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v3.8.16
v3.8.16
  • Deep Lake Docs
  • Vector Store Quickstart
  • Deep Learning Quickstart
  • Storage & Credentials
    • Storage Options
    • User Authentication
    • Storing Deep Lake Data in Your Own Cloud
      • Microsoft Azure
        • Provisioning Federated Credentials
        • Enabling CORS
      • Amazon Web Services
        • Provisioning Role-Based Access
        • Enabling CORS
  • List of ML Datasets
  • 🏢High-Performance Features
    • Introduction
    • Performant Dataloader
    • Tensor Query Language (TQL)
      • TQL Syntax
      • Sampling Datasets
    • Deep Memory
      • How it Works
    • Index for ANN Search
      • Caching and Optimization
    • Managed Tensor Database
      • REST API
      • Migrating Datasets to the Tensor Database
  • 📚EXAMPLE CODE
    • Getting Started
      • Vector Store
        • Step 1: Hello World
        • Step 2: Creating Deep Lake Vector Stores
        • Step 3: Performing Search in Vector Stores
        • Step 4: Customizing Vector Stores
      • Deep Learning
        • Step 1: Hello World
        • Step 2: Creating Deep Lake Datasets
        • Step 3: Understanding Compression
        • Step 4: Accessing and Updating Data
        • Step 5: Visualizing Datasets
        • Step 6: Using Activeloop Storage
        • Step 7: Connecting Deep Lake Datasets to ML Frameworks
        • Step 8: Parallel Computing
        • Step 9: Dataset Version Control
        • Step 10: Dataset Filtering
    • Tutorials (w Colab)
      • Vector Store Tutorials
        • Vector Search Options
          • Deep Lake Vector Store API
          • REST API
          • LangChain API
        • Image Similarity Search
        • Deep Lake Vector Store in LangChain
        • Deep Lake Vector Store in LlamaIndex
        • Improving Search Accuracy using Deep Memory
      • Deep Learning Tutorials
        • Creating Datasets
          • Creating Complex Datasets
          • Creating Object Detection Datasets
          • Creating Time-Series Datasets
          • Creating Datasets with Sequences
          • Creating Video Datasets
        • Training Models
          • Splitting Datasets for Training
          • Training an Image Classification Model in PyTorch
          • Training Models Using MMDetection
          • Training Models Using PyTorch Lightning
          • Training on AWS SageMaker
          • Training an Object Detection and Segmentation Model in PyTorch
        • Updating Datasets
        • Data Processing Using Parallel Computing
      • Concurrent Writes
        • Concurrency Using Zookeeper Locks
    • Playbooks
      • Querying, Training and Editing Datasets with Data Lineage
      • Evaluating Model Performance
      • Training Reproducibility Using Deep Lake and Weights & Biases
      • Working with Videos
    • Low-Level API Summary
  • 🔬Technical Details
    • Best Practices
      • Creating Datasets at Scale
      • Training Models at Scale
      • Storage Synchronization and "with" Context
      • Restoring Corrupted Datasets
      • Concurrent Writes
    • Data Layout
    • Version Control and Querying
    • Dataset Visualization
    • Tensor Relationships
    • Visualizer Integration
    • Shuffling in dataloaders
    • How to Contribute
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On this page
  • How to restore a corrupted Deep Lake dataset
  • How to Use Version Control to Retrieve Data

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  1. Technical Details
  2. Best Practices

Restoring Corrupted Datasets

Restoring Deep Lake datasets that may be corrupted.

PreviousStorage Synchronization and "with" ContextNextData Layout

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How to restore a corrupted Deep Lake dataset

Deliberate of accidental interruption of code may make a Deep Lake dataset or some of its tensors unreadable. At scale, code interruption is more likely to occur, and Deep Lake's version control is the primary tool for recovery.

How to Use Version Control to Retrieve Data

When manipulating Deep Lake datasets, it is recommended to commit periodically in order to create snapshots of the dataset that can be accessed later. This can be done automatically when , or manually using

If a dataset becomes corrupted, when loading the dataset, you may see an error like:

DatasetCorruptError: Exception occured (see Traceback). The dataset maybe corrupted. Try using `reset=True` to reset HEAD changes and load the previous commit. This will delete all uncommitted changes on the branch you are trying to load.

To reset the uncommitted corrupted changes, load the dataset with the reset = True flag:

ds = deeplake.load(<dataset_path>, reset = True)

Note: this operation deletes all uncommitted changes.

🔬
creating datasets with deeplake.compute
our version control API.