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MagicPickle

magicpickle_demo.webm

magicpickle allows you to transfer pickled representations of objects between local and remote instances of scripts, providing a near-seamless way to write code which both accesses data stored remotely and visualizes it locally. This avoids the need to:

  • store, load, and sync intermediate data representations between local and remote machines
  • use X11 forwarding/VNC with noticable latency

Internally, magicpickle uses joblib to pickle and unpickle objects, and magic-wormhole to transfer the pickled data between local and remote instances of a script.

Note that magicpickle assumes that each mp.save is associated with a single mp.load in the same script; it assumes that both local and remote instances have the same control flow.

Installation

pip install magicpickle

Usage

Check the docstrings in src/magicpickle.py for more information. Example use:

from magicpickle import MagicPickle

with MagicPickle(MY_LOCAL_HOSTNAME) as mp: # or MagicPickle(func_that_returns_true_if_local)
    if mp.is_remote: # or mp.is_local
        mp.save("hello")
    else:
        print(mp.load())

Tmux

tmux_magicpickle.py is a script that scrapes your panes and automatically enters the magic-wormhole code for you. Add the following to your ~/.tmux.conf to use it:

bind-key g run-shell "python3 PATH_TO/tmux_magicpickle.py"

to add the prefix + g binding.

Gotchas

To allow the pickling of lambda functions, prefix your script with

import dill as pickle

To allow the loading of pickled CUDA tensors onto a CPU, prefix your script with

import torch
# https://stackoverflow.com/a/78399538/10702372
torch.serialization.register_package(0, lambda x: x.device.type, lambda x, _: x.cpu())