tfevents allows logging data from machine learning experiments to a file format that can be later consumed by TensorBoard in order to generate visualizations.
You can install tfevents from CRAN with:
install.packages("tfevents")You can install the development version of tfevents from GitHub with:
You need to have cmake on your path. See installation
instructions in the cmake install
webpage - or:
If you use brew on MacOS you can run:
brew install cmakeOr on linux install the cmake library, for example on
Debian systems:
sudo apt install cmake# install.packages("devtools")
devtools::install_github("mlverse/tfevents")The main entrypoint in tfevents API is the log_event
function. It can be used to log summaries like scalars,
images, audio (Coming soon), histograms (Coming soon) and arbitrary
tensors (soon) to a log directory, which we like to call
logdir. You can later point TensorBoard to this
logdir to visualize the results.
library(tfevents)Summaries are always associated to a step in the TensorBoard API, and
log_event automatically increases the
step everytime it’s called, unless you
provide the step argument.
Let’s start by logging some metrics:
epochs <- 10
for (i in seq_len(epochs)) {
  # training code would go here
  log_event(
    train = list(loss = runif(1), acc = runif(1)),
    valid = list(loss = runif(1), acc = runif(1))
  )
}By default this will create a logs directory in your
working directory and write metrics to it - you can change the default
logdir using context like with_logdir or
globally with set_default_logdir().
Since we passed a nested list of metrics, log_event will
create subdirectories under logs to write metrics for each
group.
fs::dir_tree("logs")
#> logs
#> ├── train
#> │   └── events.out.tfevents.1719410709.v2
#> └── valid
#>     └── events.out.tfevents.1719410709.v2You can later point TensorBoard to that logdir using TensorBoard’s
command line interface or tensorflow’s utility function
tensorboard()
tensorflow::tensorboard(normalizePath("logs"), port = 6060)
#> Started TensorBoard at http://127.0.0.1:6060TensorBoard will display the results in a dashbboard, similar to one you can see in the screenshot below:

You can learn more in the tfevents website.