% Generated by roxygen2: do not edit by hand % Please edit documentation in R/xgb.save.R \name{xgb.save} \alias{xgb.save} \title{Save xgboost model to binary file} \usage{ xgb.save(model, fname) } \arguments{ \item{model}{Model object of \code{xgb.Booster} class.} \item{fname}{Name of the file to write. Note that the extension of this file name determined the serialization format to use:\itemize{ \item Extension ".ubj" will use the universal binary JSON format (recommended). This format uses binary types for e.g. floating point numbers, thereby preventing any loss of precision when converting to a human-readable JSON text or similar. \item Extension ".json" will use plain JSON, which is a human-readable format. \item Extension ".deprecated" will use a \bold{deprecated} binary format. This format will not be able to save attributes introduced after v1 of XGBoost, such as the "best_iteration" attribute that boosters might keep, nor feature names or user-specifiec attributes. \item If the format is not specified by passing one of the file extensions above, will default to UBJ. }} } \description{ Save xgboost model to a file in binary or JSON format. } \details{ This methods allows to save a model in an xgboost-internal binary or text format which is universal among the various xgboost interfaces. In R, the saved model file could be read-in later using either the \code{\link{xgb.load}} function or the \code{xgb_model} parameter of \code{\link{xgb.train}}. Note: a model can also be saved as an R-object (e.g., by using \code{\link[base]{readRDS}} or \code{\link[base]{save}}). However, it would then only be compatible with R, and corresponding R-methods would need to be used to load it. Moreover, persisting the model with \code{\link[base]{readRDS}} or \code{\link[base]{save}}) might cause compatibility problems in future versions of XGBoost. Consult \code{\link{a-compatibility-note-for-saveRDS-save}} to learn how to persist models in a future-proof way, i.e. to make the model accessible in future releases of XGBoost. } \examples{ data(agaricus.train, package='xgboost') data(agaricus.test, package='xgboost') ## Keep the number of threads to 1 for examples nthread <- 1 data.table::setDTthreads(nthread) train <- agaricus.train test <- agaricus.test bst <- xgb.train( data = xgb.DMatrix(train$data, label = train$label), max_depth = 2, eta = 1, nthread = nthread, nrounds = 2, objective = "binary:logistic" ) fname <- file.path(tempdir(), "xgb.ubj") xgb.save(bst, fname) bst <- xgb.load(fname) } \seealso{ \code{\link{xgb.load}} }