Pepijn 8ba3b187a1 pi052: bump lm_head_lr_scale default to 5.0 (keep base LR at 2.5e-5)
The base optimizer LR (2.5e-5, cosine to 2.5e-6, 1k warmup, AdamW
(0.9, 0.95), wd 0.01, grad_clip 1.0) is the openpi/π0.5 setting used
for the RoboCasa leaderboard baselines and is well-validated for 3B-
class VLAs with a paligemma backbone. Leave it alone.

The one place pi052 needs to diverge from pi05 is the LM-head LR
multiplier:

  * pi05 has no text supervision -> head doesn't get gradients ->
    lm_head_lr_scale is moot, stays at 1.0.
  * pi052 always has text supervision via the recipe (subtask /
    memory / VQA). Under KI, the LM head only sees gradients on
    ~30-45% of the batch (the text-CE mask share). Under aggressive
    cosine decay the head drifts back toward PaliGemma's pretrained
    <loc> first-token bias, despite teacher-forced CE staying near 0.

5x is the documented fix (see PI05Config.lm_head_lr_scale docstring
and PI05Policy.get_optim_params, which is already wired to split the
LM head + tied embed_tokens into their own param group while sharing
the same cosine lambda). Flipping the default here lifts the fix from
opt-in to on-by-default for every pi052 run, with zero downside on
text-free recipes (head still gets no gradients to scale).

Other LR knobs reviewed and intentionally NOT changed:
  - optimizer_lr=2.5e-5: openpi-validated, matches leaderboard.
  - scheduler_warmup_steps=1000: standard for VLA finetuning.
  - scheduler_decay_steps=30000: auto-scales for short runs.
  - optimizer_betas=(0.9, 0.95): GPT/LLM convention, works for
    flow-matching + LM-CE.
  - optimizer_weight_decay=0.01, grad_clip=1.0: standard.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-25 20:57:43 +02:00
2025-03-13 14:05:55 +01:00
2025-06-05 17:48:43 +02:00
2026-04-06 12:23:37 +02:00
2026-02-28 14:41:28 +01:00
2024-03-25 12:28:07 +01:00
2026-01-16 14:38:42 +01:00

LeRobot, Hugging Face Robotics Library

Tests Tests Python versions License Status Version Contributor Covenant Discord

LeRobot aims to provide models, datasets, and tools for real-world robotics in PyTorch. The goal is to lower the barrier to entry so that everyone can contribute to and benefit from shared datasets and pretrained models.

🤗 A hardware-agnostic, Python-native interface that standardizes control across diverse platforms, from low-cost arms (SO-100) to humanoids.

🤗 A standardized, scalable LeRobotDataset format (Parquet + MP4 or images) hosted on the Hugging Face Hub, enabling efficient storage, streaming and visualization of massive robotic datasets.

🤗 State-of-the-art policies that have been shown to transfer to the real-world ready for training and deployment.

🤗 Comprehensive support for the open-source ecosystem to democratize physical AI.

Quick Start

LeRobot can be installed directly from PyPI.

pip install lerobot
lerobot-info

Important

For detailed installation guide, please see the Installation Documentation.

Robots & Control

Reachy 2 Demo

LeRobot provides a unified Robot class interface that decouples control logic from hardware specifics. It supports a wide range of robots and teleoperation devices.

from lerobot.robots.myrobot import MyRobot

# Connect to a robot
robot = MyRobot(config=...)
robot.connect()

# Read observation and send action
obs = robot.get_observation()
action = model.select_action(obs)
robot.send_action(action)

Supported Hardware: SO100, LeKiwi, Koch, HopeJR, OMX, EarthRover, Reachy2, Gamepads, Keyboards, Phones, OpenARM, Unitree G1.

While these devices are natively integrated into the LeRobot codebase, the library is designed to be extensible. You can easily implement the Robot interface to utilize LeRobot's data collection, training, and visualization tools for your own custom robot.

For detailed hardware setup guides, see the Hardware Documentation.

LeRobot Dataset

To solve the data fragmentation problem in robotics, we utilize the LeRobotDataset format.

  • Structure: Synchronized MP4 videos (or images) for vision and Parquet files for state/action data.
  • HF Hub Integration: Explore thousands of robotics datasets on the Hugging Face Hub.
  • Tools: Seamlessly delete episodes, split by indices/fractions, add/remove features, and merge multiple datasets.
from lerobot.datasets.lerobot_dataset import LeRobotDataset

# Load a dataset from the Hub
dataset = LeRobotDataset("lerobot/aloha_mobile_cabinet")

# Access data (automatically handles video decoding)
episode_index=0
print(f"{dataset[episode_index]['action'].shape=}\n")

Learn more about it in the LeRobotDataset Documentation

SoTA Models

LeRobot implements state-of-the-art policies in pure PyTorch, covering Imitation Learning, Reinforcement Learning, and Vision-Language-Action (VLA) models, with more coming soon. It also provides you with the tools to instrument and inspect your training process.

Gr00t Architecture

Training a policy is as simple as running a script configuration:

lerobot-train \
  --policy=act \
  --dataset.repo_id=lerobot/aloha_mobile_cabinet
Category Models
Imitation Learning ACT, Diffusion, VQ-BeT, Multitask DiT Policy
Reinforcement Learning HIL-SERL, TDMPC & QC-FQL (coming soon)
VLAs Models Pi0Fast, Pi0.5, GR00T N1.5, SmolVLA, XVLA

Similarly to the hardware, you can easily implement your own policy & leverage LeRobot's data collection, training, and visualization tools, and share your model to the HF Hub

For detailed policy setup guides, see the Policy Documentation. For GPU/RAM requirements and expected training time per policy, see the Compute Hardware Guide.

Inference & Evaluation

Evaluate your policies in simulation or on real hardware using the unified evaluation script. LeRobot supports standard benchmarks like LIBERO, MetaWorld and more to come.

# Evaluate a policy on the LIBERO benchmark
lerobot-eval \
  --policy.path=lerobot/pi0_libero_finetuned \
  --env.type=libero \
  --env.task=libero_object \
  --eval.n_episodes=10

Learn how to implement your own simulation environment or benchmark and distribute it from the HF Hub by following the EnvHub Documentation

Resources

Citation

If you use LeRobot in your project, please cite the GitHub repository to acknowledge the ongoing development and contributors:

@misc{cadene2024lerobot,
    author = {Cadene, Remi and Alibert, Simon and Soare, Alexander and Gallouedec, Quentin and Zouitine, Adil and Palma, Steven and Kooijmans, Pepijn and Aractingi, Michel and Shukor, Mustafa and Aubakirova, Dana and Russi, Martino and Capuano, Francesco and Pascal, Caroline and Choghari, Jade and Moss, Jess and Wolf, Thomas},
    title = {LeRobot: State-of-the-art Machine Learning for Real-World Robotics in Pytorch},
    howpublished = "\url{https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot}",
    year = {2024}
}

If you are referencing our research or the academic paper, please also cite our ICLR publication:

ICLR 2026 Paper
@inproceedings{cadenelerobot,
  title={LeRobot: An Open-Source Library for End-to-End Robot Learning},
  author={Cadene, Remi and Alibert, Simon and Capuano, Francesco and Aractingi, Michel and Zouitine, Adil and Kooijmans, Pepijn and Choghari, Jade and Russi, Martino and Pascal, Caroline and Palma, Steven and Shukor, Mustafa and Moss, Jess and Soare, Alexander and Aubakirova, Dana and Lhoest, Quentin and Gallou\'edec, Quentin and Wolf, Thomas},
  booktitle={The Fourteenth International Conference on Learning Representations},
  year={2026},
  url={https://arxiv.org/abs/2602.22818}
}

Contribute

We welcome contributions from everyone in the community! To get started, please read our CONTRIBUTING.md guide. Whether you're adding a new feature, improving documentation, or fixing a bug, your help and feedback are invaluable. We're incredibly excited about the future of open-source robotics and can't wait to work with you on what's next—thank you for your support!

SO101 Video

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