tar_stan_gq()
creates targets to run
the generated quantities of a Stan model and save
draws and summaries separately.
Usage
tar_stan_gq(
name,
stan_files,
data = list(),
fitted_params,
compile = c("original", "copy"),
quiet = TRUE,
stdout = NULL,
stderr = NULL,
dir = NULL,
pedantic = FALSE,
include_paths = NULL,
cpp_options = list(),
stanc_options = list(),
force_recompile = FALSE,
seed = NULL,
output_dir = NULL,
sig_figs = NULL,
parallel_chains = getOption("mc.cores", 1),
threads_per_chain = NULL,
variables = NULL,
variables_fit = NULL,
summaries = list(),
summary_args = list(),
return_draws = TRUE,
return_summary = TRUE,
draws = NULL,
summary = NULL,
tidy_eval = targets::tar_option_get("tidy_eval"),
packages = targets::tar_option_get("packages"),
library = targets::tar_option_get("library"),
format = "qs",
format_df = "fst_tbl",
repository = targets::tar_option_get("repository"),
error = targets::tar_option_get("error"),
memory = targets::tar_option_get("memory"),
garbage_collection = targets::tar_option_get("garbage_collection"),
deployment = targets::tar_option_get("deployment"),
priority = targets::tar_option_get("priority"),
resources = targets::tar_option_get("resources"),
storage = targets::tar_option_get("storage"),
retrieval = targets::tar_option_get("retrieval"),
cue = targets::tar_option_get("cue"),
description = targets::tar_option_get("description")
)
Arguments
- name
Symbol, base name for the collection of targets. Serves as a prefix for target names.
- stan_files
Character vector of Stan model files. If you supply multiple files, each model will run on the one shared dataset generated by the code in
data
. If you supply an unnamed vector,fs::path_ext_remove(basename(stan_files))
will be used as target name suffixes. Ifstan_files
is a named vector, the suffixed will come fromnames(stan_files)
.- data
(multiple options) The data to use for the variables specified in the data block of the Stan program. One of the following:
A named list of R objects with the names corresponding to variables declared in the data block of the Stan program. Internally this list is then written to JSON for CmdStan using
write_stan_json()
. Seewrite_stan_json()
for details on the conversions performed on R objects before they are passed to Stan.A path to a data file compatible with CmdStan (JSON or R dump). See the appendices in the CmdStan guide for details on using these formats.
NULL
or an empty list if the Stan program has no data block.
- fitted_params
Symbol, name of a
CmdStanFit
object computed in a previous target: for example, the*_mcmc_*
target fromtar_stan_mcmc()
. Must be a subclass that$generate_quantities()
can accept asfitted_params
.- compile
(logical) Do compilation? The default is
TRUE
. IfFALSE
compilation can be done later via the$compile()
method.- quiet
(logical) Should the verbose output from CmdStan during compilation be suppressed? The default is
TRUE
, but if you encounter an error we recommend trying again withquiet=FALSE
to see more of the output.- stdout
Character of length 1, file path to write the stdout stream of the model when it runs. Set to
NULL
to print to the console. Set toR.utils::nullfile()
to suppress stdout. Does not apply to messages, warnings, or errors.- stderr
Character of length 1, file path to write the stderr stream of the model when it runs. Set to
NULL
to print to the console. Set toR.utils::nullfile()
to suppress stderr. Does not apply to messages, warnings, or errors.- dir
(string) The path to the directory in which to store the CmdStan executable (or
.hpp
file if using$save_hpp_file()
). The default is the same location as the Stan program.- pedantic
(logical) Should pedantic mode be turned on? The default is
FALSE
. Pedantic mode attempts to warn you about potential issues in your Stan program beyond syntax errors. For details see the Pedantic mode chapter in the Stan Reference Manual. Note: to do a pedantic check for a model without compiling it or for a model that is already compiled the$check_syntax()
method can be used instead.- include_paths
(character vector) Paths to directories where Stan should look for files specified in
#include
directives in the Stan program.- cpp_options
(list) Any makefile options to be used when compiling the model (
STAN_THREADS
,STAN_MPI
,STAN_OPENCL
, etc.). Anything you would otherwise write in themake/local
file. For an example of using threading see the Stan case study Reduce Sum: A Minimal Example.- stanc_options
(list) Any Stan-to-C++ transpiler options to be used when compiling the model. See the Examples section below as well as the
stanc
chapter of the CmdStan Guide for more details on available options: https://mc-stan.org/docs/cmdstan-guide/stanc.html.- force_recompile
(logical) Should the model be recompiled even if was not modified since last compiled. The default is
FALSE
. Can also be set via a globalcmdstanr_force_recompile
option.- seed
(positive integer(s)) A seed for the (P)RNG to pass to CmdStan. In the case of multi-chain sampling the single
seed
will automatically be augmented by the the run (chain) ID so that each chain uses a different seed. The exception is the transformed data block, which defaults to using same seed for all chains so that the same data is generated for all chains if RNG functions are used. The only timeseed
should be specified as a vector (one element per chain) is if RNG functions are used in transformed data and the goal is to generate different data for each chain.- output_dir
(string) A path to a directory where CmdStan should write its output CSV files. For interactive use this can typically be left at
NULL
(temporary directory) since CmdStanR makes the CmdStan output (posterior draws and diagnostics) available in R via methods of the fitted model objects. The behavior ofoutput_dir
is as follows:If
NULL
(the default), then the CSV files are written to a temporary directory and only saved permanently if the user calls one of the$save_*
methods of the fitted model object (e.g.,$save_output_files()
). These temporary files are removed when the fitted model object is garbage collected (manually or automatically).If a path, then the files are created in
output_dir
with names corresponding to the defaults used by$save_output_files()
.
- sig_figs
(positive integer) The number of significant figures used when storing the output values. By default, CmdStan represent the output values with 6 significant figures. The upper limit for
sig_figs
is 18. Increasing this value will result in larger output CSV files and thus an increased usage of disk space.- parallel_chains
(positive integer) The maximum number of MCMC chains to run in parallel. If
parallel_chains
is not specified then the default is to look for the option"mc.cores"
, which can be set for an entire R session byoptions(mc.cores=value)
. If the"mc.cores"
option has not been set then the default is1
.- threads_per_chain
(positive integer) If the model was compiled with threading support, the number of threads to use in parallelized sections within an MCMC chain (e.g., when using the Stan functions
reduce_sum()
ormap_rect()
). This is in contrast withparallel_chains
, which specifies the number of chains to run in parallel. The actual number of CPU cores used isparallel_chains*threads_per_chain
. For an example of using threading see the Stan case study Reduce Sum: A Minimal Example.- variables
(character vector) The variables to include.
- variables_fit
Character vector of variables to include in the big
CmdStanFit
object returned by the model fit target. Thevariables
argument, by contrast, is for the"draws"
target only. The"draws"
target can only access the variables in theCmdStanFit
target. Control the variables in each with thevariables
andvariables_fit
arguments.- summaries
Optional list of summary functions passed to
...
inposterior::summarize_draws()
through$summary()
on theCmdStanFit
object.- summary_args
Optional list of summary function arguments passed to
.args
inposterior::summarize_draws()
through$summary()
on theCmdStanFit
object.- return_draws
Logical, whether to create a target for posterior draws. Saves
posterior::as_draws_df(fit$draws())
to a compressedtibble
. Convenient, but duplicates storage.- return_summary
Logical, whether to create a target for
fit$summary()
.- draws
Deprecated on 2022-07-22. Use
return_draws
instead.- summary
Deprecated on 2022-07-22. Use
return_summary
instead.- tidy_eval
Logical, whether to enable tidy evaluation when interpreting
command
andpattern
. IfTRUE
, you can use the "bang-bang" operator!!
to programmatically insert the values of global objects.- packages
Character vector of packages to load right before the target runs or the output data is reloaded for downstream targets. Use
tar_option_set()
to set packages globally for all subsequent targets you define.- library
Character vector of library paths to try when loading
packages
.- format
Character of length 1, storage format of the data frame of posterior summaries. We recommend efficient data frame formats such as
"feather"
or"aws_parquet"
. For more on storage formats, see the help file oftargets::tar_target()
.- format_df
Character of length 1, storage format of the data frame targets such as posterior draws. We recommend efficient data frame formats such as
"feather"
or"aws_parquet"
. For more on storage formats, see the help file oftargets::tar_target()
.- repository
Character of length 1, remote repository for target storage. Choices:
"local"
: file system of the local machine."aws"
: Amazon Web Services (AWS) S3 bucket. Can be configured with a non-AWS S3 bucket using theendpoint
argument oftar_resources_aws()
, but versioning capabilities may be lost in doing so. See the cloud storage section of https://books.ropensci.org/targets/data.html for details for instructions."gcp"
: Google Cloud Platform storage bucket. See the cloud storage section of https://books.ropensci.org/targets/data.html for details for instructions.
Note: if
repository
is not"local"
andformat
is"file"
then the target should create a single output file. That output file is uploaded to the cloud and tracked for changes where it exists in the cloud. The local file is deleted after the target runs.- error
Character of length 1, what to do if the target stops and throws an error. Options:
"stop"
: the whole pipeline stops and throws an error."continue"
: the whole pipeline keeps going."abridge"
: any currently running targets keep running, but no new targets launch after that. (Visit https://books.ropensci.org/targets/debugging.html to learn how to debug targets using saved workspaces.)"null"
: The errored target continues and returnsNULL
. The data hash is deliberately wrong so the target is not up to date for the next run of the pipeline.
- memory
Character of length 1, memory strategy. If
"persistent"
, the target stays in memory until the end of the pipeline (unlessstorage
is"worker"
, in which casetargets
unloads the value from memory right after storing it in order to avoid sending copious data over a network). If"transient"
, the target gets unloaded after every new target completes. Either way, the target gets automatically loaded into memory whenever another target needs the value. For cloud-based dynamic files (e.g.format = "file"
withrepository = "aws"
), this memory strategy applies to the temporary local copy of the file:"persistent"
means it remains until the end of the pipeline and is then deleted, and"transient"
means it gets deleted as soon as possible. The former conserves bandwidth, and the latter conserves local storage.- garbage_collection
Logical, whether to run
base::gc()
just before the target runs.- deployment
Character of length 1. If
deployment
is"main"
, then the target will run on the central controlling R process. Otherwise, ifdeployment
is"worker"
and you set up the pipeline with distributed/parallel computing, then the target runs on a parallel worker. For more on distributed/parallel computing intargets
, please visit https://books.ropensci.org/targets/crew.html.- priority
Numeric of length 1 between 0 and 1. Controls which targets get deployed first when multiple competing targets are ready simultaneously. Targets with priorities closer to 1 get dispatched earlier (and polled earlier in
tar_make_future()
).- resources
Object returned by
tar_resources()
with optional settings for high-performance computing functionality, alternative data storage formats, and other optional capabilities oftargets
. Seetar_resources()
for details.- storage
Character of length 1, only relevant to
tar_make_clustermq()
andtar_make_future()
. Must be one of the following values:"main"
: the target's return value is sent back to the host machine and saved/uploaded locally."worker"
: the worker saves/uploads the value."none"
: almost never recommended. It is only for niche situations, e.g. the data needs to be loaded explicitly from another language. If you do use it, then the return value of the target is totally ignored when the target ends, but each downstream target still attempts to load the data file (except whenretrieval = "none"
).If you select
storage = "none"
, then the return value of the target's command is ignored, and the data is not saved automatically. As with dynamic files (format = "file"
) it is the responsibility of the user to write to the data store from inside the target.The distinguishing feature of
storage = "none"
(as opposed toformat = "file"
) is that in the general case, downstream targets will automatically try to load the data from the data store as a dependency. As a corollary,storage = "none"
is completely unnecessary ifformat
is"file"
.
- retrieval
Character of length 1, only relevant to
tar_make_clustermq()
andtar_make_future()
. Must be one of the following values:"main"
: the target's dependencies are loaded on the host machine and sent to the worker before the target runs."worker"
: the worker loads the targets dependencies."none"
: the dependencies are not loaded at all. This choice is almost never recommended. It is only for niche situations, e.g. the data needs to be loaded explicitly from another language.
- cue
An optional object from
tar_cue()
to customize the rules that decide whether the target is up to date.- description
Character of length 1, a custom free-form human-readable text description of the target. Descriptions appear as target labels in functions like
tar_manifest()
andtar_visnetwork()
, and they let you select subsets of targets for thenames
argument of functions liketar_make()
. For example,tar_manifest(names = tar_described_as(starts_with("survival model")))
lists all the targets whose descriptions start with the character string"survival model"
.
Value
tar_stan_gq()
returns list of target objects.
See the "Target objects" section for
background.
The target names use the name
argument as a prefix, and the individual
elements of stan_files
appear in the suffixes where applicable.
As an example, the specific target objects returned by
tar_stan_gq(name = x, stan_files = "y.stan", ...)
are as follows.
x_file_y
: reproducibly track the Stan model file. Returns a character vector with the paths to the model file and compiled executable.x_lines_y
: read the Stan model file for safe transport to parallel workers. Omitted ifcompile = "original"
. Returns a character vector of lines in the model file.x_data
: run the R expression in thedata
argument to produce a Stan dataset for the model. Returns a Stan data list.x_gq_y
: run generated quantities on the model and the dataset. Returns acmdstanr
CmdStanGQ
object with all the results.x_draws_y
: extract draws fromx_gq_y
. Omitted ifdraws = FALSE
. Returns a tidy data frame of draws.x_summary_y
: extract compact summaries fromx_gq_y
. Returns a tidy data frame of summaries. Omitted ifsummary = FALSE
.
Details
Most of the arguments are passed to the $compile()
,
$generate_quantities()
, and $summary()
methods
of the CmdStanModel
class. If you
previously compiled the model in an upstream tar_stan_compile()
target, then the model should not recompile.
Target objects
Most stantargets
functions are target factories,
which means they return target objects
or lists of target objects.
Target objects represent skippable steps of the analysis pipeline
as described at https://books.ropensci.org/targets/.
Please read the walkthrough at
https://books.ropensci.org/targets/walkthrough.html
to understand the role of target objects in analysis pipelines.
For developers, https://wlandau.github.io/targetopia/contributing.html#target-factories explains target factories (functions like this one which generate targets) and the design specification at https://books.ropensci.org/targets-design/ details the structure and composition of target objects.
See also
Other generated quantities:
tar_stan_gq_rep_draws()
,
tar_stan_gq_rep_summary()
Examples
if (Sys.getenv("TAR_LONG_EXAMPLES") == "true") {
targets::tar_dir({ # tar_dir() runs code from a temporary directory.
targets::tar_script({
library(stantargets)
# Do not use temporary storage for stan files in real projects
# or else your targets will always rerun.
path <- tempfile(pattern = "", fileext = ".stan")
tar_stan_example_file(path = path)
list(
tar_stan_mcmc(
your_model,
stan_files = c(x = path),
data = tar_stan_example_data(),
stdout = R.utils::nullfile(),
stderr = R.utils::nullfile()
),
tar_stan_gq(
custom_gq,
stan_files = path, # Can be a different model.
fitted_params = your_model_mcmc_x,
data = your_model_data, # Can be a different dataset.
stdout = R.utils::nullfile(),
stderr = R.utils::nullfile()
)
)
}, ask = FALSE)
targets::tar_make()
})
}