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310 lines
13 KiB
310 lines
13 KiB
// Ceres Solver - A fast non-linear least squares minimizer
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// Copyright 2018 Google Inc. All rights reserved.
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// http://ceres-solver.org/
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//
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// Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
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// modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met:
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//
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// * Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice,
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// this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
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// * Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice,
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// this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation
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// and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
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// * Neither the name of Google Inc. nor the names of its contributors may be
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// used to endorse or promote products derived from this software without
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// specific prior written permission.
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//
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// THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS"
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// AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
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// IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
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// ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE
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// LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR
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// CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF
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// SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS
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// INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN
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// CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE)
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// ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE
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// POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
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//
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// Author: mierle@gmail.com (Keir Mierle)
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#include "ceres/solver.h"
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#include <limits>
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#include <cmath>
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#include <vector>
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#include "gtest/gtest.h"
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#include "ceres/internal/scoped_ptr.h"
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#include "ceres/sized_cost_function.h"
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#include "ceres/problem.h"
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#include "ceres/problem_impl.h"
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namespace ceres {
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namespace internal {
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// Use an inline hash function to avoid portability wrangling. Algorithm from
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// Daniel Bernstein, known as the "djb2" hash.
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template<typename T>
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uint64_t Djb2Hash(const T* data, const int size) {
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uint64_t hash = 5381;
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const uint8_t* data_as_bytes = reinterpret_cast<const uint8_t*>(data);
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for (int i = 0; i < sizeof(*data) * size; ++i) {
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hash = hash * 33 + data_as_bytes[i];
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}
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return hash;
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}
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const double kUninitialized = 0;
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// Generally multiple inheritance is a terrible idea, but in this (test)
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// case it makes for a relatively elegant test implementation.
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struct WigglyBowlCostFunctionAndEvaluationCallback :
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SizedCostFunction<2, 2>,
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EvaluationCallback {
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explicit WigglyBowlCostFunctionAndEvaluationCallback(double *parameter)
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: EvaluationCallback(),
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user_parameter_block(parameter),
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prepare_num_calls(0),
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evaluate_num_calls(0),
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evaluate_last_parameter_hash(kUninitialized) {}
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virtual ~WigglyBowlCostFunctionAndEvaluationCallback() {}
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// Evaluation callback interface. This checks that all the preconditions are
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// met at the point that Ceres calls into it.
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virtual void PrepareForEvaluation(bool evaluate_jacobians,
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bool new_evaluation_point) {
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// At this point, the incoming parameters are implicitly pushed by Ceres
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// into the user parameter blocks; in contrast to in Evaluate().
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uint64_t incoming_parameter_hash = Djb2Hash(user_parameter_block, 2);
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// Check: Prepare() & Evaluate() come in pairs, in that order. Before this
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// call, the number of calls excluding this one should match.
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EXPECT_EQ(prepare_num_calls, evaluate_num_calls);
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// Check: new_evaluation_point indicates that the parameter has changed.
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if (new_evaluation_point) {
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// If it's a new evaluation point, then the parameter should have
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// changed. Technically, it's not required that it must change but
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// in practice it does, and that helps with testing.
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EXPECT_NE(evaluate_last_parameter_hash, incoming_parameter_hash);
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EXPECT_NE(prepare_parameter_hash, incoming_parameter_hash);
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} else {
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// If this is the same evaluation point as last time, ensure that
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// the parameters match both from the previous evaluate, the
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// previous prepare, and the current prepare.
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EXPECT_EQ(evaluate_last_parameter_hash, prepare_parameter_hash);
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EXPECT_EQ(evaluate_last_parameter_hash, incoming_parameter_hash);
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}
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// Save details for to check at the next call to Evaluate().
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prepare_num_calls++;
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prepare_requested_jacobians = evaluate_jacobians;
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prepare_new_evaluation_point = new_evaluation_point;
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prepare_parameter_hash = incoming_parameter_hash;
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}
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// Cost function interface. This checks that preconditions that were
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// set as part of the PrepareForEvaluation() call are met in this one.
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virtual bool Evaluate(double const* const* parameters,
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double* residuals,
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double** jacobians) const {
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// Cost function implementation of the "Wiggly Bowl" function:
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//
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// 1/2 * [(y - a*sin(x))^2 + x^2],
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//
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// expressed as a Ceres cost function with two residuals:
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//
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// r[0] = y - a*sin(x)
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// r[1] = x.
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//
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// This is harder to optimize than the Rosenbrock function because the
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// minimizer has to navigate a sine-shaped valley while descending the 1D
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// parabola formed along the y axis. Note that the "a" needs to be more
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// than 5 to get a strong enough wiggle effect in the cost surface to
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// trigger failed iterations in the optimizer.
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const double a = 10.0;
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double x = (*parameters)[0];
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double y = (*parameters)[1];
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residuals[0] = y - a * sin(x);
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residuals[1] = x;
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if (jacobians != NULL) {
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(*jacobians)[2 * 0 + 0] = - a * cos(x); // df1/dx
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(*jacobians)[2 * 0 + 1] = 1.0; // df1/dy
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(*jacobians)[2 * 1 + 0] = 1.0; // df2/dx
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(*jacobians)[2 * 1 + 1] = 0.0; // df2/dy
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}
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uint64_t incoming_parameter_hash = Djb2Hash(*parameters, 2);
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// Check: PrepareForEvaluation() & Evaluate() come in pairs, in that order.
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EXPECT_EQ(prepare_num_calls, evaluate_num_calls + 1);
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// Check: if new_evaluation_point indicates that the parameter has
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// changed, it has changed; otherwise it is the same.
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if (prepare_new_evaluation_point) {
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EXPECT_NE(evaluate_last_parameter_hash, incoming_parameter_hash);
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} else {
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EXPECT_NE(evaluate_last_parameter_hash, kUninitialized);
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EXPECT_EQ(evaluate_last_parameter_hash, incoming_parameter_hash);
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}
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// Check: Parameter matches value in in parameter blocks during prepare.
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EXPECT_EQ(prepare_parameter_hash, incoming_parameter_hash);
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// Check: jacobians are requested if they were in PrepareForEvaluation().
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EXPECT_EQ(prepare_requested_jacobians, jacobians != NULL);
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evaluate_num_calls++;
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evaluate_last_parameter_hash = incoming_parameter_hash;
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return true;
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}
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// Pointer to the parameter block associated with this cost function.
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// Contents should get set by Ceres before calls to PrepareForEvaluation()
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// and Evaluate().
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double* user_parameter_block;
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// Track state: PrepareForEvaluation().
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//
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// These track details from the PrepareForEvaluation() call (hence the
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// "prepare_" prefix), which are checked for consistency in Evaluate().
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int prepare_num_calls;
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bool prepare_requested_jacobians;
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bool prepare_new_evaluation_point;
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uint64_t prepare_parameter_hash;
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// Track state: Evaluate().
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//
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// These track details from the Evaluate() call (hence the "evaluate_"
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// prefix), which are then checked for consistency in the calls to
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// PrepareForEvaluation(). Mutable is reasonable for this case.
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mutable int evaluate_num_calls;
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mutable uint64_t evaluate_last_parameter_hash;
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};
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TEST(EvaluationCallback, WithTrustRegionMinimizer) {
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double parameters[2] = {50.0, 50.0};
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const uint64_t original_parameters_hash = Djb2Hash(parameters, 2);
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WigglyBowlCostFunctionAndEvaluationCallback cost_function(parameters);
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Problem::Options problem_options;
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problem_options.cost_function_ownership = DO_NOT_TAKE_OWNERSHIP;
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Problem problem(problem_options);
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problem.AddResidualBlock(&cost_function, NULL, parameters);
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Solver::Options options;
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options.linear_solver_type = DENSE_QR;
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options.max_num_iterations = 300; // Cost function is hard.
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options.evaluation_callback = &cost_function;
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// Run the solve. Checking is done inside the cost function / callback.
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Solver::Summary summary;
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Solve(options, &problem, &summary);
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// Ensure that this was a hard cost function (not all steps succeed).
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EXPECT_GT(summary.num_successful_steps, 10);
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EXPECT_GT(summary.num_unsuccessful_steps, 10);
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// Ensure PrepareForEvaluation() is called the appropriate number of times.
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EXPECT_EQ(cost_function.prepare_num_calls,
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// Unsuccessful steps are evaluated only once (no jacobians).
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summary.num_unsuccessful_steps +
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// Successful steps are evaluated twice: with and without jacobians.
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2 * summary.num_successful_steps
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// Final iteration doesn't re-evaluate the jacobian.
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// Note: This may be sensitive to tweaks to the TR algorithm; if
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// this becomes too brittle, remove this EXPECT_EQ() entirely.
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- 1);
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// Ensure the callback calls ran a reasonable number of times.
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EXPECT_GT(cost_function.prepare_num_calls, 0);
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EXPECT_GT(cost_function.evaluate_num_calls, 0);
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EXPECT_EQ(cost_function.prepare_num_calls,
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cost_function.evaluate_num_calls);
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// Ensure that the parameters did actually change.
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EXPECT_NE(Djb2Hash(parameters, 2), original_parameters_hash);
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}
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void WithLineSearchMinimizerImpl(
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LineSearchType line_search,
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LineSearchDirectionType line_search_direction,
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LineSearchInterpolationType line_search_interpolation) {
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double parameters[2] = {50.0, 50.0};
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const uint64_t original_parameters_hash = Djb2Hash(parameters, 2);
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WigglyBowlCostFunctionAndEvaluationCallback cost_function(parameters);
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Problem::Options problem_options;
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problem_options.cost_function_ownership = DO_NOT_TAKE_OWNERSHIP;
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Problem problem(problem_options);
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problem.AddResidualBlock(&cost_function, NULL, parameters);
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Solver::Options options;
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options.linear_solver_type = DENSE_QR;
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options.max_num_iterations = 300; // Cost function is hard.
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options.minimizer_type = ceres::LINE_SEARCH;
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options.evaluation_callback = &cost_function;
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options.line_search_type = line_search;
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options.line_search_direction_type = line_search_direction;
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options.line_search_interpolation_type = line_search_interpolation;
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// Run the solve. Checking is done inside the cost function / callback.
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Solver::Summary summary;
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Solve(options, &problem, &summary);
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// Ensure the callback calls ran a reasonable number of times.
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EXPECT_GT(summary.num_line_search_steps, 10);
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EXPECT_GT(cost_function.prepare_num_calls, 30);
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EXPECT_EQ(cost_function.prepare_num_calls,
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cost_function.evaluate_num_calls);
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// Ensure that the parameters did actually change.
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EXPECT_NE(Djb2Hash(parameters, 2), original_parameters_hash);
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}
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// Note: These tests omit combinations of Wolfe line search with bisection.
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// Due to an implementation quirk in Wolfe line search with bisection, there
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// are calls to re-evaluate an existing point with new_point = true. That
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// causes the (overly) strict tests to break, since they check the new_point
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// preconditions in an if-and-only-if way. Strictly speaking, if new_point =
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// true, the interface does not *require* that the point has changed; only that
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// if new_point = false, the same point is reused.
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//
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// Since the strict checking is useful to verify that there aren't missed
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// optimizations, omit tests of the Wolfe with bisection cases.
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// Wolfe with L-BFGS.
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TEST(EvaluationCallback, WithLineSearchMinimizerWolfeLbfgsCubic) {
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WithLineSearchMinimizerImpl(WOLFE, LBFGS, CUBIC);
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}
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TEST(EvaluationCallback, WithLineSearchMinimizerWolfeLbfgsQuadratic) {
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WithLineSearchMinimizerImpl(WOLFE, LBFGS, QUADRATIC);
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}
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// Wolfe with full BFGS.
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TEST(EvaluationCallback, WithLineSearchMinimizerWolfeBfgsCubic) {
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WithLineSearchMinimizerImpl(WOLFE, BFGS, CUBIC);
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}
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TEST(EvaluationCallback, WithLineSearchMinimizerWolfeBfgsQuadratic) {
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WithLineSearchMinimizerImpl(WOLFE, BFGS, QUADRATIC);
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}
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// Armijo with nonlinear conjugate gradient.
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TEST(EvaluationCallback, WithLineSearchMinimizerArmijoCubic) {
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WithLineSearchMinimizerImpl(ARMIJO, NONLINEAR_CONJUGATE_GRADIENT, CUBIC);
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}
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TEST(EvaluationCallback, WithLineSearchMinimizerArmijoBisection) {
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WithLineSearchMinimizerImpl(ARMIJO, NONLINEAR_CONJUGATE_GRADIENT, BISECTION);
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}
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TEST(EvaluationCallback, WithLineSearchMinimizerArmijoQuadratic) {
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WithLineSearchMinimizerImpl(ARMIJO, NONLINEAR_CONJUGATE_GRADIENT, QUADRATIC);
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}
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} // namespace internal
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} // namespace ceres
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