play right now

A small network with some very limited training from human games is available here: https://sjeng.org/zero/best_v1.txt.zip.

It's not very strong right now (and it's trained from human games, boo!). It will clobber gnugo, but lose to any serious engine. Hey, you said you just wanted to play right now!

I plan to update this network with more or better training when available - just feeding it into this program will make it stronger. Unzip it and specify the weights.txt file on the command line with the -w option.

Compiling

Requirements

  • GCC, Clang or MSVC, any C++14 compiler
  • boost 1.58.x or later (libboost-all-dev on Debian/Ubuntu)
  • BLAS Library: OpenBLAS (libopenblas-dev) or (optionally) Intel MKL
  • zlib library (zlib1g & zlib1g-dev on Debian/Ubuntu)
  • Standard OpenCL C headers (opencl-headers on Debian/Ubuntu, or at https://github.com/KhronosGroup/OpenCL-Headers/tree/master/opencl22/)
  • OpenCL ICD loader (ocl-icd-libopencl1 on Debian/Ubuntu, or reference implementation at https://github.com/KhronosGroup/OpenCL-ICD-Loader)
  • An OpenCL capable device, preferably a very, very fast GPU, with drivers (OpenCL 1.2 support should be enough, even OpenCL 1.1 might work)
  • The program has been tested on Windows, Linux and macOS.

Example of compiling and running - Ubuntu

# Test for OpenCL support & compatibility
sudo apt install clinfo && clinfo

# Clone github repo
git clone https://github.com/gcp/leela-zero
cd leela-zero/src
sudo apt install libboost-all-dev libopenblas-dev opencl-headers ocl-icd-libopencl1 ocl-icd-opencl-dev zlib1g-dev
make
cd ..
wget https://sjeng.org/zero/best_v1.txt.zip
unzip best_v1.txt.zip
src/leelaz --weights weights.txt

Example of compiling and running - macOS

# Clone github repo
git clone https://github.com/gcp/leela-zero
cd leela-zero/src
brew install boost
make
cd ..
curl -O https://sjeng.org/zero/best_v1.txt.zip
unzip https://sjeng.org/zero/best_v1.txt.zip
src/leelaz --weights weights.txt

Example of compiling and running - Windows

# Clone github repo
git clone https://github.com/gcp/leela-zero
cd leela-zero
cd msvc
Double-click the leela-zero2015.sln or leela-zero2017.sln corresponding
to the Visual Studio version you have.
# Build from Visual Studio 2015 or 2017
# Download and extract <https://sjeng.org/zero/best_v1.txt.zip> to msvc/x64/Release
# msvc/x64/Release/leela-zero --weights weights.txt

Usage

The engine supports the GTP protocol, version 2, specified at: https://www.lysator.liu.se/~gunnar/gtp/gtp2-spec-draft2/gtp2-spec.html

Leela Zero is not meant to be used directly. You need a graphical interface for it, which will interface with Leela Zero through the GTP protocol.

Sabaki (http://sabaki.yichuanshen.de/) is a very nice looking GUI with GTP 2 capability. It should work with this engine. A lot of go software can interface to an engine via GTP, so look around.

Add the --gtp commandline option on the engine command line to enable Leela Zero's GTP support. You will need a weights file, specify that with the -w option.

All required commands are supported, as well as the tournament subset, and "loadsgf". The full set can be seen with "list_commands". The time control can be specified over GTP via the time_settings command. The kgs-time_settings extension is also supported. These have to be supplied by the GTP 2 interface, not via the command line!

Weights format

The weights file is a text file with each line containing a row of coefficients. The layout of the network is as in the AlphaGo Zero paper, but any number of residual blocks is allowed, and any number of outputs (filters) per layer, as long as the latter is the same for all residual layers. The program will autodetect the amounts on startup. The first line contains a version number.

  • Convolutional layers have 2 weight rows:
    1. convolution weights
    2. channel biases
  • Batchnorm layers have 2 weight rows:
    1. batchnorm means
    2. batchnorm variances
  • Innerproduct (fully connected) layers have 2 weight rows:
    1. layer weights
    2. output biases

The convolution weights are in [output, input, filter_size, filter_size] order, the fully connected layer weights are in [output, input] order. The residual tower is first, followed by the policy head, and then the value head. All convolution filters are 3x3 except for the ones at the start of the policy and value head, which are 1x1 (as in the paper).

There are 18 inputs to the first layer, instead of 17 as in the paper. The original AlphaGo Zero design has a slight imbalance in that it is easier for the white player to see the board edge (due to how padding works in neural networks). This has been fixed in Leela Zero. The inputs are:

1) Side to move stones at time T=0
2) Side to move stones at time T=-1  (0 if T=0)
...
8) Side to move stones at time T=-8  (0 if T<=7)
9) Other side stones at time T=0
10) Other side stones at time T=-1   (0 if T=0)
...
16) Other side stones at time T=-8   (0 if T<=7)
17) All 1 if black is to move, 0 otherwise
18) All 1 if white is to move, 0 otherwise

Each of these forms a 19 x 19 bit plane.

In the training/caffe directory there is a zero.prototxt file which contains a description of the full 40 residual block design, in (NVIDIA)-Caffe protobuff format. It can be used to set up nv-caffe for training a suitable network. The zero_mini.prototxt file describes a smaller 12 residual block case. The training/tf directory contains a 6 residual block version in TensorFlow format, in the tfprocess.py file.

Training

Getting the data

At the end of the game, you can send Leela Zero a "dump_training" command, followed by the winner of the game (either "white" or "black") and a filename, e.g:

dump_training white train.txt

This will save (append) the training data to disk, in the format described below, and compressed with gzip.

Training data is reset on a new game.

Supervised learning

Leela can convert a database of concatenated SGF games into a datafile suitable for learning:

dump_supervised sgffile.sgf train.txt

This will cause a sequence of gzip compressed files to be generated, starting with the name train.txt and containing training data generated from the specified SGF, suitable for use in a Deep Learning framework.

Training data format

The training data consists of files with the following data, all in text format:

  • 16 lines of hexadecimal strings, each 361 bits longs, corresponding to the first 16 input planes from the previous section
  • 1 line with 1 number indicating who is to move, 0=black, 1=white, from which the last 2 input planes can be reconstructed
  • 1 line with 362 floating point numbers, indicating the search probabilities (visit counts) at the end of the search for the move in question. The last number is the probability of passing.
  • 1 line with either 1 or -1, corresponding to the outcome of the game for the player to move

Running the training

For training a new network, you can use an existing framework (Caffe, TensorFlow, PyTorch, Theano), with a set of training data as described above. You still need to contruct a model description (2 examples are provided for Caffe), parse the input file format, and outputs weights in the proper format.

There is a complete implementation for TensorFlow in the training/tf directory.

Supervised learning with TensorFlow

This requires a working installation of TensorFlow 1.4 or later:

src/leelaz -w weights.txt
dump_supervised bigsgf.sgf train.out
exit
training/tf/parse.py train.out

This will run and regularly dump Leela Zero weight files to disk, as well as snapshots of the learning state numbered by the batch number. If interrupted, training can be resumed with:

training/tf/parse.py train.out leelaz-model-batchnumber

Todo

  • List of package names for more distros
  • A real build system like CMake would nice
  • Provide or link to self-play tooling
  • CPU support for Xeon Phi and for people without a GPU
  • Faster GPU usage via batching
  • Faster GPU usage via Winograd transforms
  • CUDA specific version using cuDNN
  • AMD specific version using MIOpen
  • Faster GPU usage via supporting multiple GPU (not very urgent, we need to generate the data & network first and this can be done with multiple processes each bound to a GPU)

Related links

License

The code is released under the GPLv3 or later, except for ThreadPool.h, half.hpp and cl2.hpp, which have specific licenses (compatible with GPLv3) mentioned in those files.