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219 lines
9.8 KiB
Markdown
219 lines
9.8 KiB
Markdown
# Advanced Backtesting Analysis
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## Analyze the buy/entry and sell/exit tags
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It can be helpful to understand how a strategy behaves according to the buy/entry tags used to
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mark up different buy conditions. You might want to see more complex statistics about each buy and
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sell condition above those provided by the default backtesting output. You may also want to
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determine indicator values on the signal candle that resulted in a trade opening.
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!!! Note
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The following buy reason analysis is only available for backtesting, *not hyperopt*.
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We need to run backtesting with the `--export` option set to `signals` to enable the exporting of
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signals **and** trades:
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``` bash
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freqtrade backtesting -c <config.json> --timeframe <tf> --strategy <strategy_name> --timerange=<timerange> --export=signals
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```
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This will tell freqtrade to output a pickled dictionary of strategy, pairs and corresponding
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DataFrame of the candles that resulted in entry and exit signals.
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Depending on how many entries your strategy makes, this file may get quite large, so periodically check your `user_data/backtest_results` folder to delete old exports.
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Before running your next backtest, make sure you either delete your old backtest results or run
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backtesting with the `--cache none` option to make sure no cached results are used.
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If all goes well, you should now see a `backtest-result-{timestamp}_signals.pkl` and `backtest-result-{timestamp}_exited.pkl` files in the `user_data/backtest_results` folder.
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To analyze the entry/exit tags, we now need to use the `freqtrade backtesting-analysis` command
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with `--analysis-groups` option provided with space-separated arguments:
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``` bash
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freqtrade backtesting-analysis -c <config.json> --analysis-groups 0 1 2 3 4 5
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```
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This command will read from the last backtesting results. The `--analysis-groups` option is
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used to specify the various tabular outputs showing the profit of each group or trade,
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ranging from the simplest (0) to the most detailed per pair, per buy and per sell tag (4):
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* 0: overall winrate and profit summary by enter_tag
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* 1: profit summaries grouped by enter_tag
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* 2: profit summaries grouped by enter_tag and exit_tag
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* 3: profit summaries grouped by pair and enter_tag
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* 4: profit summaries grouped by pair, enter_ and exit_tag (this can get quite large)
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* 5: profit summaries grouped by exit_tag
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More options are available by running with the `-h` option.
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### Using export-filename
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Normally, `backtesting-analysis` uses the latest backtest results, but if you wanted to go
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back to a previous backtest output, you need to supply the `--export-filename` option.
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You can supply the same parameter to `backtest-analysis` with the name of the final backtest
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output file. This allows you to keep historical versions of backtest results and re-analyse
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them at a later date:
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``` bash
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freqtrade backtesting -c <config.json> --timeframe <tf> --strategy <strategy_name> --timerange=<timerange> --export=signals --export-filename=/tmp/mystrat_backtest.json
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```
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You should see some output similar to below in the logs with the name of the timestamped
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filename that was exported:
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```
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2022-06-14 16:28:32,698 - freqtrade.misc - INFO - dumping json to "/tmp/mystrat_backtest-2022-06-14_16-28-32.json"
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```
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You can then use that filename in `backtesting-analysis`:
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```
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freqtrade backtesting-analysis -c <config.json> --export-filename=/tmp/mystrat_backtest-2022-06-14_16-28-32.json
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```
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### Tuning the buy tags and sell tags to display
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To show only certain buy and sell tags in the displayed output, use the following two options:
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```
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--enter-reason-list : Space-separated list of enter signals to analyse. Default: "all"
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--exit-reason-list : Space-separated list of exit signals to analyse. Default: "all"
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```
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For example:
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```bash
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freqtrade backtesting-analysis -c <config.json> --analysis-groups 0 2 --enter-reason-list enter_tag_a enter_tag_b --exit-reason-list roi custom_exit_tag_a stop_loss
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```
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### Outputting signal candle indicators
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The real power of `freqtrade backtesting-analysis` comes from the ability to print out the indicator
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values present on signal candles to allow fine-grained investigation and tuning of buy signal
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indicators. To print out a column for a given set of indicators, use the `--indicator-list`
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option:
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```bash
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freqtrade backtesting-analysis -c <config.json> --analysis-groups 0 2 --enter-reason-list enter_tag_a enter_tag_b --exit-reason-list roi custom_exit_tag_a stop_loss --indicator-list rsi rsi_1h bb_lowerband ema_9 macd macdsignal
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```
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The indicators have to be present in your strategy's main DataFrame (either for your main
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timeframe or for informative timeframes) otherwise they will simply be ignored in the script
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output.
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!!! Note "Indicator List"
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The indicator values will be displayed for both entry and exit points. If `--indicator-list all` is specified,
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only the indicators at the entry point will be shown to avoid excessively large lists, which could occur depending on the strategy.
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There are a range of candle and trade-related fields that are included in the analysis so are
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automatically accessible by including them on the indicator-list, and these include:
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- **open_date :** trade open datetime
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- **close_date :** trade close datetime
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- **min_rate :** minimum price seen throughout the position
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- **max_rate :** maximum price seen throughout the position
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- **open :** signal candle open price
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- **close :** signal candle close price
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- **high :** signal candle high price
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- **low :** signal candle low price
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- **volume :** signal candle volume
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- **profit_ratio :** trade profit ratio
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- **profit_abs :** absolute profit return of the trade
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#### Sample Output for Indicator Values
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```bash
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freqtrade backtesting-analysis -c user_data/config.json --analysis-groups 0 --indicator-list chikou_span tenkan_sen
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```
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In this example,
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we aim to display the `chikou_span` and `tenkan_sen` indicator values at both the entry and exit points of trades.
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A sample output for indicators might look like this:
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| pair | open_date | enter_reason | exit_reason | chikou_span (entry) | tenkan_sen (entry) | chikou_span (exit) | tenkan_sen (exit) |
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|-----------|---------------------------|--------------|-------------|---------------------|--------------------|--------------------|-------------------|
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| DOGE/USDT | 2024-07-06 00:35:00+00:00 | | exit_signal | 0.105 | 0.106 | 0.105 | 0.107 |
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| BTC/USDT | 2024-08-05 14:20:00+00:00 | | roi | 54643.440 | 51696.400 | 54386.000 | 52072.010 |
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As shown in the table, `chikou_span (entry)` represents the indicator value at the time of trade entry,
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while `chikou_span (exit)` reflects its value at the time of exit.
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This detailed view of indicator values enhances the analysis.
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The `(entry)` and `(exit)` suffixes are added to indicators
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to distinguish the values at the entry and exit points of the trade.
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!!! Note "Trade-wide Indicators"
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Certain trade-wide indicators do not have the `(entry)` or `(exit)` suffix. These indicators include: `pair`, `stake_amount`,
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`max_stake_amount`, `amount`, `open_date`, `close_date`, `open_rate`, `close_rate`, `fee_open`, `fee_close`, `trade_duration`,
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`profit_ratio`, `profit_abs`, `exit_reason`,`initial_stop_loss_abs`, `initial_stop_loss_ratio`, `stop_loss_abs`, `stop_loss_ratio`,
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`min_rate`, `max_rate`, `is_open`, `enter_tag`, `leverage`, `is_short`, `open_timestamp`, `close_timestamp` and `orders`
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#### Filtering Indicators Based on Entry or Exit Signals
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The `--indicator-list` option, by default, displays indicator values for both entry and exit signals. To filter the indicator values exclusively for entry signals, you can use the `--entry-only` argument. Similarly, to display indicator values only at exit signals, use the `--exit-only` argument.
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Example: Display indicator values at entry signals:
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```bash
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freqtrade backtesting-analysis -c user_data/config.json --analysis-groups 0 --indicator-list chikou_span tenkan_sen --entry-only
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```
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Example: Display indicator values at exit signals:
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```bash
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freqtrade backtesting-analysis -c user_data/config.json --analysis-groups 0 --indicator-list chikou_span tenkan_sen --exit-only
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```
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!!! note
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When using these filters, the indicator names will not be suffixed with `(entry)` or `(exit)`.
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### Filtering the trade output by date
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To show only trades between dates within your backtested timerange, supply the usual `timerange` option in `YYYYMMDD-[YYYYMMDD]` format:
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```
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--timerange : Timerange to filter output trades, start date inclusive, end date exclusive. e.g. 20220101-20221231
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```
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For example, if your backtest timerange was `20220101-20221231` but you only want to output trades in January:
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```bash
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freqtrade backtesting-analysis -c <config.json> --timerange 20220101-20220201
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```
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### Printing out rejected signals
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Use the `--rejected-signals` option to print out rejected signals.
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```bash
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freqtrade backtesting-analysis -c <config.json> --rejected-signals
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```
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### Writing tables to CSV
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Some of the tabular outputs can become large, so printing them out to the terminal is not preferable.
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Use the `--analysis-to-csv` option to disable printing out of tables to standard out and write them to CSV files.
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```bash
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freqtrade backtesting-analysis -c <config.json> --analysis-to-csv
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```
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By default this will write one file per output table you specified in the `backtesting-analysis` command, e.g.
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```bash
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freqtrade backtesting-analysis -c <config.json> --analysis-to-csv --rejected-signals --analysis-groups 0 1
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```
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This will write to `user_data/backtest_results`:
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* rejected_signals.csv
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* group_0.csv
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* group_1.csv
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To override where the files will be written, also specify the `--analysis-csv-path` option.
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```bash
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freqtrade backtesting-analysis -c <config.json> --analysis-to-csv --analysis-csv-path another/data/path/
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```
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