@@ -181,9 +181,21 @@ The complete code of this example can be found :githublink:`here <examples/nas/m
...
@@ -181,9 +181,21 @@ The complete code of this example can be found :githublink:`here <examples/nas/m
Visualize the Experiment
Visualize the Experiment
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Users can visualize their experiment in the same way as visualizing a normal hyper-parameter tuning experiment. For example, open ``localhost::8081`` in your browser, 8081 is the port that you set in ``exp.run``. Please refer to `here <../Tutorial/WebUI.rst>`__ for details.
Users can visualize their experiment in the same way as visualizing a normal hyper-parameter tuning experiment. For example, open ``localhost:8081`` in your browser, 8081 is the port that you set in ``exp.run``. Please refer to `here <../Tutorial/WebUI.rst>`__ for details.
We support visualizing models with 3rd-party visualization engines (like `Netron <https://netron.app/>`__). This can be used by clicking ``Visualization`` in detail panel for each trial. Note that current visualization is based on `onnx <https://onnx.ai/>`__ , thus visualization is not feasible if the model cannot be exported into onnx. Built-in evaluators (e.g., Classification) will automatically export the model into a file. For your own evaluator, you need to save your file into ``$NNI_OUTPUT_DIR/model.onnx`` to make this work.
We support visualizing models with 3rd-party visualization engines (like `Netron <https://netron.app/>`__). This can be used by clicking ``Visualization`` in detail panel for each trial. Note that current visualization is based on `onnx <https://onnx.ai/>`__ , thus visualization is not feasible if the model cannot be exported into onnx.
Built-in evaluators (e.g., Classification) will automatically export the model into a file. For your own evaluator, you need to save your file into ``$NNI_OUTPUT_DIR/model.onnx`` to make this work. For instance,