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by hrzn
1822 days ago
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This is supported but only by neural-nets models, which are fit using SGD, hence naturally not requiring the whole dataset in memory. Other models like ARIMA do need the full series loaded in memory. The models that work on multiple time series in Darts accept Sequence[TimeSeries] for their fit() method. These sequences can either be Lists (fully in memory, simplest option), or when needed it can be a custom Sequence which for example does lazy loading from disk (somewhat similar to what PyTorch Datasets are doing) with the __getitem__() method. If you need even more control, for instance because you have only one very long series that doesn't fit in memory then you can implement your own Darts "TrainingDataset". In this case you can control how to slice your series exactly. Edit: I realised this only answers the first sentence of your comment ;) For now there's no mechanism for scaling to multiple machines beyond what PyTorch is already offering. AFAIK it's reasonably easy to scale to multiple GPUs on a machine, but I'm not sure how it would scale on several machines. We never had to try this yet! (Note that actually a single CPU can handle training deep nets models on 10's of thousands of time series similar to the M4 competition in a fairly reasonable time). |
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