Inzynierka/Lib/site-packages/sklearn/linear_model/tests/test_logistic.py
2023-06-02 12:51:02 +02:00

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Python

import itertools
import os
import warnings
from functools import partial
import numpy as np
from numpy.testing import assert_allclose, assert_almost_equal
from numpy.testing import assert_array_almost_equal, assert_array_equal
from scipy import sparse
import pytest
from sklearn.base import clone
from sklearn.datasets import load_iris, make_classification
from sklearn.metrics import log_loss
from sklearn.metrics import get_scorer
from sklearn.model_selection import StratifiedKFold
from sklearn.model_selection import GridSearchCV
from sklearn.model_selection import train_test_split
from sklearn.model_selection import cross_val_score
from sklearn.preprocessing import LabelEncoder, StandardScaler
from sklearn.utils import compute_class_weight, _IS_32BIT
from sklearn.utils._testing import ignore_warnings
from sklearn.utils import shuffle
from sklearn.linear_model import SGDClassifier
from sklearn.preprocessing import scale
from sklearn.utils._testing import skip_if_no_parallel
from sklearn.exceptions import ConvergenceWarning
from sklearn.linear_model._logistic import (
_log_reg_scoring_path,
_logistic_regression_path,
LogisticRegression as LogisticRegressionDefault,
LogisticRegressionCV as LogisticRegressionCVDefault,
)
pytestmark = pytest.mark.filterwarnings(
"error::sklearn.exceptions.ConvergenceWarning:sklearn.*"
)
# Fixing random_state helps prevent ConvergenceWarnings
LogisticRegression = partial(LogisticRegressionDefault, random_state=0)
LogisticRegressionCV = partial(LogisticRegressionCVDefault, random_state=0)
SOLVERS = ("lbfgs", "liblinear", "newton-cg", "newton-cholesky", "sag", "saga")
X = [[-1, 0], [0, 1], [1, 1]]
X_sp = sparse.csr_matrix(X)
Y1 = [0, 1, 1]
Y2 = [2, 1, 0]
iris = load_iris()
def check_predictions(clf, X, y):
"""Check that the model is able to fit the classification data"""
n_samples = len(y)
classes = np.unique(y)
n_classes = classes.shape[0]
predicted = clf.fit(X, y).predict(X)
assert_array_equal(clf.classes_, classes)
assert predicted.shape == (n_samples,)
assert_array_equal(predicted, y)
probabilities = clf.predict_proba(X)
assert probabilities.shape == (n_samples, n_classes)
assert_array_almost_equal(probabilities.sum(axis=1), np.ones(n_samples))
assert_array_equal(probabilities.argmax(axis=1), y)
def test_predict_2_classes():
# Simple sanity check on a 2 classes dataset
# Make sure it predicts the correct result on simple datasets.
check_predictions(LogisticRegression(random_state=0), X, Y1)
check_predictions(LogisticRegression(random_state=0), X_sp, Y1)
check_predictions(LogisticRegression(C=100, random_state=0), X, Y1)
check_predictions(LogisticRegression(C=100, random_state=0), X_sp, Y1)
check_predictions(LogisticRegression(fit_intercept=False, random_state=0), X, Y1)
check_predictions(LogisticRegression(fit_intercept=False, random_state=0), X_sp, Y1)
def test_logistic_cv_mock_scorer():
class MockScorer:
def __init__(self):
self.calls = 0
self.scores = [0.1, 0.4, 0.8, 0.5]
def __call__(self, model, X, y, sample_weight=None):
score = self.scores[self.calls % len(self.scores)]
self.calls += 1
return score
mock_scorer = MockScorer()
Cs = [1, 2, 3, 4]
cv = 2
lr = LogisticRegressionCV(Cs=Cs, scoring=mock_scorer, cv=cv)
X, y = make_classification(random_state=0)
lr.fit(X, y)
# Cs[2] has the highest score (0.8) from MockScorer
assert lr.C_[0] == Cs[2]
# scorer called 8 times (cv*len(Cs))
assert mock_scorer.calls == cv * len(Cs)
# reset mock_scorer
mock_scorer.calls = 0
custom_score = lr.score(X, lr.predict(X))
assert custom_score == mock_scorer.scores[0]
assert mock_scorer.calls == 1
@skip_if_no_parallel
def test_lr_liblinear_warning():
n_samples, n_features = iris.data.shape
target = iris.target_names[iris.target]
lr = LogisticRegression(solver="liblinear", n_jobs=2)
warning_message = (
"'n_jobs' > 1 does not have any effect when"
" 'solver' is set to 'liblinear'. Got 'n_jobs'"
" = 2."
)
with pytest.warns(UserWarning, match=warning_message):
lr.fit(iris.data, target)
def test_predict_3_classes():
check_predictions(LogisticRegression(C=10), X, Y2)
check_predictions(LogisticRegression(C=10), X_sp, Y2)
@pytest.mark.parametrize(
"clf",
[
LogisticRegression(C=len(iris.data), solver="liblinear", multi_class="ovr"),
LogisticRegression(C=len(iris.data), solver="lbfgs", multi_class="multinomial"),
LogisticRegression(
C=len(iris.data), solver="newton-cg", multi_class="multinomial"
),
LogisticRegression(
C=len(iris.data), solver="sag", tol=1e-2, multi_class="ovr", random_state=42
),
LogisticRegression(
C=len(iris.data),
solver="saga",
tol=1e-2,
multi_class="ovr",
random_state=42,
),
LogisticRegression(
C=len(iris.data), solver="newton-cholesky", multi_class="ovr"
),
],
)
def test_predict_iris(clf):
"""Test logistic regression with the iris dataset.
Test that both multinomial and OvR solvers handle multiclass data correctly and
give good accuracy score (>0.95) for the training data.
"""
n_samples, n_features = iris.data.shape
target = iris.target_names[iris.target]
if clf.solver == "lbfgs":
# lbfgs has convergence issues on the iris data with its default max_iter=100
with warnings.catch_warnings():
warnings.simplefilter("ignore", ConvergenceWarning)
clf.fit(iris.data, target)
else:
clf.fit(iris.data, target)
assert_array_equal(np.unique(target), clf.classes_)
pred = clf.predict(iris.data)
assert np.mean(pred == target) > 0.95
probabilities = clf.predict_proba(iris.data)
assert_allclose(probabilities.sum(axis=1), np.ones(n_samples))
pred = iris.target_names[probabilities.argmax(axis=1)]
assert np.mean(pred == target) > 0.95
@pytest.mark.parametrize("LR", [LogisticRegression, LogisticRegressionCV])
def test_check_solver_option(LR):
X, y = iris.data, iris.target
# only 'liblinear' and 'newton-cholesky' solver
for solver in ["liblinear", "newton-cholesky"]:
msg = f"Solver {solver} does not support a multinomial backend."
lr = LR(solver=solver, multi_class="multinomial")
with pytest.raises(ValueError, match=msg):
lr.fit(X, y)
# all solvers except 'liblinear' and 'saga'
for solver in ["lbfgs", "newton-cg", "newton-cholesky", "sag"]:
msg = "Solver %s supports only 'l2' or 'none' penalties," % solver
lr = LR(solver=solver, penalty="l1", multi_class="ovr")
with pytest.raises(ValueError, match=msg):
lr.fit(X, y)
for solver in ["lbfgs", "newton-cg", "newton-cholesky", "sag", "saga"]:
msg = "Solver %s supports only dual=False, got dual=True" % solver
lr = LR(solver=solver, dual=True, multi_class="ovr")
with pytest.raises(ValueError, match=msg):
lr.fit(X, y)
# only saga supports elasticnet. We only test for liblinear because the
# error is raised before for the other solvers (solver %s supports only l2
# penalties)
for solver in ["liblinear"]:
msg = "Only 'saga' solver supports elasticnet penalty, got solver={}.".format(
solver
)
lr = LR(solver=solver, penalty="elasticnet")
with pytest.raises(ValueError, match=msg):
lr.fit(X, y)
# liblinear does not support penalty='none'
# (LogisticRegressionCV does not supports penalty='none' at all)
if LR is LogisticRegression:
msg = "penalty='none' is not supported for the liblinear solver"
lr = LR(penalty="none", solver="liblinear")
with pytest.raises(ValueError, match=msg):
lr.fit(X, y)
@pytest.mark.parametrize("solver", ["lbfgs", "newton-cg", "sag", "saga"])
def test_multinomial_binary(solver):
# Test multinomial LR on a binary problem.
target = (iris.target > 0).astype(np.intp)
target = np.array(["setosa", "not-setosa"])[target]
clf = LogisticRegression(
solver=solver, multi_class="multinomial", random_state=42, max_iter=2000
)
clf.fit(iris.data, target)
assert clf.coef_.shape == (1, iris.data.shape[1])
assert clf.intercept_.shape == (1,)
assert_array_equal(clf.predict(iris.data), target)
mlr = LogisticRegression(
solver=solver, multi_class="multinomial", random_state=42, fit_intercept=False
)
mlr.fit(iris.data, target)
pred = clf.classes_[np.argmax(clf.predict_log_proba(iris.data), axis=1)]
assert np.mean(pred == target) > 0.9
def test_multinomial_binary_probabilities(global_random_seed):
# Test multinomial LR gives expected probabilities based on the
# decision function, for a binary problem.
X, y = make_classification(random_state=global_random_seed)
clf = LogisticRegression(
multi_class="multinomial",
solver="saga",
tol=1e-3,
random_state=global_random_seed,
)
clf.fit(X, y)
decision = clf.decision_function(X)
proba = clf.predict_proba(X)
expected_proba_class_1 = np.exp(decision) / (np.exp(decision) + np.exp(-decision))
expected_proba = np.c_[1 - expected_proba_class_1, expected_proba_class_1]
assert_almost_equal(proba, expected_proba)
def test_sparsify():
# Test sparsify and densify members.
n_samples, n_features = iris.data.shape
target = iris.target_names[iris.target]
X = scale(iris.data)
clf = LogisticRegression(random_state=0).fit(X, target)
pred_d_d = clf.decision_function(X)
clf.sparsify()
assert sparse.issparse(clf.coef_)
pred_s_d = clf.decision_function(X)
sp_data = sparse.coo_matrix(X)
pred_s_s = clf.decision_function(sp_data)
clf.densify()
pred_d_s = clf.decision_function(sp_data)
assert_array_almost_equal(pred_d_d, pred_s_d)
assert_array_almost_equal(pred_d_d, pred_s_s)
assert_array_almost_equal(pred_d_d, pred_d_s)
def test_inconsistent_input():
# Test that an exception is raised on inconsistent input
rng = np.random.RandomState(0)
X_ = rng.random_sample((5, 10))
y_ = np.ones(X_.shape[0])
y_[0] = 0
clf = LogisticRegression(random_state=0)
# Wrong dimensions for training data
y_wrong = y_[:-1]
with pytest.raises(ValueError):
clf.fit(X, y_wrong)
# Wrong dimensions for test data
with pytest.raises(ValueError):
clf.fit(X_, y_).predict(rng.random_sample((3, 12)))
def test_write_parameters():
# Test that we can write to coef_ and intercept_
clf = LogisticRegression(random_state=0)
clf.fit(X, Y1)
clf.coef_[:] = 0
clf.intercept_[:] = 0
assert_array_almost_equal(clf.decision_function(X), 0)
def test_nan():
# Test proper NaN handling.
# Regression test for Issue #252: fit used to go into an infinite loop.
Xnan = np.array(X, dtype=np.float64)
Xnan[0, 1] = np.nan
logistic = LogisticRegression(random_state=0)
with pytest.raises(ValueError):
logistic.fit(Xnan, Y1)
def test_consistency_path():
# Test that the path algorithm is consistent
rng = np.random.RandomState(0)
X = np.concatenate((rng.randn(100, 2) + [1, 1], rng.randn(100, 2)))
y = [1] * 100 + [-1] * 100
Cs = np.logspace(0, 4, 10)
f = ignore_warnings
# can't test with fit_intercept=True since LIBLINEAR
# penalizes the intercept
for solver in ["sag", "saga"]:
coefs, Cs, _ = f(_logistic_regression_path)(
X,
y,
Cs=Cs,
fit_intercept=False,
tol=1e-5,
solver=solver,
max_iter=1000,
multi_class="ovr",
random_state=0,
)
for i, C in enumerate(Cs):
lr = LogisticRegression(
C=C,
fit_intercept=False,
tol=1e-5,
solver=solver,
multi_class="ovr",
random_state=0,
max_iter=1000,
)
lr.fit(X, y)
lr_coef = lr.coef_.ravel()
assert_array_almost_equal(
lr_coef, coefs[i], decimal=4, err_msg="with solver = %s" % solver
)
# test for fit_intercept=True
for solver in ("lbfgs", "newton-cg", "newton-cholesky", "liblinear", "sag", "saga"):
Cs = [1e3]
coefs, Cs, _ = f(_logistic_regression_path)(
X,
y,
Cs=Cs,
tol=1e-6,
solver=solver,
intercept_scaling=10000.0,
random_state=0,
multi_class="ovr",
)
lr = LogisticRegression(
C=Cs[0],
tol=1e-6,
intercept_scaling=10000.0,
random_state=0,
multi_class="ovr",
solver=solver,
)
lr.fit(X, y)
lr_coef = np.concatenate([lr.coef_.ravel(), lr.intercept_])
assert_array_almost_equal(
lr_coef, coefs[0], decimal=4, err_msg="with solver = %s" % solver
)
def test_logistic_regression_path_convergence_fail():
rng = np.random.RandomState(0)
X = np.concatenate((rng.randn(100, 2) + [1, 1], rng.randn(100, 2)))
y = [1] * 100 + [-1] * 100
Cs = [1e3]
# Check that the convergence message points to both a model agnostic
# advice (scaling the data) and to the logistic regression specific
# documentation that includes hints on the solver configuration.
with pytest.warns(ConvergenceWarning) as record:
_logistic_regression_path(
X, y, Cs=Cs, tol=0.0, max_iter=1, random_state=0, verbose=0
)
assert len(record) == 1
warn_msg = record[0].message.args[0]
assert "lbfgs failed to converge" in warn_msg
assert "Increase the number of iterations" in warn_msg
assert "scale the data" in warn_msg
assert "linear_model.html#logistic-regression" in warn_msg
def test_liblinear_dual_random_state():
# random_state is relevant for liblinear solver only if dual=True
X, y = make_classification(n_samples=20, random_state=0)
lr1 = LogisticRegression(
random_state=0,
dual=True,
tol=1e-3,
solver="liblinear",
multi_class="ovr",
)
lr1.fit(X, y)
lr2 = LogisticRegression(
random_state=0,
dual=True,
tol=1e-3,
solver="liblinear",
multi_class="ovr",
)
lr2.fit(X, y)
lr3 = LogisticRegression(
random_state=8,
dual=True,
tol=1e-3,
solver="liblinear",
multi_class="ovr",
)
lr3.fit(X, y)
# same result for same random state
assert_array_almost_equal(lr1.coef_, lr2.coef_)
# different results for different random states
msg = "Arrays are not almost equal to 6 decimals"
with pytest.raises(AssertionError, match=msg):
assert_array_almost_equal(lr1.coef_, lr3.coef_)
def test_logistic_cv():
# test for LogisticRegressionCV object
n_samples, n_features = 50, 5
rng = np.random.RandomState(0)
X_ref = rng.randn(n_samples, n_features)
y = np.sign(X_ref.dot(5 * rng.randn(n_features)))
X_ref -= X_ref.mean()
X_ref /= X_ref.std()
lr_cv = LogisticRegressionCV(
Cs=[1.0], fit_intercept=False, solver="liblinear", multi_class="ovr", cv=3
)
lr_cv.fit(X_ref, y)
lr = LogisticRegression(
C=1.0, fit_intercept=False, solver="liblinear", multi_class="ovr"
)
lr.fit(X_ref, y)
assert_array_almost_equal(lr.coef_, lr_cv.coef_)
assert_array_equal(lr_cv.coef_.shape, (1, n_features))
assert_array_equal(lr_cv.classes_, [-1, 1])
assert len(lr_cv.classes_) == 2
coefs_paths = np.asarray(list(lr_cv.coefs_paths_.values()))
assert_array_equal(coefs_paths.shape, (1, 3, 1, n_features))
assert_array_equal(lr_cv.Cs_.shape, (1,))
scores = np.asarray(list(lr_cv.scores_.values()))
assert_array_equal(scores.shape, (1, 3, 1))
@pytest.mark.parametrize(
"scoring, multiclass_agg_list",
[
("accuracy", [""]),
("precision", ["_macro", "_weighted"]),
# no need to test for micro averaging because it
# is the same as accuracy for f1, precision,
# and recall (see https://github.com/
# scikit-learn/scikit-learn/pull/
# 11578#discussion_r203250062)
("f1", ["_macro", "_weighted"]),
("neg_log_loss", [""]),
("recall", ["_macro", "_weighted"]),
],
)
def test_logistic_cv_multinomial_score(scoring, multiclass_agg_list):
# test that LogisticRegressionCV uses the right score to compute its
# cross-validation scores when using a multinomial scoring
# see https://github.com/scikit-learn/scikit-learn/issues/8720
X, y = make_classification(
n_samples=100, random_state=0, n_classes=3, n_informative=6
)
train, test = np.arange(80), np.arange(80, 100)
lr = LogisticRegression(C=1.0, multi_class="multinomial")
# we use lbfgs to support multinomial
params = lr.get_params()
# we store the params to set them further in _log_reg_scoring_path
for key in ["C", "n_jobs", "warm_start"]:
del params[key]
lr.fit(X[train], y[train])
for averaging in multiclass_agg_list:
scorer = get_scorer(scoring + averaging)
assert_array_almost_equal(
_log_reg_scoring_path(
X, y, train, test, Cs=[1.0], scoring=scorer, **params
)[2][0],
scorer(lr, X[test], y[test]),
)
def test_multinomial_logistic_regression_string_inputs():
# Test with string labels for LogisticRegression(CV)
n_samples, n_features, n_classes = 50, 5, 3
X_ref, y = make_classification(
n_samples=n_samples,
n_features=n_features,
n_classes=n_classes,
n_informative=3,
random_state=0,
)
y_str = LabelEncoder().fit(["bar", "baz", "foo"]).inverse_transform(y)
# For numerical labels, let y values be taken from set (-1, 0, 1)
y = np.array(y) - 1
# Test for string labels
lr = LogisticRegression(multi_class="multinomial")
lr_cv = LogisticRegressionCV(multi_class="multinomial", Cs=3)
lr_str = LogisticRegression(multi_class="multinomial")
lr_cv_str = LogisticRegressionCV(multi_class="multinomial", Cs=3)
lr.fit(X_ref, y)
lr_cv.fit(X_ref, y)
lr_str.fit(X_ref, y_str)
lr_cv_str.fit(X_ref, y_str)
assert_array_almost_equal(lr.coef_, lr_str.coef_)
assert sorted(lr_str.classes_) == ["bar", "baz", "foo"]
assert_array_almost_equal(lr_cv.coef_, lr_cv_str.coef_)
assert sorted(lr_str.classes_) == ["bar", "baz", "foo"]
assert sorted(lr_cv_str.classes_) == ["bar", "baz", "foo"]
# The predictions should be in original labels
assert sorted(np.unique(lr_str.predict(X_ref))) == ["bar", "baz", "foo"]
assert sorted(np.unique(lr_cv_str.predict(X_ref))) == ["bar", "baz", "foo"]
# Make sure class weights can be given with string labels
lr_cv_str = LogisticRegression(
class_weight={"bar": 1, "baz": 2, "foo": 0}, multi_class="multinomial"
).fit(X_ref, y_str)
assert sorted(np.unique(lr_cv_str.predict(X_ref))) == ["bar", "baz"]
def test_logistic_cv_sparse():
X, y = make_classification(n_samples=50, n_features=5, random_state=0)
X[X < 1.0] = 0.0
csr = sparse.csr_matrix(X)
clf = LogisticRegressionCV()
clf.fit(X, y)
clfs = LogisticRegressionCV()
clfs.fit(csr, y)
assert_array_almost_equal(clfs.coef_, clf.coef_)
assert_array_almost_equal(clfs.intercept_, clf.intercept_)
assert clfs.C_ == clf.C_
def test_ovr_multinomial_iris():
# Test that OvR and multinomial are correct using the iris dataset.
train, target = iris.data, iris.target
n_samples, n_features = train.shape
# The cv indices from stratified kfold (where stratification is done based
# on the fine-grained iris classes, i.e, before the classes 0 and 1 are
# conflated) is used for both clf and clf1
n_cv = 2
cv = StratifiedKFold(n_cv)
precomputed_folds = list(cv.split(train, target))
# Train clf on the original dataset where classes 0 and 1 are separated
clf = LogisticRegressionCV(cv=precomputed_folds, multi_class="ovr")
clf.fit(train, target)
# Conflate classes 0 and 1 and train clf1 on this modified dataset
clf1 = LogisticRegressionCV(cv=precomputed_folds, multi_class="ovr")
target_copy = target.copy()
target_copy[target_copy == 0] = 1
clf1.fit(train, target_copy)
# Ensure that what OvR learns for class2 is same regardless of whether
# classes 0 and 1 are separated or not
assert_allclose(clf.scores_[2], clf1.scores_[2])
assert_allclose(clf.intercept_[2:], clf1.intercept_)
assert_allclose(clf.coef_[2][np.newaxis, :], clf1.coef_)
# Test the shape of various attributes.
assert clf.coef_.shape == (3, n_features)
assert_array_equal(clf.classes_, [0, 1, 2])
coefs_paths = np.asarray(list(clf.coefs_paths_.values()))
assert coefs_paths.shape == (3, n_cv, 10, n_features + 1)
assert clf.Cs_.shape == (10,)
scores = np.asarray(list(clf.scores_.values()))
assert scores.shape == (3, n_cv, 10)
# Test that for the iris data multinomial gives a better accuracy than OvR
for solver in ["lbfgs", "newton-cg", "sag", "saga"]:
max_iter = 500 if solver in ["sag", "saga"] else 30
clf_multi = LogisticRegressionCV(
solver=solver,
multi_class="multinomial",
max_iter=max_iter,
random_state=42,
tol=1e-3 if solver in ["sag", "saga"] else 1e-2,
cv=2,
)
if solver == "lbfgs":
# lbfgs requires scaling to avoid convergence warnings
train = scale(train)
clf_multi.fit(train, target)
multi_score = clf_multi.score(train, target)
ovr_score = clf.score(train, target)
assert multi_score > ovr_score
# Test attributes of LogisticRegressionCV
assert clf.coef_.shape == clf_multi.coef_.shape
assert_array_equal(clf_multi.classes_, [0, 1, 2])
coefs_paths = np.asarray(list(clf_multi.coefs_paths_.values()))
assert coefs_paths.shape == (3, n_cv, 10, n_features + 1)
assert clf_multi.Cs_.shape == (10,)
scores = np.asarray(list(clf_multi.scores_.values()))
assert scores.shape == (3, n_cv, 10)
def test_logistic_regression_solvers():
"""Test solvers converge to the same result."""
X, y = make_classification(n_features=10, n_informative=5, random_state=0)
params = dict(fit_intercept=False, random_state=42, multi_class="ovr")
regressors = {
solver: LogisticRegression(solver=solver, **params).fit(X, y)
for solver in SOLVERS
}
for solver_1, solver_2 in itertools.combinations(regressors, r=2):
assert_array_almost_equal(
regressors[solver_1].coef_, regressors[solver_2].coef_, decimal=3
)
def test_logistic_regression_solvers_multiclass():
"""Test solvers converge to the same result for multiclass problems."""
X, y = make_classification(
n_samples=20, n_features=20, n_informative=10, n_classes=3, random_state=0
)
tol = 1e-7
params = dict(fit_intercept=False, tol=tol, random_state=42, multi_class="ovr")
# Override max iteration count for specific solvers to allow for
# proper convergence.
solver_max_iter = {"sag": 1000, "saga": 10000}
regressors = {
solver: LogisticRegression(
solver=solver, max_iter=solver_max_iter.get(solver, 100), **params
).fit(X, y)
for solver in SOLVERS
}
for solver_1, solver_2 in itertools.combinations(regressors, r=2):
assert_array_almost_equal(
regressors[solver_1].coef_, regressors[solver_2].coef_, decimal=4
)
@pytest.mark.parametrize("weight", [{0: 0.1, 1: 0.2}, {0: 0.1, 1: 0.2, 2: 0.5}])
@pytest.mark.parametrize("class_weight", ["weight", "balanced"])
def test_logistic_regressioncv_class_weights(weight, class_weight):
"""Test class_weight for LogisticRegressionCV."""
n_classes = len(weight)
if class_weight == "weight":
class_weight = weight
X, y = make_classification(
n_samples=30,
n_features=3,
n_repeated=0,
n_informative=3,
n_redundant=0,
n_classes=n_classes,
random_state=0,
)
params = dict(
Cs=1,
fit_intercept=False,
multi_class="ovr",
class_weight=class_weight,
)
clf_lbfgs = LogisticRegressionCV(solver="lbfgs", **params)
clf_lbfgs.fit(X, y)
for solver in set(SOLVERS) - set(["lbfgs"]):
clf = LogisticRegressionCV(solver=solver, **params)
if solver in ("sag", "saga"):
clf.set_params(tol=1e-5, max_iter=10000, random_state=0)
clf.fit(X, y)
assert_allclose(clf.coef_, clf_lbfgs.coef_, rtol=1e-3)
def test_logistic_regression_sample_weights():
X, y = make_classification(
n_samples=20, n_features=5, n_informative=3, n_classes=2, random_state=0
)
sample_weight = y + 1
for LR in [LogisticRegression, LogisticRegressionCV]:
kw = {"random_state": 42, "fit_intercept": False, "multi_class": "ovr"}
if LR is LogisticRegressionCV:
kw.update({"Cs": 3, "cv": 3})
# Test that passing sample_weight as ones is the same as
# not passing them at all (default None)
for solver in ["lbfgs", "liblinear"]:
clf_sw_none = LR(solver=solver, **kw)
clf_sw_ones = LR(solver=solver, **kw)
clf_sw_none.fit(X, y)
clf_sw_ones.fit(X, y, sample_weight=np.ones(y.shape[0]))
assert_allclose(clf_sw_none.coef_, clf_sw_ones.coef_, rtol=1e-4)
# Test that sample weights work the same with the lbfgs,
# newton-cg, newton-cholesky and 'sag' solvers
clf_sw_lbfgs = LR(**kw)
clf_sw_lbfgs.fit(X, y, sample_weight=sample_weight)
for solver in set(SOLVERS) - set(("lbfgs", "saga")):
clf_sw = LR(solver=solver, tol=1e-10 if solver == "sag" else 1e-5, **kw)
# ignore convergence warning due to small dataset with sag
with ignore_warnings():
clf_sw.fit(X, y, sample_weight=sample_weight)
assert_allclose(clf_sw_lbfgs.coef_, clf_sw.coef_, rtol=1e-4)
# Test that passing class_weight as [1,2] is the same as
# passing class weight = [1,1] but adjusting sample weights
# to be 2 for all instances of class 2
for solver in ["lbfgs", "liblinear"]:
clf_cw_12 = LR(solver=solver, class_weight={0: 1, 1: 2}, **kw)
clf_cw_12.fit(X, y)
clf_sw_12 = LR(solver=solver, **kw)
clf_sw_12.fit(X, y, sample_weight=sample_weight)
assert_allclose(clf_cw_12.coef_, clf_sw_12.coef_, rtol=1e-4)
# Test the above for l1 penalty and l2 penalty with dual=True.
# since the patched liblinear code is different.
clf_cw = LogisticRegression(
solver="liblinear",
fit_intercept=False,
class_weight={0: 1, 1: 2},
penalty="l1",
tol=1e-5,
random_state=42,
multi_class="ovr",
)
clf_cw.fit(X, y)
clf_sw = LogisticRegression(
solver="liblinear",
fit_intercept=False,
penalty="l1",
tol=1e-5,
random_state=42,
multi_class="ovr",
)
clf_sw.fit(X, y, sample_weight)
assert_array_almost_equal(clf_cw.coef_, clf_sw.coef_, decimal=4)
clf_cw = LogisticRegression(
solver="liblinear",
fit_intercept=False,
class_weight={0: 1, 1: 2},
penalty="l2",
dual=True,
random_state=42,
multi_class="ovr",
)
clf_cw.fit(X, y)
clf_sw = LogisticRegression(
solver="liblinear",
fit_intercept=False,
penalty="l2",
dual=True,
random_state=42,
multi_class="ovr",
)
clf_sw.fit(X, y, sample_weight)
assert_array_almost_equal(clf_cw.coef_, clf_sw.coef_, decimal=4)
def _compute_class_weight_dictionary(y):
# helper for returning a dictionary instead of an array
classes = np.unique(y)
class_weight = compute_class_weight("balanced", classes=classes, y=y)
class_weight_dict = dict(zip(classes, class_weight))
return class_weight_dict
def test_logistic_regression_class_weights():
# Scale data to avoid convergence warnings with the lbfgs solver
X_iris = scale(iris.data)
# Multinomial case: remove 90% of class 0
X = X_iris[45:, :]
y = iris.target[45:]
solvers = ("lbfgs", "newton-cg")
class_weight_dict = _compute_class_weight_dictionary(y)
for solver in solvers:
clf1 = LogisticRegression(
solver=solver, multi_class="multinomial", class_weight="balanced"
)
clf2 = LogisticRegression(
solver=solver, multi_class="multinomial", class_weight=class_weight_dict
)
clf1.fit(X, y)
clf2.fit(X, y)
assert_array_almost_equal(clf1.coef_, clf2.coef_, decimal=4)
# Binary case: remove 90% of class 0 and 100% of class 2
X = X_iris[45:100, :]
y = iris.target[45:100]
class_weight_dict = _compute_class_weight_dictionary(y)
for solver in set(SOLVERS) - set(("sag", "saga")):
clf1 = LogisticRegression(
solver=solver, multi_class="ovr", class_weight="balanced"
)
clf2 = LogisticRegression(
solver=solver, multi_class="ovr", class_weight=class_weight_dict
)
clf1.fit(X, y)
clf2.fit(X, y)
assert_array_almost_equal(clf1.coef_, clf2.coef_, decimal=6)
def test_logistic_regression_multinomial():
# Tests for the multinomial option in logistic regression
# Some basic attributes of Logistic Regression
n_samples, n_features, n_classes = 50, 20, 3
X, y = make_classification(
n_samples=n_samples,
n_features=n_features,
n_informative=10,
n_classes=n_classes,
random_state=0,
)
X = StandardScaler(with_mean=False).fit_transform(X)
# 'lbfgs' is used as a referenced
solver = "lbfgs"
ref_i = LogisticRegression(solver=solver, multi_class="multinomial")
ref_w = LogisticRegression(
solver=solver, multi_class="multinomial", fit_intercept=False
)
ref_i.fit(X, y)
ref_w.fit(X, y)
assert ref_i.coef_.shape == (n_classes, n_features)
assert ref_w.coef_.shape == (n_classes, n_features)
for solver in ["sag", "saga", "newton-cg"]:
clf_i = LogisticRegression(
solver=solver,
multi_class="multinomial",
random_state=42,
max_iter=2000,
tol=1e-7,
)
clf_w = LogisticRegression(
solver=solver,
multi_class="multinomial",
random_state=42,
max_iter=2000,
tol=1e-7,
fit_intercept=False,
)
clf_i.fit(X, y)
clf_w.fit(X, y)
assert clf_i.coef_.shape == (n_classes, n_features)
assert clf_w.coef_.shape == (n_classes, n_features)
# Compare solutions between lbfgs and the other solvers
assert_allclose(ref_i.coef_, clf_i.coef_, rtol=1e-2)
assert_allclose(ref_w.coef_, clf_w.coef_, rtol=1e-2)
assert_allclose(ref_i.intercept_, clf_i.intercept_, rtol=1e-2)
# Test that the path give almost the same results. However since in this
# case we take the average of the coefs after fitting across all the
# folds, it need not be exactly the same.
for solver in ["lbfgs", "newton-cg", "sag", "saga"]:
clf_path = LogisticRegressionCV(
solver=solver, max_iter=2000, tol=1e-6, multi_class="multinomial", Cs=[1.0]
)
clf_path.fit(X, y)
assert_allclose(clf_path.coef_, ref_i.coef_, rtol=2e-2)
assert_allclose(clf_path.intercept_, ref_i.intercept_, rtol=2e-2)
def test_liblinear_decision_function_zero():
# Test negative prediction when decision_function values are zero.
# Liblinear predicts the positive class when decision_function values
# are zero. This is a test to verify that we do not do the same.
# See Issue: https://github.com/scikit-learn/scikit-learn/issues/3600
# and the PR https://github.com/scikit-learn/scikit-learn/pull/3623
X, y = make_classification(n_samples=5, n_features=5, random_state=0)
clf = LogisticRegression(fit_intercept=False, solver="liblinear", multi_class="ovr")
clf.fit(X, y)
# Dummy data such that the decision function becomes zero.
X = np.zeros((5, 5))
assert_array_equal(clf.predict(X), np.zeros(5))
def test_liblinear_logregcv_sparse():
# Test LogRegCV with solver='liblinear' works for sparse matrices
X, y = make_classification(n_samples=10, n_features=5, random_state=0)
clf = LogisticRegressionCV(solver="liblinear", multi_class="ovr")
clf.fit(sparse.csr_matrix(X), y)
def test_saga_sparse():
# Test LogRegCV with solver='liblinear' works for sparse matrices
X, y = make_classification(n_samples=10, n_features=5, random_state=0)
clf = LogisticRegressionCV(solver="saga", tol=1e-2)
clf.fit(sparse.csr_matrix(X), y)
def test_logreg_intercept_scaling_zero():
# Test that intercept_scaling is ignored when fit_intercept is False
clf = LogisticRegression(fit_intercept=False)
clf.fit(X, Y1)
assert clf.intercept_ == 0.0
def test_logreg_l1():
# Because liblinear penalizes the intercept and saga does not, we do not
# fit the intercept to make it possible to compare the coefficients of
# the two models at convergence.
rng = np.random.RandomState(42)
n_samples = 50
X, y = make_classification(n_samples=n_samples, n_features=20, random_state=0)
X_noise = rng.normal(size=(n_samples, 3))
X_constant = np.ones(shape=(n_samples, 2))
X = np.concatenate((X, X_noise, X_constant), axis=1)
lr_liblinear = LogisticRegression(
penalty="l1",
C=1.0,
solver="liblinear",
fit_intercept=False,
multi_class="ovr",
tol=1e-10,
)
lr_liblinear.fit(X, y)
lr_saga = LogisticRegression(
penalty="l1",
C=1.0,
solver="saga",
fit_intercept=False,
multi_class="ovr",
max_iter=1000,
tol=1e-10,
)
lr_saga.fit(X, y)
assert_array_almost_equal(lr_saga.coef_, lr_liblinear.coef_)
# Noise and constant features should be regularized to zero by the l1
# penalty
assert_array_almost_equal(lr_liblinear.coef_[0, -5:], np.zeros(5))
assert_array_almost_equal(lr_saga.coef_[0, -5:], np.zeros(5))
def test_logreg_l1_sparse_data():
# Because liblinear penalizes the intercept and saga does not, we do not
# fit the intercept to make it possible to compare the coefficients of
# the two models at convergence.
rng = np.random.RandomState(42)
n_samples = 50
X, y = make_classification(n_samples=n_samples, n_features=20, random_state=0)
X_noise = rng.normal(scale=0.1, size=(n_samples, 3))
X_constant = np.zeros(shape=(n_samples, 2))
X = np.concatenate((X, X_noise, X_constant), axis=1)
X[X < 1] = 0
X = sparse.csr_matrix(X)
lr_liblinear = LogisticRegression(
penalty="l1",
C=1.0,
solver="liblinear",
fit_intercept=False,
multi_class="ovr",
tol=1e-10,
)
lr_liblinear.fit(X, y)
lr_saga = LogisticRegression(
penalty="l1",
C=1.0,
solver="saga",
fit_intercept=False,
multi_class="ovr",
max_iter=1000,
tol=1e-10,
)
lr_saga.fit(X, y)
assert_array_almost_equal(lr_saga.coef_, lr_liblinear.coef_)
# Noise and constant features should be regularized to zero by the l1
# penalty
assert_array_almost_equal(lr_liblinear.coef_[0, -5:], np.zeros(5))
assert_array_almost_equal(lr_saga.coef_[0, -5:], np.zeros(5))
# Check that solving on the sparse and dense data yield the same results
lr_saga_dense = LogisticRegression(
penalty="l1",
C=1.0,
solver="saga",
fit_intercept=False,
multi_class="ovr",
max_iter=1000,
tol=1e-10,
)
lr_saga_dense.fit(X.toarray(), y)
assert_array_almost_equal(lr_saga.coef_, lr_saga_dense.coef_)
@pytest.mark.parametrize("random_seed", [42])
@pytest.mark.parametrize("penalty", ["l1", "l2"])
def test_logistic_regression_cv_refit(random_seed, penalty):
# Test that when refit=True, logistic regression cv with the saga solver
# converges to the same solution as logistic regression with a fixed
# regularization parameter.
# Internally the LogisticRegressionCV model uses a warm start to refit on
# the full data model with the optimal C found by CV. As the penalized
# logistic regression loss is convex, we should still recover exactly
# the same solution as long as the stopping criterion is strict enough (and
# that there are no exactly duplicated features when penalty='l1').
X, y = make_classification(n_samples=100, n_features=20, random_state=random_seed)
common_params = dict(
solver="saga",
penalty=penalty,
random_state=random_seed,
max_iter=1000,
tol=1e-12,
)
lr_cv = LogisticRegressionCV(Cs=[1.0], refit=True, **common_params)
lr_cv.fit(X, y)
lr = LogisticRegression(C=1.0, **common_params)
lr.fit(X, y)
assert_array_almost_equal(lr_cv.coef_, lr.coef_)
def test_logreg_predict_proba_multinomial():
X, y = make_classification(
n_samples=10, n_features=20, random_state=0, n_classes=3, n_informative=10
)
# Predicted probabilities using the true-entropy loss should give a
# smaller loss than those using the ovr method.
clf_multi = LogisticRegression(multi_class="multinomial", solver="lbfgs")
clf_multi.fit(X, y)
clf_multi_loss = log_loss(y, clf_multi.predict_proba(X))
clf_ovr = LogisticRegression(multi_class="ovr", solver="lbfgs")
clf_ovr.fit(X, y)
clf_ovr_loss = log_loss(y, clf_ovr.predict_proba(X))
assert clf_ovr_loss > clf_multi_loss
# Predicted probabilities using the soft-max function should give a
# smaller loss than those using the logistic function.
clf_multi_loss = log_loss(y, clf_multi.predict_proba(X))
clf_wrong_loss = log_loss(y, clf_multi._predict_proba_lr(X))
assert clf_wrong_loss > clf_multi_loss
@pytest.mark.parametrize("max_iter", np.arange(1, 5))
@pytest.mark.parametrize("multi_class", ["ovr", "multinomial"])
@pytest.mark.parametrize(
"solver, message",
[
(
"newton-cg",
"newton-cg failed to converge. Increase the number of iterations.",
),
(
"liblinear",
"Liblinear failed to converge, increase the number of iterations.",
),
("sag", "The max_iter was reached which means the coef_ did not converge"),
("saga", "The max_iter was reached which means the coef_ did not converge"),
("lbfgs", "lbfgs failed to converge"),
("newton-cholesky", "Newton solver did not converge after [0-9]* iterations"),
],
)
def test_max_iter(max_iter, multi_class, solver, message):
# Test that the maximum number of iteration is reached
X, y_bin = iris.data, iris.target.copy()
y_bin[y_bin == 2] = 0
if solver in ("liblinear", "newton-cholesky") and multi_class == "multinomial":
pytest.skip("'multinomial' is not supported by liblinear and newton-cholesky")
if solver == "newton-cholesky" and max_iter > 1:
pytest.skip("solver newton-cholesky might converge very fast")
lr = LogisticRegression(
max_iter=max_iter,
tol=1e-15,
multi_class=multi_class,
random_state=0,
solver=solver,
)
with pytest.warns(ConvergenceWarning, match=message):
lr.fit(X, y_bin)
assert lr.n_iter_[0] == max_iter
@pytest.mark.parametrize("solver", SOLVERS)
def test_n_iter(solver):
# Test that self.n_iter_ has the correct format.
X, y = iris.data, iris.target
if solver == "lbfgs":
# lbfgs requires scaling to avoid convergence warnings
X = scale(X)
n_classes = np.unique(y).shape[0]
assert n_classes == 3
# Also generate a binary classification sub-problem.
y_bin = y.copy()
y_bin[y_bin == 2] = 0
n_Cs = 4
n_cv_fold = 2
# Binary classification case
clf = LogisticRegression(tol=1e-2, C=1.0, solver=solver, random_state=42)
clf.fit(X, y_bin)
assert clf.n_iter_.shape == (1,)
clf_cv = LogisticRegressionCV(
tol=1e-2, solver=solver, Cs=n_Cs, cv=n_cv_fold, random_state=42
)
clf_cv.fit(X, y_bin)
assert clf_cv.n_iter_.shape == (1, n_cv_fold, n_Cs)
# OvR case
clf.set_params(multi_class="ovr").fit(X, y)
assert clf.n_iter_.shape == (n_classes,)
clf_cv.set_params(multi_class="ovr").fit(X, y)
assert clf_cv.n_iter_.shape == (n_classes, n_cv_fold, n_Cs)
# multinomial case
if solver in ("liblinear", "newton-cholesky"):
# This solver only supports one-vs-rest multiclass classification.
return
# When using the multinomial objective function, there is a single
# optimization problem to solve for all classes at once:
clf.set_params(multi_class="multinomial").fit(X, y)
assert clf.n_iter_.shape == (1,)
clf_cv.set_params(multi_class="multinomial").fit(X, y)
assert clf_cv.n_iter_.shape == (1, n_cv_fold, n_Cs)
@pytest.mark.parametrize("solver", sorted(set(SOLVERS) - set(["liblinear"])))
@pytest.mark.parametrize("warm_start", (True, False))
@pytest.mark.parametrize("fit_intercept", (True, False))
@pytest.mark.parametrize("multi_class", ["ovr", "multinomial"])
def test_warm_start(solver, warm_start, fit_intercept, multi_class):
# A 1-iteration second fit on same data should give almost same result
# with warm starting, and quite different result without warm starting.
# Warm starting does not work with liblinear solver.
X, y = iris.data, iris.target
if solver == "newton-cholesky" and multi_class == "multinomial":
# solver does only support OvR
return
clf = LogisticRegression(
tol=1e-4,
multi_class=multi_class,
warm_start=warm_start,
solver=solver,
random_state=42,
fit_intercept=fit_intercept,
)
with ignore_warnings(category=ConvergenceWarning):
clf.fit(X, y)
coef_1 = clf.coef_
clf.max_iter = 1
clf.fit(X, y)
cum_diff = np.sum(np.abs(coef_1 - clf.coef_))
msg = (
"Warm starting issue with %s solver in %s mode "
"with fit_intercept=%s and warm_start=%s"
% (solver, multi_class, str(fit_intercept), str(warm_start))
)
if warm_start:
assert 2.0 > cum_diff, msg
else:
assert cum_diff > 2.0, msg
def test_saga_vs_liblinear():
iris = load_iris()
X, y = iris.data, iris.target
X = np.concatenate([X] * 3)
y = np.concatenate([y] * 3)
X_bin = X[y <= 1]
y_bin = y[y <= 1] * 2 - 1
X_sparse, y_sparse = make_classification(
n_samples=50, n_features=20, random_state=0
)
X_sparse = sparse.csr_matrix(X_sparse)
for X, y in ((X_bin, y_bin), (X_sparse, y_sparse)):
for penalty in ["l1", "l2"]:
n_samples = X.shape[0]
# alpha=1e-3 is time consuming
for alpha in np.logspace(-1, 1, 3):
saga = LogisticRegression(
C=1.0 / (n_samples * alpha),
solver="saga",
multi_class="ovr",
max_iter=200,
fit_intercept=False,
penalty=penalty,
random_state=0,
tol=1e-6,
)
liblinear = LogisticRegression(
C=1.0 / (n_samples * alpha),
solver="liblinear",
multi_class="ovr",
max_iter=200,
fit_intercept=False,
penalty=penalty,
random_state=0,
tol=1e-6,
)
saga.fit(X, y)
liblinear.fit(X, y)
# Convergence for alpha=1e-3 is very slow
assert_array_almost_equal(saga.coef_, liblinear.coef_, 3)
@pytest.mark.parametrize("multi_class", ["ovr", "multinomial"])
@pytest.mark.parametrize(
"solver", ["liblinear", "newton-cg", "newton-cholesky", "saga"]
)
@pytest.mark.parametrize("fit_intercept", [False, True])
def test_dtype_match(solver, multi_class, fit_intercept):
# Test that np.float32 input data is not cast to np.float64 when possible
# and that the output is approximately the same no matter the input format.
if solver in ("liblinear", "newton-cholesky") and multi_class == "multinomial":
pytest.skip(f"Solver={solver} does not support multinomial logistic.")
out32_type = np.float64 if solver == "liblinear" else np.float32
X_32 = np.array(X).astype(np.float32)
y_32 = np.array(Y1).astype(np.float32)
X_64 = np.array(X).astype(np.float64)
y_64 = np.array(Y1).astype(np.float64)
X_sparse_32 = sparse.csr_matrix(X, dtype=np.float32)
X_sparse_64 = sparse.csr_matrix(X, dtype=np.float64)
solver_tol = 5e-4
lr_templ = LogisticRegression(
solver=solver,
multi_class=multi_class,
random_state=42,
tol=solver_tol,
fit_intercept=fit_intercept,
)
# Check 32-bit type consistency
lr_32 = clone(lr_templ)
lr_32.fit(X_32, y_32)
assert lr_32.coef_.dtype == out32_type
# Check 32-bit type consistency with sparsity
lr_32_sparse = clone(lr_templ)
lr_32_sparse.fit(X_sparse_32, y_32)
assert lr_32_sparse.coef_.dtype == out32_type
# Check 64-bit type consistency
lr_64 = clone(lr_templ)
lr_64.fit(X_64, y_64)
assert lr_64.coef_.dtype == np.float64
# Check 64-bit type consistency with sparsity
lr_64_sparse = clone(lr_templ)
lr_64_sparse.fit(X_sparse_64, y_64)
assert lr_64_sparse.coef_.dtype == np.float64
# solver_tol bounds the norm of the loss gradient
# dw ~= inv(H)*grad ==> |dw| ~= |inv(H)| * solver_tol, where H - hessian
#
# See https://github.com/scikit-learn/scikit-learn/pull/13645
#
# with Z = np.hstack((np.ones((3,1)), np.array(X)))
# In [8]: np.linalg.norm(np.diag([0,2,2]) + np.linalg.inv((Z.T @ Z)/4))
# Out[8]: 1.7193336918135917
# factor of 2 to get the ball diameter
atol = 2 * 1.72 * solver_tol
if os.name == "nt" and _IS_32BIT:
# FIXME
atol = 1e-2
# Check accuracy consistency
assert_allclose(lr_32.coef_, lr_64.coef_.astype(np.float32), atol=atol)
if solver == "saga" and fit_intercept:
# FIXME: SAGA on sparse data fits the intercept inaccurately with the
# default tol and max_iter parameters.
atol = 1e-1
assert_allclose(lr_32.coef_, lr_32_sparse.coef_, atol=atol)
assert_allclose(lr_64.coef_, lr_64_sparse.coef_, atol=atol)
def test_warm_start_converge_LR():
# Test to see that the logistic regression converges on warm start,
# with multi_class='multinomial'. Non-regressive test for #10836
rng = np.random.RandomState(0)
X = np.concatenate((rng.randn(100, 2) + [1, 1], rng.randn(100, 2)))
y = np.array([1] * 100 + [-1] * 100)
lr_no_ws = LogisticRegression(
multi_class="multinomial", solver="sag", warm_start=False, random_state=0
)
lr_ws = LogisticRegression(
multi_class="multinomial", solver="sag", warm_start=True, random_state=0
)
lr_no_ws_loss = log_loss(y, lr_no_ws.fit(X, y).predict_proba(X))
for i in range(5):
lr_ws.fit(X, y)
lr_ws_loss = log_loss(y, lr_ws.predict_proba(X))
assert_allclose(lr_no_ws_loss, lr_ws_loss, rtol=1e-5)
def test_elastic_net_coeffs():
# make sure elasticnet penalty gives different coefficients from l1 and l2
# with saga solver (l1_ratio different from 0 or 1)
X, y = make_classification(random_state=0)
C = 2.0
l1_ratio = 0.5
coeffs = list()
for penalty in ("elasticnet", "l1", "l2"):
lr = LogisticRegression(
penalty=penalty,
C=C,
solver="saga",
random_state=0,
l1_ratio=l1_ratio,
tol=1e-3,
max_iter=200,
)
lr.fit(X, y)
coeffs.append(lr.coef_)
elastic_net_coeffs, l1_coeffs, l2_coeffs = coeffs
# make sure coeffs differ by at least .1
assert not np.allclose(elastic_net_coeffs, l1_coeffs, rtol=0, atol=0.1)
assert not np.allclose(elastic_net_coeffs, l2_coeffs, rtol=0, atol=0.1)
assert not np.allclose(l2_coeffs, l1_coeffs, rtol=0, atol=0.1)
@pytest.mark.parametrize("C", [0.001, 0.1, 1, 10, 100, 1000, 1e6])
@pytest.mark.parametrize("penalty, l1_ratio", [("l1", 1), ("l2", 0)])
def test_elastic_net_l1_l2_equivalence(C, penalty, l1_ratio):
# Make sure elasticnet is equivalent to l1 when l1_ratio=1 and to l2 when
# l1_ratio=0.
X, y = make_classification(random_state=0)
lr_enet = LogisticRegression(
penalty="elasticnet",
C=C,
l1_ratio=l1_ratio,
solver="saga",
random_state=0,
tol=1e-2,
)
lr_expected = LogisticRegression(
penalty=penalty, C=C, solver="saga", random_state=0, tol=1e-2
)
lr_enet.fit(X, y)
lr_expected.fit(X, y)
assert_array_almost_equal(lr_enet.coef_, lr_expected.coef_)
@pytest.mark.parametrize("C", [0.001, 1, 100, 1e6])
def test_elastic_net_vs_l1_l2(C):
# Make sure that elasticnet with grid search on l1_ratio gives same or
# better results than just l1 or just l2.
X, y = make_classification(500, random_state=0)
X_train, X_test, y_train, y_test = train_test_split(X, y, random_state=0)
param_grid = {"l1_ratio": np.linspace(0, 1, 5)}
enet_clf = LogisticRegression(
penalty="elasticnet", C=C, solver="saga", random_state=0, tol=1e-2
)
gs = GridSearchCV(enet_clf, param_grid, refit=True)
l1_clf = LogisticRegression(
penalty="l1", C=C, solver="saga", random_state=0, tol=1e-2
)
l2_clf = LogisticRegression(
penalty="l2", C=C, solver="saga", random_state=0, tol=1e-2
)
for clf in (gs, l1_clf, l2_clf):
clf.fit(X_train, y_train)
assert gs.score(X_test, y_test) >= l1_clf.score(X_test, y_test)
assert gs.score(X_test, y_test) >= l2_clf.score(X_test, y_test)
@pytest.mark.parametrize("C", np.logspace(-3, 2, 4))
@pytest.mark.parametrize("l1_ratio", [0.1, 0.5, 0.9])
def test_LogisticRegression_elastic_net_objective(C, l1_ratio):
# Check that training with a penalty matching the objective leads
# to a lower objective.
# Here we train a logistic regression with l2 (a) and elasticnet (b)
# penalties, and compute the elasticnet objective. That of a should be
# greater than that of b (both objectives are convex).
X, y = make_classification(
n_samples=1000,
n_classes=2,
n_features=20,
n_informative=10,
n_redundant=0,
n_repeated=0,
random_state=0,
)
X = scale(X)
lr_enet = LogisticRegression(
penalty="elasticnet",
solver="saga",
random_state=0,
C=C,
l1_ratio=l1_ratio,
fit_intercept=False,
)
lr_l2 = LogisticRegression(
penalty="l2", solver="saga", random_state=0, C=C, fit_intercept=False
)
lr_enet.fit(X, y)
lr_l2.fit(X, y)
def enet_objective(lr):
coef = lr.coef_.ravel()
obj = C * log_loss(y, lr.predict_proba(X))
obj += l1_ratio * np.sum(np.abs(coef))
obj += (1.0 - l1_ratio) * 0.5 * np.dot(coef, coef)
return obj
assert enet_objective(lr_enet) < enet_objective(lr_l2)
@pytest.mark.parametrize("multi_class", ("ovr", "multinomial"))
def test_LogisticRegressionCV_GridSearchCV_elastic_net(multi_class):
# make sure LogisticRegressionCV gives same best params (l1 and C) as
# GridSearchCV when penalty is elasticnet
if multi_class == "ovr":
# This is actually binary classification, ovr multiclass is treated in
# test_LogisticRegressionCV_GridSearchCV_elastic_net_ovr
X, y = make_classification(random_state=0)
else:
X, y = make_classification(
n_samples=100, n_classes=3, n_informative=3, random_state=0
)
cv = StratifiedKFold(5)
l1_ratios = np.linspace(0, 1, 3)
Cs = np.logspace(-4, 4, 3)
lrcv = LogisticRegressionCV(
penalty="elasticnet",
Cs=Cs,
solver="saga",
cv=cv,
l1_ratios=l1_ratios,
random_state=0,
multi_class=multi_class,
tol=1e-2,
)
lrcv.fit(X, y)
param_grid = {"C": Cs, "l1_ratio": l1_ratios}
lr = LogisticRegression(
penalty="elasticnet",
solver="saga",
random_state=0,
multi_class=multi_class,
tol=1e-2,
)
gs = GridSearchCV(lr, param_grid, cv=cv)
gs.fit(X, y)
assert gs.best_params_["l1_ratio"] == lrcv.l1_ratio_[0]
assert gs.best_params_["C"] == lrcv.C_[0]
def test_LogisticRegressionCV_GridSearchCV_elastic_net_ovr():
# make sure LogisticRegressionCV gives same best params (l1 and C) as
# GridSearchCV when penalty is elasticnet and multiclass is ovr. We can't
# compare best_params like in the previous test because
# LogisticRegressionCV with multi_class='ovr' will have one C and one
# l1_param for each class, while LogisticRegression will share the
# parameters over the *n_classes* classifiers.
X, y = make_classification(
n_samples=100, n_classes=3, n_informative=3, random_state=0
)
X_train, X_test, y_train, y_test = train_test_split(X, y, random_state=0)
cv = StratifiedKFold(5)
l1_ratios = np.linspace(0, 1, 3)
Cs = np.logspace(-4, 4, 3)
lrcv = LogisticRegressionCV(
penalty="elasticnet",
Cs=Cs,
solver="saga",
cv=cv,
l1_ratios=l1_ratios,
random_state=0,
multi_class="ovr",
tol=1e-2,
)
lrcv.fit(X_train, y_train)
param_grid = {"C": Cs, "l1_ratio": l1_ratios}
lr = LogisticRegression(
penalty="elasticnet",
solver="saga",
random_state=0,
multi_class="ovr",
tol=1e-2,
)
gs = GridSearchCV(lr, param_grid, cv=cv)
gs.fit(X_train, y_train)
# Check that predictions are 80% the same
assert (lrcv.predict(X_train) == gs.predict(X_train)).mean() >= 0.8
assert (lrcv.predict(X_test) == gs.predict(X_test)).mean() >= 0.8
@pytest.mark.parametrize("penalty", ("l2", "elasticnet"))
@pytest.mark.parametrize("multi_class", ("ovr", "multinomial", "auto"))
def test_LogisticRegressionCV_no_refit(penalty, multi_class):
# Test LogisticRegressionCV attribute shapes when refit is False
n_classes = 3
n_features = 20
X, y = make_classification(
n_samples=200,
n_classes=n_classes,
n_informative=n_classes,
n_features=n_features,
random_state=0,
)
Cs = np.logspace(-4, 4, 3)
if penalty == "elasticnet":
l1_ratios = np.linspace(0, 1, 2)
else:
l1_ratios = None
lrcv = LogisticRegressionCV(
penalty=penalty,
Cs=Cs,
solver="saga",
l1_ratios=l1_ratios,
random_state=0,
multi_class=multi_class,
tol=1e-2,
refit=False,
)
lrcv.fit(X, y)
assert lrcv.C_.shape == (n_classes,)
assert lrcv.l1_ratio_.shape == (n_classes,)
assert lrcv.coef_.shape == (n_classes, n_features)
def test_LogisticRegressionCV_elasticnet_attribute_shapes():
# Make sure the shapes of scores_ and coefs_paths_ attributes are correct
# when using elasticnet (added one dimension for l1_ratios)
n_classes = 3
n_features = 20
X, y = make_classification(
n_samples=200,
n_classes=n_classes,
n_informative=n_classes,
n_features=n_features,
random_state=0,
)
Cs = np.logspace(-4, 4, 3)
l1_ratios = np.linspace(0, 1, 2)
n_folds = 2
lrcv = LogisticRegressionCV(
penalty="elasticnet",
Cs=Cs,
solver="saga",
cv=n_folds,
l1_ratios=l1_ratios,
multi_class="ovr",
random_state=0,
tol=1e-2,
)
lrcv.fit(X, y)
coefs_paths = np.asarray(list(lrcv.coefs_paths_.values()))
assert coefs_paths.shape == (
n_classes,
n_folds,
Cs.size,
l1_ratios.size,
n_features + 1,
)
scores = np.asarray(list(lrcv.scores_.values()))
assert scores.shape == (n_classes, n_folds, Cs.size, l1_ratios.size)
assert lrcv.n_iter_.shape == (n_classes, n_folds, Cs.size, l1_ratios.size)
def test_l1_ratio_non_elasticnet():
msg = (
r"l1_ratio parameter is only used when penalty is"
r" 'elasticnet'\. Got \(penalty=l1\)"
)
with pytest.warns(UserWarning, match=msg):
LogisticRegression(penalty="l1", solver="saga", l1_ratio=0.5).fit(X, Y1)
@pytest.mark.parametrize("C", np.logspace(-3, 2, 4))
@pytest.mark.parametrize("l1_ratio", [0.1, 0.5, 0.9])
def test_elastic_net_versus_sgd(C, l1_ratio):
# Compare elasticnet penalty in LogisticRegression() and SGD(loss='log')
n_samples = 500
X, y = make_classification(
n_samples=n_samples,
n_classes=2,
n_features=5,
n_informative=5,
n_redundant=0,
n_repeated=0,
random_state=1,
)
X = scale(X)
sgd = SGDClassifier(
penalty="elasticnet",
random_state=1,
fit_intercept=False,
tol=None,
max_iter=2000,
l1_ratio=l1_ratio,
alpha=1.0 / C / n_samples,
loss="log_loss",
)
log = LogisticRegression(
penalty="elasticnet",
random_state=1,
fit_intercept=False,
tol=1e-5,
max_iter=1000,
l1_ratio=l1_ratio,
C=C,
solver="saga",
)
sgd.fit(X, y)
log.fit(X, y)
assert_array_almost_equal(sgd.coef_, log.coef_, decimal=1)
def test_logistic_regression_path_coefs_multinomial():
# Make sure that the returned coefs by logistic_regression_path when
# multi_class='multinomial' don't override each other (used to be a
# bug).
X, y = make_classification(
n_samples=200,
n_classes=3,
n_informative=2,
n_redundant=0,
n_clusters_per_class=1,
random_state=0,
n_features=2,
)
Cs = [0.00001, 1, 10000]
coefs, _, _ = _logistic_regression_path(
X,
y,
penalty="l1",
Cs=Cs,
solver="saga",
random_state=0,
multi_class="multinomial",
)
with pytest.raises(AssertionError):
assert_array_almost_equal(coefs[0], coefs[1], decimal=1)
with pytest.raises(AssertionError):
assert_array_almost_equal(coefs[0], coefs[2], decimal=1)
with pytest.raises(AssertionError):
assert_array_almost_equal(coefs[1], coefs[2], decimal=1)
@pytest.mark.parametrize(
"est",
[
LogisticRegression(random_state=0, max_iter=500),
LogisticRegressionCV(random_state=0, cv=3, Cs=3, tol=1e-3, max_iter=500),
],
ids=lambda x: x.__class__.__name__,
)
@pytest.mark.parametrize("solver", SOLVERS)
def test_logistic_regression_multi_class_auto(est, solver):
# check multi_class='auto' => multi_class='ovr'
# iff binary y or liblinear or newton-cholesky
def fit(X, y, **kw):
return clone(est).set_params(**kw).fit(X, y)
scaled_data = scale(iris.data)
X = scaled_data[::10]
X2 = scaled_data[1::10]
y_multi = iris.target[::10]
y_bin = y_multi == 0
est_auto_bin = fit(X, y_bin, multi_class="auto", solver=solver)
est_ovr_bin = fit(X, y_bin, multi_class="ovr", solver=solver)
assert_allclose(est_auto_bin.coef_, est_ovr_bin.coef_)
assert_allclose(est_auto_bin.predict_proba(X2), est_ovr_bin.predict_proba(X2))
est_auto_multi = fit(X, y_multi, multi_class="auto", solver=solver)
if solver in ("liblinear", "newton-cholesky"):
est_ovr_multi = fit(X, y_multi, multi_class="ovr", solver=solver)
assert_allclose(est_auto_multi.coef_, est_ovr_multi.coef_)
assert_allclose(
est_auto_multi.predict_proba(X2), est_ovr_multi.predict_proba(X2)
)
else:
est_multi_multi = fit(X, y_multi, multi_class="multinomial", solver=solver)
assert_allclose(est_auto_multi.coef_, est_multi_multi.coef_)
assert_allclose(
est_auto_multi.predict_proba(X2), est_multi_multi.predict_proba(X2)
)
# Make sure multi_class='ovr' is distinct from ='multinomial'
assert not np.allclose(
est_auto_bin.coef_,
fit(X, y_bin, multi_class="multinomial", solver=solver).coef_,
)
assert not np.allclose(
est_auto_bin.coef_,
fit(X, y_multi, multi_class="multinomial", solver=solver).coef_,
)
@pytest.mark.parametrize("solver", sorted(set(SOLVERS) - set(["liblinear"])))
def test_penalty_none(solver):
# - Make sure warning is raised if penalty=None and C is set to a
# non-default value.
# - Make sure setting penalty=None is equivalent to setting C=np.inf with
# l2 penalty.
X, y = make_classification(n_samples=1000, random_state=0)
msg = "Setting penalty=None will ignore the C"
lr = LogisticRegression(penalty=None, solver=solver, C=4)
with pytest.warns(UserWarning, match=msg):
lr.fit(X, y)
lr_none = LogisticRegression(penalty=None, solver=solver, random_state=0)
lr_l2_C_inf = LogisticRegression(
penalty="l2", C=np.inf, solver=solver, random_state=0
)
pred_none = lr_none.fit(X, y).predict(X)
pred_l2_C_inf = lr_l2_C_inf.fit(X, y).predict(X)
assert_array_equal(pred_none, pred_l2_C_inf)
@pytest.mark.parametrize(
"params",
[
{"penalty": "l1", "dual": False, "tol": 1e-6, "max_iter": 1000},
{"penalty": "l2", "dual": True, "tol": 1e-12, "max_iter": 1000},
{"penalty": "l2", "dual": False, "tol": 1e-12, "max_iter": 1000},
],
)
def test_logisticregression_liblinear_sample_weight(params):
# check that we support sample_weight with liblinear in all possible cases:
# l1-primal, l2-primal, l2-dual
X = np.array(
[
[1, 3],
[1, 3],
[1, 3],
[1, 3],
[2, 1],
[2, 1],
[2, 1],
[2, 1],
[3, 3],
[3, 3],
[3, 3],
[3, 3],
[4, 1],
[4, 1],
[4, 1],
[4, 1],
],
dtype=np.dtype("float"),
)
y = np.array(
[1, 1, 1, 1, 2, 2, 2, 2, 1, 1, 1, 1, 2, 2, 2, 2], dtype=np.dtype("int")
)
X2 = np.vstack([X, X])
y2 = np.hstack([y, 3 - y])
sample_weight = np.ones(shape=len(y) * 2)
sample_weight[len(y) :] = 0
X2, y2, sample_weight = shuffle(X2, y2, sample_weight, random_state=0)
base_clf = LogisticRegression(solver="liblinear", random_state=42)
base_clf.set_params(**params)
clf_no_weight = clone(base_clf).fit(X, y)
clf_with_weight = clone(base_clf).fit(X2, y2, sample_weight=sample_weight)
for method in ("predict", "predict_proba", "decision_function"):
X_clf_no_weight = getattr(clf_no_weight, method)(X)
X_clf_with_weight = getattr(clf_with_weight, method)(X)
assert_allclose(X_clf_no_weight, X_clf_with_weight)
def test_scores_attribute_layout_elasticnet():
# Non regression test for issue #14955.
# when penalty is elastic net the scores_ attribute has shape
# (n_classes, n_Cs, n_l1_ratios)
# We here make sure that the second dimension indeed corresponds to Cs and
# the third dimension corresponds to l1_ratios.
X, y = make_classification(n_samples=1000, random_state=0)
cv = StratifiedKFold(n_splits=5)
l1_ratios = [0.1, 0.9]
Cs = [0.1, 1, 10]
lrcv = LogisticRegressionCV(
penalty="elasticnet",
solver="saga",
l1_ratios=l1_ratios,
Cs=Cs,
cv=cv,
random_state=0,
max_iter=250,
tol=1e-3,
)
lrcv.fit(X, y)
avg_scores_lrcv = lrcv.scores_[1].mean(axis=0) # average over folds
for i, C in enumerate(Cs):
for j, l1_ratio in enumerate(l1_ratios):
lr = LogisticRegression(
penalty="elasticnet",
solver="saga",
C=C,
l1_ratio=l1_ratio,
random_state=0,
max_iter=250,
tol=1e-3,
)
avg_score_lr = cross_val_score(lr, X, y, cv=cv).mean()
assert avg_scores_lrcv[i, j] == pytest.approx(avg_score_lr)
@pytest.mark.parametrize("fit_intercept", [False, True])
def test_multinomial_identifiability_on_iris(fit_intercept):
"""Test that the multinomial classification is identifiable.
A multinomial with c classes can be modeled with
probability_k = exp(X@coef_k) / sum(exp(X@coef_l), l=1..c) for k=1..c.
This is not identifiable, unless one chooses a further constraint.
According to [1], the maximum of the L2 penalized likelihood automatically
satisfies the symmetric constraint:
sum(coef_k, k=1..c) = 0
Further details can be found in [2].
Reference
---------
.. [1] :doi:`Zhu, Ji and Trevor J. Hastie. "Classification of gene microarrays by
penalized logistic regression". Biostatistics 5 3 (2004): 427-43.
<10.1093/biostatistics/kxg046>`
.. [2] :arxiv:`Noah Simon and Jerome Friedman and Trevor Hastie. (2013)
"A Blockwise Descent Algorithm for Group-penalized Multiresponse and
Multinomial Regression". <1311.6529>`
"""
# Test logistic regression with the iris dataset
n_samples, n_features = iris.data.shape
target = iris.target_names[iris.target]
clf = LogisticRegression(
C=len(iris.data),
solver="lbfgs",
multi_class="multinomial",
fit_intercept=fit_intercept,
)
# Scaling X to ease convergence.
X_scaled = scale(iris.data)
clf.fit(X_scaled, target)
# axis=0 is sum over classes
assert_allclose(clf.coef_.sum(axis=0), 0, atol=1e-10)
if fit_intercept:
clf.intercept_.sum(axis=0) == pytest.approx(0, abs=1e-15)
@pytest.mark.parametrize("multi_class", ["ovr", "multinomial", "auto"])
@pytest.mark.parametrize("class_weight", [{0: 1.0, 1: 10.0, 2: 1.0}, "balanced"])
def test_sample_weight_not_modified(multi_class, class_weight):
X, y = load_iris(return_X_y=True)
n_features = len(X)
W = np.ones(n_features)
W[: n_features // 2] = 2
expected = W.copy()
clf = LogisticRegression(
random_state=0, class_weight=class_weight, max_iter=200, multi_class=multi_class
)
clf.fit(X, y, sample_weight=W)
assert_allclose(expected, W)
@pytest.mark.parametrize("solver", SOLVERS)
def test_large_sparse_matrix(solver):
# Solvers either accept large sparse matrices, or raise helpful error.
# Non-regression test for pull-request #21093.
# generate sparse matrix with int64 indices
X = sparse.rand(20, 10, format="csr")
for attr in ["indices", "indptr"]:
setattr(X, attr, getattr(X, attr).astype("int64"))
y = np.random.randint(2, size=X.shape[0])
if solver in ["liblinear", "sag", "saga"]:
msg = "Only sparse matrices with 32-bit integer indices"
with pytest.raises(ValueError, match=msg):
LogisticRegression(solver=solver).fit(X, y)
else:
LogisticRegression(solver=solver).fit(X, y)
def test_single_feature_newton_cg():
# Test that Newton-CG works with a single feature and intercept.
# Non-regression test for issue #23605.
X = np.array([[0.5, 0.65, 1.1, 1.25, 0.8, 0.54, 0.95, 0.7]]).T
y = np.array([1, 1, 0, 0, 1, 1, 0, 1])
assert X.shape[1] == 1
LogisticRegression(solver="newton-cg", fit_intercept=True).fit(X, y)
# TODO(1.4): Remove
def test_warning_on_penalty_string_none():
# Test that warning message is shown when penalty='none'
target = iris.target_names[iris.target]
lr = LogisticRegression(penalty="none")
warning_message = (
"`penalty='none'`has been deprecated in 1.2 and will be removed in 1.4."
" To keep the past behaviour, set `penalty=None`."
)
with pytest.warns(FutureWarning, match=warning_message):
lr.fit(iris.data, target)