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Leela Chess Zero

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Original author(s)Gian-Carlo Pascutto, Gary Linscott
Developer(s)Gary Linscott, Alexander Lyashuk, Folkert Huizinga, others
Initial release9 January 2018; 6 years ago (2018-01-09)
Stable release
v0.31.1 / 11 August 2024; 3 months ago (2024-08-11)
Repository
Written inC++
Operating systemWindows, Mac, Linux, Ubuntu, Android
TypeChess engine
LicenseGPL-3.0-or-later
Websitelczero.org

Leela Chess Zero (abbreviated as LCZero, lc0) is a free, open-source, and deep neural network–based chess engine and volunteer computing project. Development has been spearheaded by programmer Gary Linscott, who is also a developer for the Stockfish chess engine. Leela Chess Zero was adapted from the Leela Zero Go engine,[1] which in turn was based on Google's AlphaGo Zero project.[2] One of the purposes of Leela Chess Zero was to verify the methods in the AlphaZero paper as applied to the game of chess.

Like Leela Zero and AlphaGo Zero, Leela Chess Zero starts with no intrinsic chess-specific knowledge other than the basic rules of the game.[1] Leela Chess Zero then learns how to play chess by reinforcement learning from repeated self-play, using a distributed computing network coordinated at the Leela Chess Zero website.

As of June 2024, Leela Chess Zero has played over 2.5 billion games against itself, playing around 1 million games every day,[3] and is capable of play at a level that is comparable with Stockfish, the leading conventional chess program.[4][5]

History

[edit]

The Leela Chess Zero project was first announced on TalkChess.com on January 9, 2018.[1][6] This revealed Leela Chess Zero as the open-source, self-learning chess engine it would come to be known as, with a goal of creating a strong chess engine.[7] Within the first few months of training, Leela Chess Zero had already reached the Grandmaster level, surpassing the strength of early releases of Rybka, Stockfish, and Komodo, despite evaluating orders of magnitude fewer positions due to its deep neural network in its evaluation function and its use of Monte Carlo tree search.

In December 2018, the AlphaZero team published a new paper in Science magazine revealing previously undisclosed details of the architecture and training parameters used for AlphaZero.[8] These changes were soon incorporated into Leela Chess Zero and increased both its strength and training efficiency.[9]

The work on Leela Chess Zero has informed the similar AobaZero project for shogi.[10]

The engine has been rewritten and carefully iterated upon since its inception, and since 2019[11] runs on multiple backends, allowing it to effectively utilize different types of hardware, both CPU and GPU.[12]

The engine can be configured to use different weights,[13] including even different architectures. This same mechanism of substitutable weights can also be used for alternative chess rules, such as for the Fischer Random Chess variant, which was done in 2019.[14]

Since 2022, it uses post-LN encoder-only transformers, similar to BERT. It represents a chessboard as a length-64 sequence of tokens.[15] The output of the network is another length-64 sequence of encoded tokens. A separate module is used to compute a logit for every possible move from one square (the source) to another (the target). The module takes as input two encoded tokens and outputs a single number (the logit for that move).[16]: Appendix A 

Program and use

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The method used by its designers to make Leela Chess Zero self-learn and play chess at above human level is reinforcement learning. This is a machine-learning algorithm, mirrored from AlphaZero used by the Leela Chess Zero training executable/binary code (called "binary") to maximize reward through self-play.[1][8] As an open-source distributed computing project, volunteer users run Leela Chess Zero to play hundreds of millions of games which are fed to the reinforcement algorithm.[3] In order to contribute to the advancement of the Leela Chess Zero engine, the latest non-release candidate (non-rc) version of the Engine as well as the Client must be downloaded. The Client is needed to connect to the current server of Leela Chess Zero, where all of the information from the self-play chess games are stored, to obtain the latest network, generate self-play games, and upload the training data back to the server.[17]

In order to play against the Leela Chess Zero engine on a machine, two components are needed: the engine binary and a network. (The engine binary is distinct from the client, in that the client is used as a training platform for the engine). The network contains Leela Chess Zero's evaluation function that is needed to evaluate positions.[17] Older networks can also be downloaded and used by placing those networks in the folder with the Lc0 binary.

Self-play Elo

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Self-play Elo is used to gauge relative network strength to look for anomalies and general changes in network strength, and can be used as a diagnostic tool when Lc0 undergoes significant changes. Through test match games that are played with minimal temperature-based variation,[18] Lc0 engine clients test the most recent version against other recent versions of the same network's run, which is then sent to the training server to create an overall Elo assessment.

Standard Elo formulae are used to calculate relative Elo strength between the two players. More recent Self-play Elo calculations use match game results against multiple network versions to calculate a more accurate Elo value.

The Self-play approach has several consequences on gauging Lc0 Elo rating:

  • Initial Cumulative Elo inflation in training runs differ drastically due to a-periodic gains in self-improvement and adversarial play.
  • Measuring Elo relative to previous networks fails to measure general strength since networks are trained to anticipate and beat the predictions made by prior Lc0 networks rather than opponents outside the training domain. This is a type of overfitting measured most drastically when testing smaller networks.
  • There is no direct one-to-one correlation between self-play Elo and the strength against Alpha-Beta engines, and no known correlation to strength against humans.
  • Input training data has a significant effect on how a network will perform elo-wise against the next iteration.
  • Cumulative Self-Play Elo does not have a universal conversion to conventional Human Elo due to inflation issues presented by adversarial play, and the reliance of the measure on time control. This holds true even when the engine runs on a standard set of initial conditions.

Cumulative Self-Play Elo inflation can be compared with other runs to gauge the lack of generality in gauging strength with pure cumulative self-play Elo. The Fischer Random Chess run Test 71.4 (named 714xxx nets), ranks at nearly 4000 cumulative self-play Elo 76 nets into its run (714076). The T60 (6xxxx) run 63000 net has a cumulative self-play Elo of around 2900. Pitting 714076 against net 63000 reveals 63000 clearly beats 714076 in head-to-head matches at most, if not all "fair" time controls. However, net 63000's Elo is significantly lower than its opponent. This supports the claim that Cumulative Self-Play Elo is not an objective measure of strength, nor is it a measure which allows one to linearly compare Lc0 network strength to human strength.

Setting up the engine to play a single node with --minibatch-size=1 and go nodes 1 for each played move creates deterministic play, and Self-Play Elo on such settings will always yield the same result between 2 of the same networks on the same start position—always win, always loss, or always draw. Self-play Elo is not reliable for determining strength in these deterministic circumstances.

Spinoffs

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In season 15 of the Top Chess Engine Championship, the engine AllieStein competed alongside Leela. AllieStein is a combination of two different spinoffs from Leela: Allie, which uses the same evaluation network as Leela, but has a unique search algorithm for exploring different lines of play, and Stein, an evaluation network which has been trained using supervised learning based on existing game data featuring other engines (as opposed to the unsupervised learning which Leela uses). While neither of these projects would be admitted to TCEC separately due to their similarity to Leela, the combination of Allie's search algorithm with the Stein network, called AllieStein, is unique enough to warrant it competing alongside mainstream Lc0. (The TCEC rules require that a neural network-based engine has at least two unique components out of three essential features: The code that evaluates a network, the network itself, and the search algorithm. While AllieStein uses the same code to evaluate its network as Lc0, since the other two components are fresh, AllieStein is considered a distinct engine.)[19]

In early 2021, the LcZero blog announced Ceres, a new chess engine that uses LcZero networks. It implements Monte Carlo tree search as well as many novel algorithmic improvement ideas. Initial Elo testing showed that Ceres is stronger than Lc0 with the same network.[20]

Competition results

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In April 2018, Leela Chess Zero became the first engine using a deep neural network to enter the Top Chess Engine Championship (TCEC), during season 12 in the lowest division, division 4.[21] Leela did not perform well: in 28 games, it won one, drew two, and lost the remainder; its sole victory came from a position in which its opponent, Scorpio 2.82, crashed in three moves.[22] However, it improved quickly. In July 2018, Leela placed seventh out of eight competitors at the 2018 World Computer Chess Championship.[23] In August 2018, it won division 4 of TCEC season 13 with a record of 14 wins, 12 draws, and 2 losses.[22][24] In Division 3, Leela scored 16/28 points, finishing third behind Ethereal, which scored 22.5/28 points, and Arasan on tiebreak.[25][22]

By September 2018, Leela had become competitive with the strongest engines in the world. In the 2018 Chess.com Computer Chess Championship (CCCC),[26] Leela placed fifth out of 24 entrants. The top eight engines advanced to round 2, where Leela placed fourth.[27][28] Leela then won the 30-game match against Komodo to secure third place in the tournament.[29][30] Leela participated in the "TCEC cup", an event in which engines from different TCEC divisions can play matches against one another. Leela defeated higher-division engines Laser, Ethereal and Fire before finally being eliminated by Stockfish in the semi-finals.[22]

In October and November 2018, Leela participated in the Chess.com Computer Chess Championship Blitz Battle.[31] Leela finished third behind Stockfish and Komodo.[32]

In December 2018, Leela participated in season 14 of the Top Chess Engine Championship. Leela dominated divisions 3, 2, and 1, easily finishing first in all of them. In the premier division, Stockfish dominated while Houdini, Komodo and Leela competed for second place. It came down to a final-round game where Leela needed to hold Stockfish to a draw with black to finish second ahead of Komodo. Leela managed this and therefore met Stockfish in the superfinal. In a back and forth match, first Stockfish and then Leela took three game leads before Stockfish won by the narrowest margin of 50.5–49.5.[22]

In February 2019, Leela scored its first major tournament win when it defeated Houdini in the final of the second TCEC cup. Leela did not lose a game the entire tournament.[22][33] In April 2019, Leela won the Chess.com Computer Chess Championship 7: Blitz Bonanza, becoming the first neural-network project to take the title.[34]

In the season 15 of the Top Chess Engine Championship (May 2019), Leela defended its TCEC cup title, this time defeating Stockfish in the final 5.5–4.5 (+2 =7 −1) after Stockfish blundered a seven-man tablebase draw.[35] Leela also won the Superfinal for the first time, scoring 53.5–46.5 (+14 −7 =79) versus Stockfish, including winning as both white and black in the same predetermined opening in games 61 and 62.[36][37]

Season 16 of TCEC saw Leela finish in third place in premier division, missing qualification for the superfinal to Stockfish and new deep neural network engine AllieStein. Leela did not suffer any losses in the Premier division, the only engine to do so, and defeated Stockfish in one of the six games they played. However, Leela only managed to score nine wins, while AllieStein and Stockfish both scored 14 wins. This inability to defeat weaker engines led to Leela finishing third, half a point behind AllieStein and a point behind Stockfish.[38] In the fourth TCEC cup, Leela was seeded first as the defending champion, which placed it on the opposite half of the brackets as AllieStein and Stockfish. Leela was able to qualify for the finals, where it faced Stockfish. After seven draws, Stockfish won the eighth game to win the match.[39]

In Season 17 of TCEC, held in January–April 2020, Leela regained the championship by defeating Stockfish 52.5–47.5, scoring a remarkable six wins in the final ten games, including winning as both white and black in the same predetermined opening in games 95 and 96.[40] It qualified for the superfinal again in Season 18, but this time was defeated by Stockfish 53.5–46.5.[41] In the TCEC Cup 6 final, Leela lost to AllieStein, finishing second.[42]

Season 19 of TCEC saw Leela qualify for the superfinal again. This time it played against a new Stockfish version with support for NNUE, a shallow neural network–based evaluation function used primarily for the leaf nodes of the search tree. Stockfish NNUE defeated Leela convincingly with a final score of 54.5–45.5 (+18 −9 =73).[43][44] Since then, Leela has repeatedly qualified for the superfinal, only to lose every time to Stockfish: +14 −8 =78 in Season 20, +19 −7 =74 in Season 21, +27 −10 =63 in Season 23, +20 −16 =64 in Season 24, +27 =50 -23 in Season 25, and +31 =52 -17 in Season 26.

Results summary

[edit]
Top Chess Engine Championship (TCEC)[45]
Season Division 4 Division 3 Division 2 Division 1 Division P Infrafinal Superfinal
12 (2018) 8th
13 (2018) 1st 3rd
14 (2018) 1st 1st 1st 2nd 2nd
15 (2019) 2nd 1st
16 (2019) 3rd
17 (2020) 1st 1st
18 (2020) 2nd 2nd
19 (2020) 2nd 2nd
20 (2020) 1st 2nd
21 (2021) 2nd 2nd
22 (2022) 3rd 3rd
23 (2022) 2nd 2nd
24 (2023) 2nd 2nd
25 (2023) 2nd 2nd
26 (2024) 2nd 2nd
Top Chess Engine Championship Cup (TCEC Cup)[45]
Event Result Opponent Score
Cup 1 (2018) 3rd -
Cup 2 (2019) 1st Houdini 4.5–3.5
Cup 3 (2019) 1st Stockfish 5.5–4.5
Cup 4 (2019) 2nd Stockfish 3.5–4.5
Cup 5 (2020) 2nd Stockfish 1.5–2.5
Cup 6 (2020) 2nd AllieStein 1.5–2.5
Cup 7 (2020) 2nd Stockfish 1.5–2.5
Cup 8 (2021) 2nd Stockfish 3.5–4.5
Cup 9 (2021) 2nd Stockfish 1.5–2.5
Cup 10 (2022) 2nd Stockfish 4–6
Cup 11 (2023) 1st Stockfish 8.5–7.5
Cup 12 (2023) 2nd Stockfish 13.5–14.5
Cup 13 (2024) 2nd Stockfish 12.5–9.5
Chess.com Computer Chess Championship (CCC)
Event Year Time Controls Result Ref
CCC 1: Rapid Rumble 2018 15+5 3rd [46]
CCC 2: Blitz Battle 2018 5+2 3rd [47]
CCC 3: Rapid Redux 2019 30+5 2nd [48]
CCC 4: Bullet Brawl 2019 1+2 2nd [49]
CCC 5: Escalation 2019 10+5 2nd [50]
CCC 6: Winter Classic 2019 10+10 2nd [51]
CCC 7: Blitz Bonanza 2019 5+2 1st [34]
CCC 8: Deep Dive 2019 15+5 2nd [5]
CCC 9: The Gauntlet 2019 5+2, 10+5 3rd [52]
CCC 10: Double Digits 2019 10+3 3rd [53]
CCC 11 2019 30+5 1st [54]
CCC 12: Bullet Madness! 2020 1+1 1st [55]
CCC 13: Shapes 2020 3+2, 5+5, 10+5, 15+5 1st [56][57]
CCC 14 2020 15+5 1st [58]
CCC Blitz 2021 2021 5+5 2nd [59]
CCC Chess 960 Blitz 2021 5+5 3rd [60]
CCC 16: Rapid 2021 15+3 2nd [61]
CCC 16: Bullet 2021 2+1 3rd [62]
CCC 16: Blitz 2022 5+5 3rd [63]
CCC 17: Rapid 2022 15+3 3rd [64]
CCC 17: Bullet 2022 2+1 3rd [65]
CCC 17: Blitz 2022 5+5 2nd [66]
CCC 18: Rapid 2022 15+3 2nd [67]
CCC 19: Blitz 2022 5+5 3rd [68]
CCC 19: Rapid 2022 15+3 2nd [69]
CCC 19: Bullet 2023 1+1 3rd [70]
CCC 20: Blitz 2023 3+2 2nd [71]
CCC 20: Rapid 2023 10+3 2nd [72]
CCC 20: Bullet 2023 1+1 4th [73]
CCC 21: Blitz 2023 3+2 3rd [74]
CCC 21: Rapid 2023 10+3 2nd [75]
CCC 21: Bullet 2023 1+1 5th [76]
CCC 22: Blitz 2024 3+2 3rd [77]
CCC 22: Rapid 2024 10+3 2nd [78]
CCC 22: Bullet 2024 1+1 4th [79]
CCC 23: Blitz 2024 3+2 3rd [80]

Notable games

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References

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