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register-ml-model

pjt222
Mis à jour 2 days ago
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À propos

Cette compétence enregistre les modèles entraînés dans le Registre de Modèles de MLflow avec un contrôle de version complet et une gestion des étapes (Staging, Production, Archivé). Elle permet des flux de travail d'approbation pour la gouvernance, des retours aux versions antérieures, et un suivi complet des métadonnées pour la traçabilité et la conformité. Utilisez-la pour promouvoir systématiquement les modèles de l'expérimentation vers la production et pour auditer les modifications des modèles.

Installation rapide

Claude Code

Recommandé
Principal
npx skills add pjt222/agent-almanac -a claude-code
Commande PluginAlternatif
/plugin add https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac
Git CloneAlternatif
git clone https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac.git ~/.claude/skills/register-ml-model

Copiez et collez cette commande dans Claude Code pour installer cette compétence

Documentation

Register ML Model

See Extended Examples for complete configuration files and templates.

Implement MLflow Model Registry for systematic model versioning, stage management, deployment governance.

When Use

  • Promote trained model from experimentation to production
  • Manage multiple model versions across development stages
  • Implement model approval workflows for governance
  • Track model lineage from training to deployment
  • Roll back to previous model versions
  • Compare deployed model versions for A/B testing
  • Audit model changes for compliance requirements

Inputs

  • Required: MLflow tracking server with Model Registry enabled
  • Required: Trained model logged with MLflow (from tracking runs)
  • Required: Model name for registry registration
  • Optional: Approval workflow integration (email, Slack, Jira)
  • Optional: CI/CD pipeline for automated promotion
  • Optional: Model validation metrics thresholds

Steps

Step 1: Configure Model Registry Backend

Set up MLflow Model Registry with database backend (file-based registry not recommended for production).

# Start MLflow server with Model Registry support
mlflow server \
  --backend-store-uri postgresql://user:pass@localhost:5432/mlflow \
  --default-artifact-root s3://mlflow-artifacts/models \
  --host 0.0.0.0 \
  --port 5000

Python configuration:

# model_registry_config.py
import mlflow
from mlflow.tracking import MlflowClient

# Set tracking URI (must support Model Registry)
MLFLOW_TRACKING_URI = "http://mlflow-server.company.com:5000"
mlflow.set_tracking_uri(MLFLOW_TRACKING_URI)

# ... (see EXAMPLES.md for complete implementation)

Got: Model Registry UI tab appears in MLflow. search_registered_models() returns successfully (even if empty). Database contains registered_models table.

If fail: Verify MLflow version ≥1.2 (Model Registry introduced in 1.2). Check database backend (SQLite not fully supported for Model Registry). Ensure --backend-store-uri points to database (not file://). Verify database user has CREATE TABLE permissions. Check MLflow server logs for migration errors.

Step 2: Register Model from Training Run

Register a logged model to Model Registry with comprehensive metadata.

# register_model.py
import mlflow
from mlflow.tracking import MlflowClient
from model_registry_config import MLFLOW_TRACKING_URI

mlflow.set_tracking_uri(MLFLOW_TRACKING_URI)
client = MlflowClient()

# ... (see EXAMPLES.md for complete implementation)

Got: New model version appears in Model Registry UI. Version includes description and tags. Model artifacts accessible via models:/<model-name>/<version> URI. Model signature and input example preserved.

If fail: Verify run_id exists and has completed (client.get_run(run_id)). Check model artifact path matches logged artifact (mlflow.search_runs() to inspect). Ensure model logged with proper framework flavor (mlflow.sklearn.log_model not mlflow.log_artifact). Verify no special characters in model name (use hyphens not underscores). Check artifact storage accessibility.

Step 3: Implement Stage Transitions with Validation

Move model versions through stages (None → Staging → Production → Archived) with validation checks.

# stage_management.py
import mlflow
from mlflow.tracking import MlflowClient
from datetime import datetime

client = MlflowClient()

class ModelStageManager:
# ... (see EXAMPLES.md for complete implementation)

Got: Model version stage updates in registry. Old versions archived automatically. Transition timestamps recorded in tags. Rollback restores previous production version.

If fail: Check version exists and is in expected stage. Verify archive_existing_versions flag behavior (may not archive if only one version). Ensure database supports concurrent transactions for stage updates. Check for stage transition locks (only one transition per version at a time). Verify approval workflow integration.

Step 4: Implement Model Aliasing and References

Use model aliases for stable deployment references (MLflow ≥2.0).

# model_aliases.py
from mlflow.tracking import MlflowClient

client = MlflowClient()

def set_model_alias(model_name, version, alias):
    """
    Set an alias for a model version (MLflow 2.0+).
# ... (see EXAMPLES.md for complete implementation)

Got: Aliases appear in Model Registry UI. Loading models by alias works (models:/name@alias). Updating alias immediately affects new loads. A/B test infrastructure functional.

If fail: Upgrade MLflow to ≥2.0 for native alias support. Use tag-based fallback for older versions. Verify alias naming (alphanumeric and hyphens only). Check for alias conflicts (one alias per model version).

Step 5: Implement Model Lineage Tracking

Track full lineage from data to deployment with comprehensive metadata.

# model_lineage.py
import mlflow
from mlflow.tracking import MlflowClient
import json

client = MlflowClient()

def enrich_model_metadata(model_name, version, lineage_data):
# ... (see EXAMPLES.md for complete implementation)

Got: Model version tags include comprehensive lineage information. get_model_lineage() returns full history. JSON report contains data source, training details, deployment info.

If fail: Verify tag values are strings (convert dicts to JSON). Check tag key naming (no spaces or special chars). Ensure lineage data captured during training. Verify run_id is valid and accessible.

Step 6: Automate Registry Operations with CI/CD

Integrate model registration into CI/CD pipelines for automated promotion.

# .github/workflows/model_promotion.yml
name: Model Promotion Pipeline

on:
  workflow_dispatch:
    inputs:
      model_name:
        description: 'Model name to promote'
# ... (see EXAMPLES.md for complete implementation)

Python automation script:

# scripts/promote_model.py
import argparse
from stage_management import ModelStageManager

def main():
    parser = argparse.ArgumentParser()
    parser.add_argument("--model-name", required=True)
    parser.add_argument("--version", type=int, required=True)
# ... (see EXAMPLES.md for complete implementation)

Got: GitHub Actions workflow triggers on manual dispatch. Validation tests pass. Model promoted to target stage. Slack notification sent. Deployment pipeline triggered automatically.

If fail: Check GitHub secrets configuration for MLFLOW_TRACKING_URI. Verify network access from GitHub Actions to MLflow server (may need VPN or IP allowlist). Ensure validation script has correct metric thresholds. Check Slack webhook configuration. Verify Python script executable permissions.

Checks

  • Model Registry accessible and backend configured
  • Models register successfully from training runs
  • Stage transitions work (None → Staging → Production → Archived)
  • Validation checks enforce quality thresholds
  • Model aliases set and resolved correctly
  • Lineage metadata captured comprehensively
  • Rollback functionality restores previous versions
  • CI/CD pipeline automates promotions
  • Team notifications working for stage changes
  • Model URIs resolve correctly in all stages

Pitfalls

  • SQLite limitations: Model Registry needs database backend (PostgreSQL/MySQL) for production — file-based registry causes concurrency issues
  • Stage conflicts: Multiple versions in same stage cause confusion — use archive_existing_versions=True to auto-archive
  • Missing run linkage: Register models without run_id loses lineage — always register from MLflow runs, not raw files
  • Alias confusion: Use stages as deployment targets instead of aliases — stages for workflow, aliases for deployment references
  • Validation skipped: Promote to Production without checks — implement mandatory validation in CI/CD pipeline
  • No rollback plan: Production issues without rollback capability — keep previous Production version in Archived stage
  • Tag overload: Too many unstructured tags — standardize tag schema and naming conventions
  • Manual processes: Human-driven promotions are error-prone and slow — automate with CI/CD and approval workflows
  • Lost artifacts: Model registered but artifacts deleted from storage — ensure artifact retention policies align with model lifecycle

See Also

  • track-ml-experiments — Log models to MLflow before register them
  • deploy-ml-model-serving — Deploy registered models to serving infrastructure
  • run-ab-test-models — A/B test models using registry aliases
  • orchestrate-ml-pipeline — Automate model training and registration
  • version-ml-data — Version training data for model lineage

Dépôt GitHub

pjt222/agent-almanac
Chemin: i18n/caveman/skills/register-ml-model
0
agentsagentskillsai-assisted-developmentclaude-codeskillsteams

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