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Reference for ultralytics/cfg/__init__.py

Note

This file is available at https://github.com/ultralytics/ultralytics/blob/main/ultralytics/cfg/__init__.py. If you spot a problem please help fix it by contributing a Pull Request 🛠️. Thank you 🙏!


ultralytics.cfg.cfg2dict

cfg2dict(cfg)

Converts a configuration object to a dictionary.

Parameters:

Name Type Description Default
cfg str | Path | Dict | SimpleNamespace

Configuration object to be converted. Can be a file path, a string, a dictionary, or a SimpleNamespace object.

required

Returns:

Type Description
Dict

Configuration object in dictionary format.

Examples:

Convert a YAML file path to a dictionary:

>>> config_dict = cfg2dict("config.yaml")

Convert a SimpleNamespace to a dictionary:

>>> from types import SimpleNamespace
>>> config_sn = SimpleNamespace(param1="value1", param2="value2")
>>> config_dict = cfg2dict(config_sn)

Pass through an already existing dictionary:

>>> config_dict = cfg2dict({"param1": "value1", "param2": "value2"})
Notes
  • If cfg is a path or string, it's loaded as YAML and converted to a dictionary.
  • If cfg is a SimpleNamespace object, it's converted to a dictionary using vars().
  • If cfg is already a dictionary, it's returned unchanged.
Source code in ultralytics/cfg/__init__.py
def cfg2dict(cfg):
    """
    Converts a configuration object to a dictionary.

    Args:
        cfg (str | Path | Dict | SimpleNamespace): Configuration object to be converted. Can be a file path,
            a string, a dictionary, or a SimpleNamespace object.

    Returns:
        (Dict): Configuration object in dictionary format.

    Examples:
        Convert a YAML file path to a dictionary:
        >>> config_dict = cfg2dict("config.yaml")

        Convert a SimpleNamespace to a dictionary:
        >>> from types import SimpleNamespace
        >>> config_sn = SimpleNamespace(param1="value1", param2="value2")
        >>> config_dict = cfg2dict(config_sn)

        Pass through an already existing dictionary:
        >>> config_dict = cfg2dict({"param1": "value1", "param2": "value2"})

    Notes:
        - If cfg is a path or string, it's loaded as YAML and converted to a dictionary.
        - If cfg is a SimpleNamespace object, it's converted to a dictionary using vars().
        - If cfg is already a dictionary, it's returned unchanged.
    """
    if isinstance(cfg, (str, Path)):
        cfg = yaml_load(cfg)  # load dict
    elif isinstance(cfg, SimpleNamespace):
        cfg = vars(cfg)  # convert to dict
    return cfg





ultralytics.cfg.get_cfg

get_cfg(cfg: Union[str, Path, Dict, SimpleNamespace] = DEFAULT_CFG_DICT, overrides: Dict = None)

Load and merge configuration data from a file or dictionary, with optional overrides.

Parameters:

Name Type Description Default
cfg str | Path | Dict | SimpleNamespace

Configuration data source. Can be a file path, dictionary, or SimpleNamespace object.

DEFAULT_CFG_DICT
overrides Dict | None

Dictionary containing key-value pairs to override the base configuration.

None

Returns:

Type Description
SimpleNamespace

Namespace containing the merged configuration arguments.

Examples:

>>> from ultralytics.cfg import get_cfg
>>> config = get_cfg()  # Load default configuration
>>> config = get_cfg("path/to/config.yaml", overrides={"epochs": 50, "batch_size": 16})
Notes
  • If both cfg and overrides are provided, the values in overrides will take precedence.
  • Special handling ensures alignment and correctness of the configuration, such as converting numeric project and name to strings and validating configuration keys and values.
  • The function performs type and value checks on the configuration data.
Source code in ultralytics/cfg/__init__.py
def get_cfg(cfg: Union[str, Path, Dict, SimpleNamespace] = DEFAULT_CFG_DICT, overrides: Dict = None):
    """
    Load and merge configuration data from a file or dictionary, with optional overrides.

    Args:
        cfg (str | Path | Dict | SimpleNamespace): Configuration data source. Can be a file path, dictionary, or
            SimpleNamespace object.
        overrides (Dict | None): Dictionary containing key-value pairs to override the base configuration.

    Returns:
        (SimpleNamespace): Namespace containing the merged configuration arguments.

    Examples:
        >>> from ultralytics.cfg import get_cfg
        >>> config = get_cfg()  # Load default configuration
        >>> config = get_cfg("path/to/config.yaml", overrides={"epochs": 50, "batch_size": 16})

    Notes:
        - If both `cfg` and `overrides` are provided, the values in `overrides` will take precedence.
        - Special handling ensures alignment and correctness of the configuration, such as converting numeric
          `project` and `name` to strings and validating configuration keys and values.
        - The function performs type and value checks on the configuration data.
    """
    cfg = cfg2dict(cfg)

    # Merge overrides
    if overrides:
        overrides = cfg2dict(overrides)
        if "save_dir" not in cfg:
            overrides.pop("save_dir", None)  # special override keys to ignore
        check_dict_alignment(cfg, overrides)
        cfg = {**cfg, **overrides}  # merge cfg and overrides dicts (prefer overrides)

    # Special handling for numeric project/name
    for k in "project", "name":
        if k in cfg and isinstance(cfg[k], (int, float)):
            cfg[k] = str(cfg[k])
    if cfg.get("name") == "model":  # assign model to 'name' arg
        cfg["name"] = cfg.get("model", "").split(".")[0]
        LOGGER.warning(f"WARNING ⚠️ 'name=model' automatically updated to 'name={cfg['name']}'.")

    # Type and Value checks
    check_cfg(cfg)

    # Return instance
    return IterableSimpleNamespace(**cfg)





ultralytics.cfg.check_cfg

check_cfg(cfg, hard=True)

Checks configuration argument types and values for the Ultralytics library.

This function validates the types and values of configuration arguments, ensuring correctness and converting them if necessary. It checks for specific key types defined in global variables such as CFG_FLOAT_KEYS, CFG_FRACTION_KEYS, CFG_INT_KEYS, and CFG_BOOL_KEYS.

Parameters:

Name Type Description Default
cfg Dict

Configuration dictionary to validate.

required
hard bool

If True, raises exceptions for invalid types and values; if False, attempts to convert them.

True

Examples:

>>> config = {
...     "epochs": 50,  # valid integer
...     "lr0": 0.01,  # valid float
...     "momentum": 1.2,  # invalid float (out of 0.0-1.0 range)
...     "save": "true",  # invalid bool
... }
>>> check_cfg(config, hard=False)
>>> print(config)
{'epochs': 50, 'lr0': 0.01, 'momentum': 1.2, 'save': False}  # corrected 'save' key
Notes
  • The function modifies the input dictionary in-place.
  • None values are ignored as they may be from optional arguments.
  • Fraction keys are checked to be within the range [0.0, 1.0].
Source code in ultralytics/cfg/__init__.py
def check_cfg(cfg, hard=True):
    """
    Checks configuration argument types and values for the Ultralytics library.

    This function validates the types and values of configuration arguments, ensuring correctness and converting
    them if necessary. It checks for specific key types defined in global variables such as CFG_FLOAT_KEYS,
    CFG_FRACTION_KEYS, CFG_INT_KEYS, and CFG_BOOL_KEYS.

    Args:
        cfg (Dict): Configuration dictionary to validate.
        hard (bool): If True, raises exceptions for invalid types and values; if False, attempts to convert them.

    Examples:
        >>> config = {
        ...     "epochs": 50,  # valid integer
        ...     "lr0": 0.01,  # valid float
        ...     "momentum": 1.2,  # invalid float (out of 0.0-1.0 range)
        ...     "save": "true",  # invalid bool
        ... }
        >>> check_cfg(config, hard=False)
        >>> print(config)
        {'epochs': 50, 'lr0': 0.01, 'momentum': 1.2, 'save': False}  # corrected 'save' key

    Notes:
        - The function modifies the input dictionary in-place.
        - None values are ignored as they may be from optional arguments.
        - Fraction keys are checked to be within the range [0.0, 1.0].
    """
    for k, v in cfg.items():
        if v is not None:  # None values may be from optional args
            if k in CFG_FLOAT_KEYS and not isinstance(v, (int, float)):
                if hard:
                    raise TypeError(
                        f"'{k}={v}' is of invalid type {type(v).__name__}. "
                        f"Valid '{k}' types are int (i.e. '{k}=0') or float (i.e. '{k}=0.5')"
                    )
                cfg[k] = float(v)
            elif k in CFG_FRACTION_KEYS:
                if not isinstance(v, (int, float)):
                    if hard:
                        raise TypeError(
                            f"'{k}={v}' is of invalid type {type(v).__name__}. "
                            f"Valid '{k}' types are int (i.e. '{k}=0') or float (i.e. '{k}=0.5')"
                        )
                    cfg[k] = v = float(v)
                if not (0.0 <= v <= 1.0):
                    raise ValueError(f"'{k}={v}' is an invalid value. " f"Valid '{k}' values are between 0.0 and 1.0.")
            elif k in CFG_INT_KEYS and not isinstance(v, int):
                if hard:
                    raise TypeError(
                        f"'{k}={v}' is of invalid type {type(v).__name__}. " f"'{k}' must be an int (i.e. '{k}=8')"
                    )
                cfg[k] = int(v)
            elif k in CFG_BOOL_KEYS and not isinstance(v, bool):
                if hard:
                    raise TypeError(
                        f"'{k}={v}' is of invalid type {type(v).__name__}. "
                        f"'{k}' must be a bool (i.e. '{k}=True' or '{k}=False')"
                    )
                cfg[k] = bool(v)





ultralytics.cfg.get_save_dir

get_save_dir(args, name=None)

Returns the directory path for saving outputs, derived from arguments or default settings.

Parameters:

Name Type Description Default
args SimpleNamespace

Namespace object containing configurations such as 'project', 'name', 'task', 'mode', and 'save_dir'.

required
name str | None

Optional name for the output directory. If not provided, it defaults to 'args.name' or the 'args.mode'.

None

Returns:

Type Description
Path

Directory path where outputs should be saved.

Examples:

>>> from types import SimpleNamespace
>>> args = SimpleNamespace(project="my_project", task="detect", mode="train", exist_ok=True)
>>> save_dir = get_save_dir(args)
>>> print(save_dir)
my_project/detect/train
Source code in ultralytics/cfg/__init__.py
def get_save_dir(args, name=None):
    """
    Returns the directory path for saving outputs, derived from arguments or default settings.

    Args:
        args (SimpleNamespace): Namespace object containing configurations such as 'project', 'name', 'task',
            'mode', and 'save_dir'.
        name (str | None): Optional name for the output directory. If not provided, it defaults to 'args.name'
            or the 'args.mode'.

    Returns:
        (Path): Directory path where outputs should be saved.

    Examples:
        >>> from types import SimpleNamespace
        >>> args = SimpleNamespace(project="my_project", task="detect", mode="train", exist_ok=True)
        >>> save_dir = get_save_dir(args)
        >>> print(save_dir)
        my_project/detect/train
    """
    if getattr(args, "save_dir", None):
        save_dir = args.save_dir
    else:
        from ultralytics.utils.files import increment_path

        project = args.project or (ROOT.parent / "tests/tmp/runs" if TESTS_RUNNING else RUNS_DIR) / args.task
        name = name or args.name or f"{args.mode}"
        save_dir = increment_path(Path(project) / name, exist_ok=args.exist_ok if RANK in {-1, 0} else True)

    return Path(save_dir)





ultralytics.cfg._handle_deprecation

_handle_deprecation(custom)

Handles deprecated configuration keys by mapping them to current equivalents with deprecation warnings.

Parameters:

Name Type Description Default
custom Dict

Configuration dictionary potentially containing deprecated keys.

required

Examples:

>>> custom_config = {"boxes": True, "hide_labels": "False", "line_thickness": 2}
>>> _handle_deprecation(custom_config)
>>> print(custom_config)
{'show_boxes': True, 'show_labels': True, 'line_width': 2}
Notes

This function modifies the input dictionary in-place, replacing deprecated keys with their current equivalents. It also handles value conversions where necessary, such as inverting boolean values for 'hide_labels' and 'hide_conf'.

Source code in ultralytics/cfg/__init__.py
def _handle_deprecation(custom):
    """
    Handles deprecated configuration keys by mapping them to current equivalents with deprecation warnings.

    Args:
        custom (Dict): Configuration dictionary potentially containing deprecated keys.

    Examples:
        >>> custom_config = {"boxes": True, "hide_labels": "False", "line_thickness": 2}
        >>> _handle_deprecation(custom_config)
        >>> print(custom_config)
        {'show_boxes': True, 'show_labels': True, 'line_width': 2}

    Notes:
        This function modifies the input dictionary in-place, replacing deprecated keys with their current
        equivalents. It also handles value conversions where necessary, such as inverting boolean values for
        'hide_labels' and 'hide_conf'.
    """
    for key in custom.copy().keys():
        if key == "boxes":
            deprecation_warn(key, "show_boxes")
            custom["show_boxes"] = custom.pop("boxes")
        if key == "hide_labels":
            deprecation_warn(key, "show_labels")
            custom["show_labels"] = custom.pop("hide_labels") == "False"
        if key == "hide_conf":
            deprecation_warn(key, "show_conf")
            custom["show_conf"] = custom.pop("hide_conf") == "False"
        if key == "line_thickness":
            deprecation_warn(key, "line_width")
            custom["line_width"] = custom.pop("line_thickness")

    return custom





ultralytics.cfg.check_dict_alignment

check_dict_alignment(base: Dict, custom: Dict, e=None)

Checks alignment between custom and base configuration dictionaries, handling deprecated keys and providing error messages for mismatched keys.

Parameters:

Name Type Description Default
base Dict

The base configuration dictionary containing valid keys.

required
custom Dict

The custom configuration dictionary to be checked for alignment.

required
e Exception | None

Optional error instance passed by the calling function.

None

Raises:

Type Description
SystemExit

If mismatched keys are found between the custom and base dictionaries.

Examples:

>>> base_cfg = {"epochs": 50, "lr0": 0.01, "batch_size": 16}
>>> custom_cfg = {"epoch": 100, "lr": 0.02, "batch_size": 32}
>>> try:
...     check_dict_alignment(base_cfg, custom_cfg)
... except SystemExit:
...     print("Mismatched keys found")
Notes
  • Suggests corrections for mismatched keys based on similarity to valid keys.
  • Automatically replaces deprecated keys in the custom configuration with updated equivalents.
  • Prints detailed error messages for each mismatched key to help users correct their configurations.
Source code in ultralytics/cfg/__init__.py
def check_dict_alignment(base: Dict, custom: Dict, e=None):
    """
    Checks alignment between custom and base configuration dictionaries, handling deprecated keys and providing error
    messages for mismatched keys.

    Args:
        base (Dict): The base configuration dictionary containing valid keys.
        custom (Dict): The custom configuration dictionary to be checked for alignment.
        e (Exception | None): Optional error instance passed by the calling function.

    Raises:
        SystemExit: If mismatched keys are found between the custom and base dictionaries.

    Examples:
        >>> base_cfg = {"epochs": 50, "lr0": 0.01, "batch_size": 16}
        >>> custom_cfg = {"epoch": 100, "lr": 0.02, "batch_size": 32}
        >>> try:
        ...     check_dict_alignment(base_cfg, custom_cfg)
        ... except SystemExit:
        ...     print("Mismatched keys found")

    Notes:
        - Suggests corrections for mismatched keys based on similarity to valid keys.
        - Automatically replaces deprecated keys in the custom configuration with updated equivalents.
        - Prints detailed error messages for each mismatched key to help users correct their configurations.
    """
    custom = _handle_deprecation(custom)
    base_keys, custom_keys = (set(x.keys()) for x in (base, custom))
    mismatched = [k for k in custom_keys if k not in base_keys]
    if mismatched:
        from difflib import get_close_matches

        string = ""
        for x in mismatched:
            matches = get_close_matches(x, base_keys)  # key list
            matches = [f"{k}={base[k]}" if base.get(k) is not None else k for k in matches]
            match_str = f"Similar arguments are i.e. {matches}." if matches else ""
            string += f"'{colorstr('red', 'bold', x)}' is not a valid YOLO argument. {match_str}\n"
        raise SyntaxError(string + CLI_HELP_MSG) from e





ultralytics.cfg.merge_equals_args

merge_equals_args(args: List[str]) -> List[str]

Merges arguments around isolated '=' in a list of strings, handling three cases: 1. ['arg', '=', 'val'] becomes ['arg=val'], 2. ['arg=', 'val'] becomes ['arg=val'], 3. ['arg', '=val'] becomes ['arg=val'].

Parameters:

Name Type Description Default
args List[str]

A list of strings where each element represents an argument.

required

Returns:

Type Description
List[str]

A list of strings where the arguments around isolated '=' are merged.

Examples:

>>> args = ["arg1", "=", "value", "arg2=", "value2", "arg3", "=value3"]
>>> merge_equals_args(args)
['arg1=value', 'arg2=value2', 'arg3=value3']
Source code in ultralytics/cfg/__init__.py
def merge_equals_args(args: List[str]) -> List[str]:
    """
    Merges arguments around isolated '=' in a list of strings, handling three cases:
    1. ['arg', '=', 'val'] becomes ['arg=val'],
    2. ['arg=', 'val'] becomes ['arg=val'],
    3. ['arg', '=val'] becomes ['arg=val'].

    Args:
        args (List[str]): A list of strings where each element represents an argument.

    Returns:
        (List[str]): A list of strings where the arguments around isolated '=' are merged.

    Examples:
        >>> args = ["arg1", "=", "value", "arg2=", "value2", "arg3", "=value3"]
        >>> merge_equals_args(args)
        ['arg1=value', 'arg2=value2', 'arg3=value3']
    """
    new_args = []
    for i, arg in enumerate(args):
        if arg == "=" and 0 < i < len(args) - 1:  # merge ['arg', '=', 'val']
            new_args[-1] += f"={args[i + 1]}"
            del args[i + 1]
        elif arg.endswith("=") and i < len(args) - 1 and "=" not in args[i + 1]:  # merge ['arg=', 'val']
            new_args.append(f"{arg}{args[i + 1]}")
            del args[i + 1]
        elif arg.startswith("=") and i > 0:  # merge ['arg', '=val']
            new_args[-1] += arg
        else:
            new_args.append(arg)
    return new_args





ultralytics.cfg.handle_yolo_hub

handle_yolo_hub(args: List[str]) -> None

Handles Ultralytics HUB command-line interface (CLI) commands for authentication.

This function processes Ultralytics HUB CLI commands such as login and logout. It should be called when executing a script with arguments related to HUB authentication.

Parameters:

Name Type Description Default
args List[str]

A list of command line arguments. The first argument should be either 'login' or 'logout'. For 'login', an optional second argument can be the API key.

required

Examples:

yolo hub login YOUR_API_KEY
Notes
  • The function imports the 'hub' module from ultralytics to perform login and logout operations.
  • For the 'login' command, if no API key is provided, an empty string is passed to the login function.
  • The 'logout' command does not require any additional arguments.
Source code in ultralytics/cfg/__init__.py
def handle_yolo_hub(args: List[str]) -> None:
    """
    Handles Ultralytics HUB command-line interface (CLI) commands for authentication.

    This function processes Ultralytics HUB CLI commands such as login and logout. It should be called when executing a
    script with arguments related to HUB authentication.

    Args:
        args (List[str]): A list of command line arguments. The first argument should be either 'login'
            or 'logout'. For 'login', an optional second argument can be the API key.

    Examples:
        ```bash
        yolo hub login YOUR_API_KEY
        ```

    Notes:
        - The function imports the 'hub' module from ultralytics to perform login and logout operations.
        - For the 'login' command, if no API key is provided, an empty string is passed to the login function.
        - The 'logout' command does not require any additional arguments.
    """
    from ultralytics import hub

    if args[0] == "login":
        key = args[1] if len(args) > 1 else ""
        # Log in to Ultralytics HUB using the provided API key
        hub.login(key)
    elif args[0] == "logout":
        # Log out from Ultralytics HUB
        hub.logout()





ultralytics.cfg.handle_yolo_settings

handle_yolo_settings(args: List[str]) -> None

Handles YOLO settings command-line interface (CLI) commands.

This function processes YOLO settings CLI commands such as reset and updating individual settings. It should be called when executing a script with arguments related to YOLO settings management.

Parameters:

Name Type Description Default
args List[str]

A list of command line arguments for YOLO settings management.

required

Examples:

>>> handle_yolo_settings(["reset"])  # Reset YOLO settings
>>> handle_yolo_settings(["default_cfg_path=yolo11n.yaml"])  # Update a specific setting
Notes
  • If no arguments are provided, the function will display the current settings.
  • The 'reset' command will delete the existing settings file and create new default settings.
  • Other arguments are treated as key-value pairs to update specific settings.
  • The function will check for alignment between the provided settings and the existing ones.
  • After processing, the updated settings will be displayed.
  • For more information on handling YOLO settings, visit: https://docs.ultralytics.com/quickstart/#ultralytics-settings
Source code in ultralytics/cfg/__init__.py
def handle_yolo_settings(args: List[str]) -> None:
    """
    Handles YOLO settings command-line interface (CLI) commands.

    This function processes YOLO settings CLI commands such as reset and updating individual settings. It should be
    called when executing a script with arguments related to YOLO settings management.

    Args:
        args (List[str]): A list of command line arguments for YOLO settings management.

    Examples:
        >>> handle_yolo_settings(["reset"])  # Reset YOLO settings
        >>> handle_yolo_settings(["default_cfg_path=yolo11n.yaml"])  # Update a specific setting

    Notes:
        - If no arguments are provided, the function will display the current settings.
        - The 'reset' command will delete the existing settings file and create new default settings.
        - Other arguments are treated as key-value pairs to update specific settings.
        - The function will check for alignment between the provided settings and the existing ones.
        - After processing, the updated settings will be displayed.
        - For more information on handling YOLO settings, visit:
          https://docs.ultralytics.com/quickstart/#ultralytics-settings
    """
    url = "https://docs.ultralytics.com/quickstart/#ultralytics-settings"  # help URL
    try:
        if any(args):
            if args[0] == "reset":
                SETTINGS_FILE.unlink()  # delete the settings file
                SETTINGS.reset()  # create new settings
                LOGGER.info("Settings reset successfully")  # inform the user that settings have been reset
            else:  # save a new setting
                new = dict(parse_key_value_pair(a) for a in args)
                check_dict_alignment(SETTINGS, new)
                SETTINGS.update(new)

        print(SETTINGS)  # print the current settings
        LOGGER.info(f"💡 Learn more about Ultralytics Settings at {url}")
    except Exception as e:
        LOGGER.warning(f"WARNING ⚠️ settings error: '{e}'. Please see {url} for help.")





ultralytics.cfg.handle_streamlit_inference

handle_streamlit_inference()

Open the Ultralytics Live Inference Streamlit app for real-time object detection.

This function initializes and runs a Streamlit application designed for performing live object detection using Ultralytics models. It checks for the required Streamlit package and launches the app.

Examples:

>>> handle_streamlit_inference()
Notes
  • Requires Streamlit version 1.29.0 or higher.
  • The app is launched using the 'streamlit run' command.
  • The Streamlit app file is located in the Ultralytics package directory.
Source code in ultralytics/cfg/__init__.py
def handle_streamlit_inference():
    """
    Open the Ultralytics Live Inference Streamlit app for real-time object detection.

    This function initializes and runs a Streamlit application designed for performing live object detection using
    Ultralytics models. It checks for the required Streamlit package and launches the app.

    Examples:
        >>> handle_streamlit_inference()

    Notes:
        - Requires Streamlit version 1.29.0 or higher.
        - The app is launched using the 'streamlit run' command.
        - The Streamlit app file is located in the Ultralytics package directory.
    """
    checks.check_requirements("streamlit>=1.29.0")
    LOGGER.info("💡 Loading Ultralytics Live Inference app...")
    subprocess.run(["streamlit", "run", ROOT / "solutions/streamlit_inference.py", "--server.headless", "true"])





ultralytics.cfg.parse_key_value_pair

parse_key_value_pair(pair: str = &#39;key=value&#39;)

Parses a key-value pair string into separate key and value components.

Parameters:

Name Type Description Default
pair str

A string containing a key-value pair in the format "key=value".

'key=value'

Returns:

Type Description
tuple

A tuple containing two elements: - key (str): The parsed key. - value (str): The parsed value.

Raises:

Type Description
AssertionError

If the value is missing or empty.

Examples:

>>> key, value = parse_key_value_pair("model=yolo11n.pt")
>>> print(f"Key: {key}, Value: {value}")
Key: model, Value: yolo11n.pt
>>> key, value = parse_key_value_pair("epochs=100")
>>> print(f"Key: {key}, Value: {value}")
Key: epochs, Value: 100
Notes
  • The function splits the input string on the first '=' character.
  • Leading and trailing whitespace is removed from both key and value.
  • An assertion error is raised if the value is empty after stripping.
Source code in ultralytics/cfg/__init__.py
def parse_key_value_pair(pair: str = "key=value"):
    """
    Parses a key-value pair string into separate key and value components.

    Args:
        pair (str): A string containing a key-value pair in the format "key=value".

    Returns:
        (tuple): A tuple containing two elements:
            - key (str): The parsed key.
            - value (str): The parsed value.

    Raises:
        AssertionError: If the value is missing or empty.

    Examples:
        >>> key, value = parse_key_value_pair("model=yolo11n.pt")
        >>> print(f"Key: {key}, Value: {value}")
        Key: model, Value: yolo11n.pt

        >>> key, value = parse_key_value_pair("epochs=100")
        >>> print(f"Key: {key}, Value: {value}")
        Key: epochs, Value: 100

    Notes:
        - The function splits the input string on the first '=' character.
        - Leading and trailing whitespace is removed from both key and value.
        - An assertion error is raised if the value is empty after stripping.
    """
    k, v = pair.split("=", 1)  # split on first '=' sign
    k, v = k.strip(), v.strip()  # remove spaces
    assert v, f"missing '{k}' value"
    return k, smart_value(v)





ultralytics.cfg.smart_value

smart_value(v)

Converts a string representation of a value to its appropriate Python type.

This function attempts to convert a given string into a Python object of the most appropriate type. It handles conversions to None, bool, int, float, and other types that can be evaluated safely.

Parameters:

Name Type Description Default
v str

The string representation of the value to be converted.

required

Returns:

Type Description
Any

The converted value. The type can be None, bool, int, float, or the original string if no conversion is applicable.

Examples:

>>> smart_value("42")
42
>>> smart_value("3.14")
3.14
>>> smart_value("True")
True
>>> smart_value("None")
None
>>> smart_value("some_string")
'some_string'
Notes
  • The function uses a case-insensitive comparison for boolean and None values.
  • For other types, it attempts to use Python's eval() function, which can be unsafe if used on untrusted input.
  • If no conversion is possible, the original string is returned.
Source code in ultralytics/cfg/__init__.py
def smart_value(v):
    """
    Converts a string representation of a value to its appropriate Python type.

    This function attempts to convert a given string into a Python object of the most appropriate type. It handles
    conversions to None, bool, int, float, and other types that can be evaluated safely.

    Args:
        v (str): The string representation of the value to be converted.

    Returns:
        (Any): The converted value. The type can be None, bool, int, float, or the original string if no conversion
            is applicable.

    Examples:
        >>> smart_value("42")
        42
        >>> smart_value("3.14")
        3.14
        >>> smart_value("True")
        True
        >>> smart_value("None")
        None
        >>> smart_value("some_string")
        'some_string'

    Notes:
        - The function uses a case-insensitive comparison for boolean and None values.
        - For other types, it attempts to use Python's eval() function, which can be unsafe if used on untrusted input.
        - If no conversion is possible, the original string is returned.
    """
    v_lower = v.lower()
    if v_lower == "none":
        return None
    elif v_lower == "true":
        return True
    elif v_lower == "false":
        return False
    else:
        try:
            return eval(v)
        except:  # noqa E722
            return v





ultralytics.cfg.entrypoint

entrypoint(debug=&#39;&#39;)

Ultralytics entrypoint function for parsing and executing command-line arguments.

This function serves as the main entry point for the Ultralytics CLI, parsing command-line arguments and executing the corresponding tasks such as training, validation, prediction, exporting models, and more.

Parameters:

Name Type Description Default
debug str

Space-separated string of command-line arguments for debugging purposes.

''

Examples:

Train a detection model for 10 epochs with an initial learning_rate of 0.01:

>>> entrypoint("train data=coco8.yaml model=yolo11n.pt epochs=10 lr0=0.01")

Predict a YouTube video using a pretrained segmentation model at image size 320:

>>> entrypoint("predict model=yolo11n-seg.pt source='https://youtu.be/LNwODJXcvt4' imgsz=320")

Validate a pretrained detection model at batch-size 1 and image size 640:

>>> entrypoint("val model=yolo11n.pt data=coco8.yaml batch=1 imgsz=640")
Notes
  • If no arguments are passed, the function will display the usage help message.
  • For a list of all available commands and their arguments, see the provided help messages and the Ultralytics documentation at https://docs.ultralytics.com.
Source code in ultralytics/cfg/__init__.py
def entrypoint(debug=""):
    """
    Ultralytics entrypoint function for parsing and executing command-line arguments.

    This function serves as the main entry point for the Ultralytics CLI, parsing command-line arguments and
    executing the corresponding tasks such as training, validation, prediction, exporting models, and more.

    Args:
        debug (str): Space-separated string of command-line arguments for debugging purposes.

    Examples:
        Train a detection model for 10 epochs with an initial learning_rate of 0.01:
        >>> entrypoint("train data=coco8.yaml model=yolo11n.pt epochs=10 lr0=0.01")

        Predict a YouTube video using a pretrained segmentation model at image size 320:
        >>> entrypoint("predict model=yolo11n-seg.pt source='https://youtu.be/LNwODJXcvt4' imgsz=320")

        Validate a pretrained detection model at batch-size 1 and image size 640:
        >>> entrypoint("val model=yolo11n.pt data=coco8.yaml batch=1 imgsz=640")

    Notes:
        - If no arguments are passed, the function will display the usage help message.
        - For a list of all available commands and their arguments, see the provided help messages and the
          Ultralytics documentation at https://docs.ultralytics.com.
    """
    args = (debug.split(" ") if debug else ARGV)[1:]
    if not args:  # no arguments passed
        LOGGER.info(CLI_HELP_MSG)
        return

    special = {
        "help": lambda: LOGGER.info(CLI_HELP_MSG),
        "checks": checks.collect_system_info,
        "version": lambda: LOGGER.info(__version__),
        "settings": lambda: handle_yolo_settings(args[1:]),
        "cfg": lambda: yaml_print(DEFAULT_CFG_PATH),
        "hub": lambda: handle_yolo_hub(args[1:]),
        "login": lambda: handle_yolo_hub(args),
        "logout": lambda: handle_yolo_hub(args),
        "copy-cfg": copy_default_cfg,
        "streamlit-predict": lambda: handle_streamlit_inference(),
    }
    full_args_dict = {**DEFAULT_CFG_DICT, **{k: None for k in TASKS}, **{k: None for k in MODES}, **special}

    # Define common misuses of special commands, i.e. -h, -help, --help
    special.update({k[0]: v for k, v in special.items()})  # singular
    special.update({k[:-1]: v for k, v in special.items() if len(k) > 1 and k.endswith("s")})  # singular
    special = {**special, **{f"-{k}": v for k, v in special.items()}, **{f"--{k}": v for k, v in special.items()}}

    overrides = {}  # basic overrides, i.e. imgsz=320
    for a in merge_equals_args(args):  # merge spaces around '=' sign
        if a.startswith("--"):
            LOGGER.warning(f"WARNING ⚠️ argument '{a}' does not require leading dashes '--', updating to '{a[2:]}'.")
            a = a[2:]
        if a.endswith(","):
            LOGGER.warning(f"WARNING ⚠️ argument '{a}' does not require trailing comma ',', updating to '{a[:-1]}'.")
            a = a[:-1]
        if "=" in a:
            try:
                k, v = parse_key_value_pair(a)
                if k == "cfg" and v is not None:  # custom.yaml passed
                    LOGGER.info(f"Overriding {DEFAULT_CFG_PATH} with {v}")
                    overrides = {k: val for k, val in yaml_load(checks.check_yaml(v)).items() if k != "cfg"}
                else:
                    overrides[k] = v
            except (NameError, SyntaxError, ValueError, AssertionError) as e:
                check_dict_alignment(full_args_dict, {a: ""}, e)

        elif a in TASKS:
            overrides["task"] = a
        elif a in MODES:
            overrides["mode"] = a
        elif a.lower() in special:
            special[a.lower()]()
            return
        elif a in DEFAULT_CFG_DICT and isinstance(DEFAULT_CFG_DICT[a], bool):
            overrides[a] = True  # auto-True for default bool args, i.e. 'yolo show' sets show=True
        elif a in DEFAULT_CFG_DICT:
            raise SyntaxError(
                f"'{colorstr('red', 'bold', a)}' is a valid YOLO argument but is missing an '=' sign "
                f"to set its value, i.e. try '{a}={DEFAULT_CFG_DICT[a]}'\n{CLI_HELP_MSG}"
            )
        else:
            check_dict_alignment(full_args_dict, {a: ""})

    # Check keys
    check_dict_alignment(full_args_dict, overrides)

    # Mode
    mode = overrides.get("mode")
    if mode is None:
        mode = DEFAULT_CFG.mode or "predict"
        LOGGER.warning(f"WARNING ⚠️ 'mode' argument is missing. Valid modes are {MODES}. Using default 'mode={mode}'.")
    elif mode not in MODES:
        raise ValueError(f"Invalid 'mode={mode}'. Valid modes are {MODES}.\n{CLI_HELP_MSG}")

    # Task
    task = overrides.pop("task", None)
    if task:
        if task not in TASKS:
            raise ValueError(f"Invalid 'task={task}'. Valid tasks are {TASKS}.\n{CLI_HELP_MSG}")
        if "model" not in overrides:
            overrides["model"] = TASK2MODEL[task]

    # Model
    model = overrides.pop("model", DEFAULT_CFG.model)
    if model is None:
        model = "yolo11n.pt"
        LOGGER.warning(f"WARNING ⚠️ 'model' argument is missing. Using default 'model={model}'.")
    overrides["model"] = model
    stem = Path(model).stem.lower()
    if "rtdetr" in stem:  # guess architecture
        from ultralytics import RTDETR

        model = RTDETR(model)  # no task argument
    elif "fastsam" in stem:
        from ultralytics import FastSAM

        model = FastSAM(model)
    elif "sam_" in stem or "sam2_" in stem:
        from ultralytics import SAM

        model = SAM(model)
    else:
        from ultralytics import YOLO

        model = YOLO(model, task=task)
    if isinstance(overrides.get("pretrained"), str):
        model.load(overrides["pretrained"])

    # Task Update
    if task != model.task:
        if task:
            LOGGER.warning(
                f"WARNING ⚠️ conflicting 'task={task}' passed with 'task={model.task}' model. "
                f"Ignoring 'task={task}' and updating to 'task={model.task}' to match model."
            )
        task = model.task

    # Mode
    if mode in {"predict", "track"} and "source" not in overrides:
        overrides["source"] = DEFAULT_CFG.source or ASSETS
        LOGGER.warning(f"WARNING ⚠️ 'source' argument is missing. Using default 'source={overrides['source']}'.")
    elif mode in {"train", "val"}:
        if "data" not in overrides and "resume" not in overrides:
            overrides["data"] = DEFAULT_CFG.data or TASK2DATA.get(task or DEFAULT_CFG.task, DEFAULT_CFG.data)
            LOGGER.warning(f"WARNING ⚠️ 'data' argument is missing. Using default 'data={overrides['data']}'.")
    elif mode == "export":
        if "format" not in overrides:
            overrides["format"] = DEFAULT_CFG.format or "torchscript"
            LOGGER.warning(f"WARNING ⚠️ 'format' argument is missing. Using default 'format={overrides['format']}'.")

    # Run command in python
    getattr(model, mode)(**overrides)  # default args from model

    # Show help
    LOGGER.info(f"💡 Learn more at https://docs.ultralytics.com/modes/{mode}")

    # Recommend VS Code extension
    if IS_VSCODE and SETTINGS.get("vscode_msg", True):
        LOGGER.info(vscode_msg())





ultralytics.cfg.copy_default_cfg

copy_default_cfg()

Copies the default configuration file and creates a new one with '_copy' appended to its name.

This function duplicates the existing default configuration file (DEFAULT_CFG_PATH) and saves it with '_copy' appended to its name in the current working directory. It provides a convenient way to create a custom configuration file based on the default settings.

Examples:

>>> copy_default_cfg()
# Output: default.yaml copied to /path/to/current/directory/default_copy.yaml
# Example YOLO command with this new custom cfg:
#   yolo cfg='/path/to/current/directory/default_copy.yaml' imgsz=320 batch=8
Notes
  • The new configuration file is created in the current working directory.
  • After copying, the function prints a message with the new file's location and an example YOLO command demonstrating how to use the new configuration file.
  • This function is useful for users who want to modify the default configuration without altering the original file.
Source code in ultralytics/cfg/__init__.py
def copy_default_cfg():
    """
    Copies the default configuration file and creates a new one with '_copy' appended to its name.

    This function duplicates the existing default configuration file (DEFAULT_CFG_PATH) and saves it
    with '_copy' appended to its name in the current working directory. It provides a convenient way
    to create a custom configuration file based on the default settings.

    Examples:
        >>> copy_default_cfg()
        # Output: default.yaml copied to /path/to/current/directory/default_copy.yaml
        # Example YOLO command with this new custom cfg:
        #   yolo cfg='/path/to/current/directory/default_copy.yaml' imgsz=320 batch=8

    Notes:
        - The new configuration file is created in the current working directory.
        - After copying, the function prints a message with the new file's location and an example
          YOLO command demonstrating how to use the new configuration file.
        - This function is useful for users who want to modify the default configuration without
          altering the original file.
    """
    new_file = Path.cwd() / DEFAULT_CFG_PATH.name.replace(".yaml", "_copy.yaml")
    shutil.copy2(DEFAULT_CFG_PATH, new_file)
    LOGGER.info(
        f"{DEFAULT_CFG_PATH} copied to {new_file}\n"
        f"Example YOLO command with this new custom cfg:\n    yolo cfg='{new_file}' imgsz=320 batch=8"
    )




📅 Created 11 months ago ✏️ Updated 1 day ago