Examples: query, "exact match", wildcard*, wild?ard, wild*rd
Fuzzy search: cake~ (finds cakes, bake)
Term boost: "red velvet"^4, chocolate^2
Field grouping: tags:(+work -"fun-stuff")
Escaping: Escape characters +-&|!(){}[]^"~*?:\ with \, e.g. \+
Range search: properties.timestamp:[1587729413488 TO *] (inclusive), properties.title:{A TO Z}(excluding A and Z)
Combinations: chocolate AND vanilla, chocolate OR vanilla, (chocolate OR vanilla) NOT "vanilla pudding"
Field search: properties.title:"The Title" AND text
Answered
Hi, Guys! How Do You Keep Your Secrets (User, Password, Host And So On For Data Base, For Example)? I Mean Remote Experiments With Clearml. I Think There Is Two Ways: 1. Use Argparse (Or Hydra) 2. Download Them From S3 As Txt File And Parse It. What Is

Hi, guys!
How do you keep your secrets (user, password, host and so on for Data Base, for example)? I mean remote experiments with ClearML.
I think there is two ways:

  1. use argparse (or hydra)
  2. download them from s3 as txt file and parse it.
    What is your opinion?
  
  
Posted 3 years ago
Votes Newest

Answers 8


I thought we can keep there only special sections? Can we create some custom section in clearml.config ?

I thought you were asking about secrets related to ClearML (i.e. server credentials etc.)

  
  
Posted 3 years ago

SharpHedgehog60 hi!

All passwords/secrets can be kept in ~/clearml.conf on the relevant machine.

Is this what you meant?

  
  
Posted 3 years ago

We don’t want to procreate redundant config files, yes it’s a solution of the problem, but may be we can find more convenient solution

  
  
Posted 3 years ago

What would be the different between your own file and clearml.conf?

  
  
Posted 3 years ago

SharpHedgehog60 where are you running your ClearML experiments?

  
  
Posted 3 years ago

I thought we can keep there only special sections: agent, api, sdk ? Can we create some custom section in clearml.config ?

  
  
Posted 3 years ago

If you're referring to your own secrets, you can just keep them in your own file on the relevant machine?

  
  
Posted 3 years ago

SuccessfulKoala55 our local server

  
  
Posted 3 years ago
1K Views
8 Answers
3 years ago
one year ago
Tags