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When the Solver Fails

Too Many Iterations or Function Evaluations

The solver stopped because it reached a limit on the number of iterations or function evaluations before it minimized the objective to the requested tolerance. To proceed, try one or more of the following.

1. Enable Iterative Display
2. Relax Tolerances
3. Start the Solver from Different Points
4. Check Objective and Constraint Function Definitions
5. Center and Scale Your Problem
6. Provide Gradient or Jacobian
7. Provide Hessian

1. Enable Iterative Display

Set the Display option to 'iter'. This setting shows the results of the solver iterations.

To enable iterative display at the MATLAB® command line, enter

options = optimoptions('solvername','Display','iter');

Call the solver using the options structure.

For an example of iterative display, see Interpret Result.

What to Look for in Iterative Display

  • See if the objective function (Fval or f(x) or Resnorm) decreases. Decrease indicates progress.

  • Examine constraint violation (Max constraint) to ensure that it decreases towards 0. Decrease indicates progress.

  • See if the first-order optimality decreases towards 0. Decrease indicates progress.

  • See if the Trust-region radius decreases to a small value. This decrease indicates that the objective might not be smooth.

What to Do

  • If the solver seemed to progress:

    1. Set MaxIterations and/or MaxFunctionEvaluations to values larger than the defaults. You can see the default values in the Options table in the solver's function reference pages.

    2. Start the solver from its last calculated point.

  • If the solver is not progressing, try the other listed suggestions.

2. Relax Tolerances

If StepTolerance or OptimalityTolerance, for example, are too small, the solver might not recognize when it has reached a minimum; it can make futile iterations indefinitely.

To change tolerances at the command line, use optimoptions as described in Set and Change Optimization Options.

The FiniteDifferenceStepSize option (or DiffMaxChange and DiffMinChange options) can affect a solver's progress. These options control the step size in finite differencing for derivative estimation.

3. Start the Solver from Different Points

See Change the Initial Point.

4. Check Objective and Constraint Function Definitions

For example, check that your objective and nonlinear constraint functions return the correct values at some points. See Check your Objective and Constraint Functions. Check that an infeasible point does not cause an error in your functions; see Iterations Can Violate Constraints.

5. Center and Scale Your Problem

Solvers run more reliably when each coordinate has about the same effect on the objective and constraint functions. Multiply your coordinate directions with appropriate scalars to equalize the effect of each coordinate. Add appropriate values to certain coordinates to equalize their size.

Example: Centering and Scaling.  Consider minimizing 1e6*x(1)^2 + 1e-6*x(2)^2:

f = @(x) 10^6*x(1)^2 + 10^-6*x(2)^2;

Minimize f using the fminunc 'quasi-newton' algorithm:

opts = optimoptions('fminunc','Display','none','Algorithm','quasi-newton');
x = fminunc(f,[0.5;0.5],opts)

x =
         0
    0.5000

The result is incorrect; poor scaling interfered with obtaining a good solution.

Scale the problem. Set

D = diag([1e-3,1e3]);
fr = @(y) f(D*y);
y = fminunc(fr, [0.5;0.5], opts)

y =
     0
     0 % the correct answer

Similarly, poor centering can interfere with a solution.

fc = @(z)fr([z(1)-1e6;z(2)+1e6]); % poor centering
z = fminunc(fc,[.5 .5],opts)

z =
  1.0e+005 *
   10.0000  -10.0000 % looks good, but...

z - [1e6 -1e6] % checking how close z is to 1e6

ans =

   -0.0071    0.0078 % reveals a distance


fcc = @(w)fc([w(1)+1e6;w(2)-1e6]); % centered

w = fminunc(fcc,[.5 .5],opts)

w =
     0     0 % the correct answer

6. Provide Gradient or Jacobian

If you do not provide gradients or Jacobians, solvers estimate gradients and Jacobians by finite differences. Therefore, providing these derivatives can save computational time, and can lead to increased accuracy. The problem-based approach can provide gradients automatically; see Automatic Differentiation in Optimization Toolbox.

For constrained problems, providing a gradient has another advantage. A solver can reach a point x such that x is feasible, but finite differences around x always lead to an infeasible point. In this case, a solver can fail or halt prematurely. Providing a gradient allows a solver to proceed.

Provide gradients or Jacobians in the files for your objective function and nonlinear constraint functions. For details of the syntax, see Writing Scalar Objective Functions, Writing Vector and Matrix Objective Functions, and Nonlinear Constraints.

To check that your gradient or Jacobian function is correct, use the checkGradients function, as described in Checking Validity of Gradients or Jacobians.

If you have a Symbolic Math Toolbox™ license, you can calculate gradients and Hessians programmatically. For an example, see Calculate Gradients and Hessians Using Symbolic Math Toolbox.

For examples using gradients and Jacobians, see Minimization with Gradient and Hessian, Nonlinear Constraints with Gradients, Calculate Gradients and Hessians Using Symbolic Math Toolbox, Solve Nonlinear System Without and Including Jacobian, and Large Sparse System of Nonlinear Equations with Jacobian. For automatic differentiation in the problem-based approach, see Effect of Automatic Differentiation in Problem-Based Optimization.

7. Provide Hessian

Solvers often run more reliably and with fewer iterations when you supply a Hessian.

The following solvers and algorithms accept Hessians:

If you have a Symbolic Math Toolbox license, you can calculate gradients and Hessians programmatically. For an example, see Calculate Gradients and Hessians Using Symbolic Math Toolbox. To provide a Hessian in the problem-based approach, see Supply Derivatives in Problem-Based Workflow.

Converged to an Infeasible Point

Usually, you get this result because the solver was unable to find a point satisfying all constraints to within the ConstraintTolerance tolerance. However, the solver might have located or started at a feasible point, and converged to an infeasible point. If the solver lost feasibility, see Solver Lost Feasibility. If quadprog returns this result, see quadprog Converges to an Infeasible Point

To proceed when the solver found no feasible point, try one or more of the following.

1. Check Linear Constraints
2. Check Nonlinear Constraints

1. Check Linear Constraints

Try finding a point that satisfies the bounds and linear constraints by solving a linear programming problem.

  1. Define a linear programming problem with an objective function that is always zero:

    f = zeros(size(x0)); % assumes x0 is the initial point
  2. Solve the linear programming problem to see if there is a feasible point:

    xnew = linprog(f,A,b,Aeq,beq,lb,ub);
  3. If there is a feasible point xnew, use xnew as the initial point and rerun your original problem.

  4. If there is no feasible point, your problem is not well-formulated. Check the definitions of your bounds and linear constraints. For details on checking linear constraints, see Investigate Linear Infeasibilities.

2. Check Nonlinear Constraints

After ensuring that your bounds and linear constraints are feasible (contain a point satisfying all constraints), check your nonlinear constraints.

  • Set your objective function to zero:

    @(x)0

    Run your optimization with all constraints and with the zero objective. If you find a feasible point xnew, set x0 = xnew and rerun your original problem.

  • If you do not find a feasible point using a zero objective function, use the zero objective function with several initial points.

    • If you find a feasible point xnew, set x0 = xnew and rerun your original problem.

    • If you do not find a feasible point, try using fmincon with the EnableFeasibilityMode option set to true and the SubproblemAlgorithm option set to 'cg', as in Obtain Solution Using Feasibility Mode. Try several initial points with these options.

    • If you still do not find a feasible point, try relaxing the constraints, discussed next.

Try relaxing your nonlinear inequality constraints, then tightening them.

  1. Change the nonlinear constraint function c to return c-Δ, where Δ is a positive number. This change makes your nonlinear constraints easier to satisfy.

  2. Look for a feasible point for the new constraint function, using either your original objective function or the zero objective function.

    1. If you find a feasible point,

      1. Reduce Δ

      2. Look for a feasible point for the new constraint function, starting at the previously found point.

    2. If you do not find a feasible point, try increasing Δ and looking again.

If you find no feasible point, your problem might be truly infeasible, meaning that no solution exists. Check all your constraint definitions again.

Solver Lost Feasibility

If the solver started at a feasible point, but converged to an infeasible point, try the following techniques.

  • Try a different algorithm. The fmincon 'sqp' and 'interior-point' algorithms are usually the most robust, so try one or both of them first.

  • Tighten the bounds. Give the highest lb and lowest ub vectors that you can. This can help the solver to maintain feasibility. The fmincon 'sqp' and 'interior-point' algorithms obey bounds at every iteration, so tight bounds help throughout the optimization.

quadprog Converges to an Infeasible Point

Usually, you get this message because the linear constraints are inconsistent, or are nearly singular. To check whether a feasible point exists, create a linear programming problem with the same constraints and with a zero objective function vector f. Solve using the linprog 'dual-simplex' algorithm:

options = optimoptions('linprog','Algorithm','dual-simplex');
x = linprog(f,A,b,Aeq,beq,lb,ub,options)

If linprog finds no feasible point, then your problem is truly infeasible.

If linprog finds a feasible point, then try a different quadprog algorithm. Alternatively, change some tolerances such as StepTolerance or ConstraintTolerance and solve the problem again.

Problem Unbounded

The solver reached a point whose objective function was less than the objective limit tolerance.

  • Your problem might be truly unbounded. In other words, there is a sequence of points xi with

    lim f(xi) = –∞.

    and such that all the xi satisfy the problem constraints.

  • Check that your problem is formulated correctly. Solvers try to minimize objective functions; if you want a maximum, change your objective function to its negative. For an example, see Maximizing an Objective.

  • Try scaling or centering your problem. See Center and Scale Your Problem.

  • Relax the objective limit tolerance by using optimoptions to reduce the value of the ObjectiveLimit tolerance.

fsolve Could Not Solve Equation

fsolve can fail to solve an equation for various reasons. Here are some suggestions for how to proceed:

  1. Try Changing the Initial Point. fsolve relies on an initial point. By giving it different initial points, you increase the chances of success.

  2. Check the definition of the equation to make sure that it is smooth. fsolve might fail to converge for equations with discontinuous gradients, such as absolute value. fsolve can fail to converge for functions with discontinuities.

  3. Check that the equation is “square,” meaning equal dimensions for input and output (has the same number of unknowns as values of the equation).

  4. Change tolerances, especially OptimalityTolerance and StepTolerance. If you attempt to get high accuracy by setting tolerances to very small values, fsolve can fail to converge. If you set tolerances that are too high, fsolve can fail to solve an equation accurately.

  5. Check the problem definition. Some problems have no real solution, such as x^2 + 1 = 0. If you can accept a complex solution, try setting your initial point to a complex value. fsolve does not attempt to find a complex solution when the initial point is real.

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