* Extract interaction constraints from split evaluator. The reason for doing so is mostly for model IO, where num_feature and interaction_constraints are copied in split evaluator. Also interaction constraint by itself is a feature selector, acting like column sampler and it's inefficient to bury it deep in the evaluator chain. Lastly removing one another copied parameter is a win. * Enable inc for approx tree method. As now the implementation is spited up from evaluator class, it's also enabled for approx method. * Removing obsoleted code in colmaker. They are never documented nor actually used in real world. Also there isn't a single test for those code blocks. * Unifying the types used for row and column. As the size of input dataset is marching to billion, incorrect use of int is subject to overflow, also singed integer overflow is undefined behaviour. This PR starts the procedure for unifying used index type to unsigned integers. There's optimization that can utilize this undefined behaviour, but after some testings I don't see the optimization is beneficial to XGBoost.
eXtreme Gradient Boosting
Community | Documentation | Resources | Contributors | Release Notes
XGBoost is an optimized distributed gradient boosting library designed to be highly efficient, flexible and portable. It implements machine learning algorithms under the Gradient Boosting framework. XGBoost provides a parallel tree boosting (also known as GBDT, GBM) that solve many data science problems in a fast and accurate way. The same code runs on major distributed environment (Kubernetes, Hadoop, SGE, MPI, Dask) and can solve problems beyond billions of examples.
License
© Contributors, 2019. Licensed under an Apache-2 license.
Contribute to XGBoost
XGBoost has been developed and used by a group of active community members. Your help is very valuable to make the package better for everyone. Checkout the Community Page
Reference
- Tianqi Chen and Carlos Guestrin. XGBoost: A Scalable Tree Boosting System. In 22nd SIGKDD Conference on Knowledge Discovery and Data Mining, 2016
- XGBoost originates from research project at University of Washington.
Sponsors
Become a sponsor and get a logo here. See details at Sponsoring the XGBoost Project. The funds are used to defray the cost of continuous integration and testing infrastructure (https://xgboost-ci.net).
Open Source Collective sponsors
Sponsors
Backers
Other sponsors
The sponsors in this list are donating cloud hours in lieu of cash donation.

