6.0 KiB
Advanced Backtesting Analysis
Analyze the buy/entry and sell/exit tags
It can be helpful to understand how a strategy behaves according to the buy/entry tags used to mark up different buy conditions. You might want to see more complex statistics about each buy and sell condition above those provided by the default backtesting output. You may also want to determine indicator values on the signal candle that resulted in a trade opening.
!!! Note The following buy reason analysis is only available for backtesting, not hyperopt.
We need to run backtesting with the --export
option set to signals
to enable the exporting of
signals and trades:
freqtrade backtesting -c <config.json> --timeframe <tf> --strategy <strategy_name> --timerange=<timerange> --export=signals
This will tell freqtrade to output a pickled dictionary of strategy, pairs and corresponding
DataFrame of the candles that resulted in buy signals. Depending on how many buys your strategy
makes, this file may get quite large, so periodically check your user_data/backtest_results
folder to delete old exports.
Before running your next backtest, make sure you either delete your old backtest results or run
backtesting with the --cache none
option to make sure no cached results are used.
If all goes well, you should now see a backtest-result-{timestamp}_signals.pkl
file in the
user_data/backtest_results
folder.
To analyze the entry/exit tags, we now need to use the freqtrade backtesting-analysis
command
with --analysis-groups
option provided with space-separated arguments:
freqtrade backtesting-analysis -c <config.json> --analysis-groups 0 1 2 3 4
This command will read from the last backtesting results. The --analysis-groups
option is
used to specify the various tabular outputs showing the profit fo each group or trade,
ranging from the simplest (0) to the most detailed per pair, per buy and per sell tag (4):
- 0: overall winrate and profit summary by enter_tag
- 1: profit summaries grouped by enter_tag
- 2: profit summaries grouped by enter_tag and exit_tag
- 3: profit summaries grouped by pair and enter_tag
- 4: profit summaries grouped by pair, enter_ and exit_tag (this can get quite large)
More options are available by running with the -h
option.
Using export-filename
Normally, backtesting-analysis
uses the latest backtest results, but if you wanted to go
back to a previous backtest output, you need to supply the --export-filename
option.
You can supply the same parameter to backtest-analysis
with the name of the final backtest
output file. This allows you to keep historical versions of backtest results and re-analyse
them at a later date:
freqtrade backtesting -c <config.json> --timeframe <tf> --strategy <strategy_name> --timerange=<timerange> --export=signals --export-filename=/tmp/mystrat_backtest.json
You should see some output similar to below in the logs with the name of the timestamped filename that was exported:
2022-06-14 16:28:32,698 - freqtrade.misc - INFO - dumping json to "/tmp/mystrat_backtest-2022-06-14_16-28-32.json"
You can then use that filename in backtesting-analysis
:
freqtrade backtesting-analysis -c <config.json> --export-filename=/tmp/mystrat_backtest-2022-06-14_16-28-32.json
Tuning the buy tags and sell tags to display
To show only certain buy and sell tags in the displayed output, use the following two options:
--enter-reason-list : Space-separated list of enter signals to analyse. Default: "all"
--exit-reason-list : Space-separated list of exit signals to analyse. Default: "all"
For example:
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
Outputting signal candle indicators
The real power of freqtrade backtesting-analysis
comes from the ability to print out the indicator
values present on signal candles to allow fine-grained investigation and tuning of buy signal
indicators. To print out a column for a given set of indicators, use the --indicator-list
option:
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
The indicators have to be present in your strategy's main DataFrame (either for your main timeframe or for informative timeframes) otherwise they will simply be ignored in the script output.
Filtering the trade output by date
To show only trades between dates within your backtested timerange, supply the usual timerange
option in YYYYMMDD-[YYYYMMDD]
format:
--timerange : Timerange to filter output trades, start date inclusive, end date exclusive. e.g. 20220101-20221231
For example, if your backtest timerange was 20220101-20221231
but you only want to output trades in January:
freqtrade backtesting-analysis -c <config.json> --timerange 20220101-20220201
Printing out rejected signals
Use the --rejected-signals
option to print out rejected signals.
freqtrade backtesting-analysis -c <config.json> --rejected-signals
Writing tables to CSV
Some of the tabular outputs can become large, so printing them out to the terminal is not preferable.
Use the --analysis-to-csv
option to disable printing out of tables to standard out and write them to CSV files.
freqtrade backtesting-analysis -c <config.json> --analysis-to-csv
By default this will write one file per output table you specified in the backtesting-analysis
command, e.g.
freqtrade backtesting-analysis -c <config.json> --analysis-to-csv --rejected-signals --analysis-groups 0 1
This will write to user_data/backtest_results
:
- rejected_signals.csv
- group_0.csv
- group_1.csv
To override where the files will be written, also specify the --analysis-csv-path
option.
freqtrade backtesting-analysis -c <config.json> --analysis-to-csv --analysis-csv-path another/data/path/