target_evaluator_default
is the default targetEvaluator
function that is
invoked if targetEvaluator
is a string (by default
targetEvaluator
is NULL
and this function is not invoked). You can use it as
an advanced example of how to create your own targetEvaluator
function.
Usage
target_evaluator_default(
experiment,
num_configurations,
all_conf_id,
scenario,
target_runner_call
)
Arguments
- experiment
A list describing the experiment. It contains at least:
id_configuration
An alphanumeric string that uniquely identifies a configuration;
id_instance
An alphanumeric string that uniquely identifies an instance;
seed
Seed for the random number generator to be used for this evaluation, ignore the seed for deterministic algorithms;
instance
String giving the instance to be used for this evaluation;
bound
(only when
capping
is enabled) Time bound for the execution;configuration
1-row data frame with a column per parameter name;
switches
Vector of parameter switches (labels) in the order of parameters used in
configuration
.
- num_configurations
Number of configurations alive in the race.
- all_conf_id
Vector of configuration IDs of the alive configurations.
- scenario
list()
Data structure containing irace settings. The data structure has to be the one returned by the functiondefaultScenario()
orreadScenario()
.- target_runner_call
String describing the call to
targetRunner
that corresponds to this call totargetEvaluator
. This is used for providing extra information to the user, for example, in casetargetEvaluator
fails.
Value
The function targetEvaluator
must return a list with one element
"cost"
, the numerical value corresponding to the cost measure of the
given configuration on the given instance.
The return list may also contain the following optional elements that are used
by irace for reporting errors in targetEvaluator
:
error
is a string used to report an error;
outputRaw
is a string used to report the raw output of calls to an external program or function;
call
is a string used to report how
targetRunner
called an external program or function.