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Version: 1.0.8

LightGBM

What is LightGBM

LightGBM is an open-source, distributed, high-performance gradient boosting (GBDT, GBRT, GBM, or MART) framework. This framework specializes in creating high-quality and GPU-enabled decision tree algorithms for ranking, classification, and many other machine learning tasks. LightGBM is part of Microsoft's DMTK project.

Advantages of LightGBM

  • Composability: LightGBM models can be incorporated into existing SparkML pipelines and used for batch, streaming, and serving workloads.
  • Performance: LightGBM on Spark is 10-30% faster than SparkML on the Higgs dataset and achieves a 15% increase in AUC. Parallel experiments have verified that LightGBM can achieve a linear speed-up by using multiple machines for training in specific settings.
  • Functionality: LightGBM offers a wide array of tunable parameters, that one can use to customize their decision tree system. LightGBM on Spark also supports new types of problems such as quantile regression.
  • Cross platform: LightGBM on Spark is available on Spark, PySpark, and SparklyR.

LightGBM Usage

  • LightGBMClassifier: used for building classification models. For example, to predict whether a company bankrupts or not, we could build a binary classification model with LightGBMClassifier.
  • LightGBMRegressor: used for building regression models. For example, to predict housing price, we could build a regression model with LightGBMRegressor.
  • LightGBMRanker: used for building ranking models. For example, to predict the relevance of website search results, we could build a ranking model with LightGBMRanker.

Use LightGBMClassifier to train a classification model

In this example, we use LightGBM to build a classification model in order to predict bankruptcy.

Read dataset

from synapse.ml.core.platform import *
df = (
spark.read.format("csv")
.option("header", True)
.option("inferSchema", True)
.load(
"wasbs://publicwasb@mmlspark.blob.core.windows.net/company_bankruptcy_prediction_data.csv"
)
)
# print dataset size
print("records read: " + str(df.count()))
print("Schema: ")
df.printSchema()
display(df)

Split the dataset into train and test sets

train, test = df.randomSplit([0.85, 0.15], seed=1)

Add a featurizer to convert features into vectors

from pyspark.ml.feature import VectorAssembler

feature_cols = df.columns[1:]
featurizer = VectorAssembler(inputCols=feature_cols, outputCol="features")
train_data = featurizer.transform(train)["Bankrupt?", "features"]
test_data = featurizer.transform(test)["Bankrupt?", "features"]

Check if the data is unbalanced

display(train_data.groupBy("Bankrupt?").count())

Model Training

from synapse.ml.lightgbm import LightGBMClassifier

model = LightGBMClassifier(
objective="binary", featuresCol="features", labelCol="Bankrupt?", isUnbalance=True
)
model = model.fit(train_data)

"saveNativeModel" allows you to extract the underlying lightGBM model for fast deployment after you train on Spark.

from synapse.ml.lightgbm import LightGBMClassificationModel

if running_on_synapse():
model.saveNativeModel("/models/lgbmclassifier.model")
model = LightGBMClassificationModel.loadNativeModelFromFile(
"/models/lgbmclassifier.model"
)
if running_on_synapse_internal():
model.saveNativeModel("Files/models/lgbmclassifier.model")
model = LightGBMClassificationModel.loadNativeModelFromFile(
"Files/models/lgbmclassifier.model"
)
else:
model.saveNativeModel("/tmp/lgbmclassifier.model")
model = LightGBMClassificationModel.loadNativeModelFromFile(
"/tmp/lgbmclassifier.model"
)

Visualize feature importance

import pandas as pd
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt

feature_importances = model.getFeatureImportances()
fi = pd.Series(feature_importances, index=feature_cols)
fi = fi.sort_values(ascending=True)
f_index = fi.index
f_values = fi.values

# print feature importances
print("f_index:", f_index)
print("f_values:", f_values)

# plot
x_index = list(range(len(fi)))
x_index = [x / len(fi) for x in x_index]
plt.rcParams["figure.figsize"] = (20, 20)
plt.barh(
x_index, f_values, height=0.028, align="center", color="tan", tick_label=f_index
)
plt.xlabel("importances")
plt.ylabel("features")
plt.show()

Generate predictions with the model

predictions = model.transform(test_data)
predictions.limit(10).toPandas()
from synapse.ml.train import ComputeModelStatistics

metrics = ComputeModelStatistics(
evaluationMetric="classification",
labelCol="Bankrupt?",
scoredLabelsCol="prediction",
).transform(predictions)
display(metrics)

Use LightGBMRegressor to train a quantile regression model

In this example, we show how to use LightGBM to build a regression model.

Read dataset

triazines = spark.read.format("libsvm").load(
"wasbs://publicwasb@mmlspark.blob.core.windows.net/triazines.scale.svmlight"
)
# print some basic info
print("records read: " + str(triazines.count()))
print("Schema: ")
triazines.printSchema()
display(triazines.limit(10))

Split dataset into train and test sets

train, test = triazines.randomSplit([0.85, 0.15], seed=1)

Train the model using LightGBMRegressor

from synapse.ml.lightgbm import LightGBMRegressor

model = LightGBMRegressor(
objective="quantile", alpha=0.2, learningRate=0.3, numLeaves=31
).fit(train)
print(model.getFeatureImportances())

Generate predictions with the model

scoredData = model.transform(test)
display(scoredData)
from synapse.ml.train import ComputeModelStatistics

metrics = ComputeModelStatistics(
evaluationMetric="regression", labelCol="label", scoresCol="prediction"
).transform(scoredData)
display(metrics)

Use LightGBMRanker to train a ranking model

Read the dataset

df = spark.read.format("parquet").load(
"wasbs://publicwasb@mmlspark.blob.core.windows.net/lightGBMRanker_train.parquet"
)
# print some basic info
print("records read: " + str(df.count()))
print("Schema: ")
df.printSchema()
display(df.limit(10))

Train the ranking model using LightGBMRanker.

from synapse.ml.lightgbm import LightGBMRanker

features_col = "features"
query_col = "query"
label_col = "labels"
lgbm_ranker = LightGBMRanker(
labelCol=label_col,
featuresCol=features_col,
groupCol=query_col,
predictionCol="preds",
leafPredictionCol="leafPreds",
featuresShapCol="importances",
repartitionByGroupingColumn=True,
numLeaves=32,
numIterations=200,
evalAt=[1, 3, 5],
metric="ndcg",
)
lgbm_ranker_model = lgbm_ranker.fit(df)

Generate predictions with the model

dt = spark.read.format("parquet").load(
"wasbs://publicwasb@mmlspark.blob.core.windows.net/lightGBMRanker_test.parquet"
)
predictions = lgbm_ranker_model.transform(dt)
predictions.limit(10).toPandas()