Revamped codebase of EvalAI Frontend
EvalAI is an open source web application that helps researchers, students and data-scientists to create, collaborate and participate in various AI challenges organized round the globe.
In recent years, it has become increasingly difficult to compare an algorithm solving a given task with other existing approaches. These comparisons suffer from minor differences in algorithm implementation, use of non-standard dataset splits and different evaluation metrics. By providing a central leaderboard and submission interface, we make it easier for researchers to reproduce the results mentioned in the paper and perform reliable & accurate quantitative analysis. By providing swift and robust backends based on map-reduce frameworks that speed up evaluation on the fly, EvalAI aims to make it easier for researchers to reproduce results from technical papers and perform reliable and accurate analyses.
A question we’re often asked is: Doesn’t Kaggle already do this? The central differences are:
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Custom Evaluation Protocols and Phases: We have designed versatile backend framework that can support user-defined evaluation metrics, various evaluation phases, private and public leaderboard.
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Faster Evaluation: The backend evaluation pipeline is engineered so that submissions can be evaluated parallelly using multiple cores on multiple machines via mapreduce frameworks offering a significant performance boost over similar web AI-challenge platforms.
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Portability: Since the platform is open-source, users have the freedom to host challenges on their own private servers rather than having to explicitly depend on Cloud Services such as AWS, Azure, etc.
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Easy Hosting: Hosting a challenge is streamlined. One can create the challenge on EvalAI using the intuitive UI (work-in-progress) or using zip configuration file.
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Centralized Leaderboard: Challenge Organizers whether host their challenge on EvalAI or forked version of EvalAI, they can send the results to main EvalAI server. This helps to build a centralized platform to keep track of different challenges.
Our ultimate goal is to build a centralized platform to host, participate and collaborate in AI challenges organized around the globe and we hope to help in benchmarking progress in AI.
Some background: Last year, the Visual Question Answering Challenge (VQA) 2016 was hosted on some other platform, and on average evaluation would take ~10 minutes. EvalAI hosted this year's VQA Challenge 2017. This year, the dataset for the VQA Challenge 2017 is twice as large. Despite this, we’ve found that our parallelized backend only takes ~130 seconds to evaluate on the whole test set VQA 2.0 dataset.
Use Docker Compose to run all the components of EvalAI-ngx together. The steps are:
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Get the source code on to your machine via git.
git clone https://github.com/Cloud-CV/EvalAI-ngx.git evalai-ngx && cd evalai-ngx
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Build and run the Docker containers. This might take a while. You should be able to access EvalAI at
localhost:8888
.docker-compose up
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That's it. Open web browser and hit the url http://127.0.0.1:8888. Three users will be created by default which are listed below -
SUPERUSER- username:
admin
password:password
HOST USER- username:host
password:password
PARTICIPANT USER- username:participant
password:password
For deploying with Surge:
Surge will automatically generate deployment link whenever a pull request passes Travis CI.
Suppose pull request number is 123 and it passes Travis CI. The deployment link can be found here: https://pr-123-evalai.surge.sh
Run ng generate component component-name
to generate a new component. You can also use ng generate directive|pipe|service|class|guard|interface|enum|module
.
We are using compodoc for documentation. The goal of this tool is to generate a documentation for all the common APIs of the application like modules, components, injectables, routes, directives, pipes and classical classes.
Compodoc supports these JSDoc tags.
Please go through our Contribution Guidelines. Also go through our detailed Code Structure Guide to make the most of existing re-usable features. Finally, go through the Pull Request Template when creating your pull request.
Run the following command to build and serve the docs:
npm run doc:buildandserve
Open http://localhost:8080 in the browser to have a look at the generated docs.
Run ng build
to build the project. The build artifacts will be stored in the dist/
directory. Use the -prod
flag for a production build.
Run ng test
to execute the unit tests via Karma.
Run ng e2e
to execute the end-to-end tests via Protractor.
EvalAI-ngx is currently maintained by Shekhar Rajak, Mayank Lunayach, Shivani Prakash Gupta, Rishabh Jain and Deshraj Yadav.