Project: gpytorch

An implementation of Gaussian Processes in Pytorch

Project Details

Latest version
1.11
Home Page
https://gpytorch.ai
PyPI Page
https://pypi.org/project/gpytorch/

Project Popularity

PageRank
0.0028407843549837658
Number of downloads
126429

GPyTorch


Test Suite Documentation Status License

Python Version Conda PyPI

GPyTorch is a Gaussian process library implemented using PyTorch. GPyTorch is designed for creating scalable, flexible, and modular Gaussian process models with ease.

Internally, GPyTorch differs from many existing approaches to GP inference by performing most inference operations using numerical linear algebra techniques like preconditioned conjugate gradients. Implementing a scalable GP method is as simple as providing a matrix multiplication routine with the kernel matrix and its derivative via our LinearOperator interface, or by composing many of our already existing LinearOperators. This allows not only for easy implementation of popular scalable GP techniques, but often also for significantly improved utilization of GPU computing compared to solvers based on the Cholesky decomposition.

GPyTorch provides (1) significant GPU acceleration (through MVM based inference); (2) state-of-the-art implementations of the latest algorithmic advances for scalability and flexibility (SKI/KISS-GP, stochastic Lanczos expansions, LOVE, SKIP, stochastic variational deep kernel learning, ...); (3) easy integration with deep learning frameworks.

Examples, Tutorials, and Documentation

See our documentation, examples, tutorials on how to construct all sorts of models in GPyTorch.

Installation

Requirements:

  • Python >= 3.8
  • PyTorch >= 1.11

Install GPyTorch using pip or conda:

pip install gpytorch
conda install gpytorch -c gpytorch

(To use packages globally but install GPyTorch as a user-only package, use pip install --user above.)

Latest (Unstable) Version

To upgrade to the latest (unstable) version, run

pip install --upgrade git+https://github.com/cornellius-gp/linear_operator.git
pip install --upgrade git+https://github.com/cornellius-gp/gpytorch.git

Development version

If you are contributing a pull request, it is best to perform a manual installation:

git clone https://github.com/cornellius-gp/gpytorch.git
cd gpytorch
pip install -e .[dev,examples,test,pyro,keops]

To generate the documentation locally, you will also need to run the following command from the linear_operator folder:

pip install -r docs/requirements.txt

ArchLinux Package

Note: Experimental AUR package. For most users, we recommend installation by conda or pip.

GPyTorch is also available on the ArchLinux User Repository (AUR). You can install it with an AUR helper, like yay, as follows:

yay -S python-gpytorch

To discuss any issues related to this AUR package refer to the comments section of python-gpytorch.

Citing Us

If you use GPyTorch, please cite the following papers:

Gardner, Jacob R., Geoff Pleiss, David Bindel, Kilian Q. Weinberger, and Andrew Gordon Wilson. "GPyTorch: Blackbox Matrix-Matrix Gaussian Process Inference with GPU Acceleration." In Advances in Neural Information Processing Systems (2018).

@inproceedings{gardner2018gpytorch,
  title={GPyTorch: Blackbox Matrix-Matrix Gaussian Process Inference with GPU Acceleration},
  author={Gardner, Jacob R and Pleiss, Geoff and Bindel, David and Weinberger, Kilian Q and Wilson, Andrew Gordon},
  booktitle={Advances in Neural Information Processing Systems},
  year={2018}
}

Contributing

See the contributing guidelines CONTRIBUTING.md for information on submitting issues and pull requests.

The Team

GPyTorch is primarily maintained by:

We would like to thank our other contributors including (but not limited to) Eytan Bakshy, Wesley Maddox, Ke Alexander Wang, Ruihan Wu, Sait Cakmak, David Eriksson, Sam Daulton, Martin Jankowiak, Sam Stanton, Zitong Zhou, David Arbour, Karthik Rajkumar, Bram Wallace, Jared Frank, and many more!

Acknowledgements

Development of GPyTorch is supported by funding from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, the National Science Foundation, SAP, the Simons Foundation, and the Gatsby Charitable Trust.

License

GPyTorch is MIT licensed.