anirudhacharya commented on a change in pull request #12542: [MXNET-949] Module API to Gluon API tutorial URL: https://github.com/apache/incubator-mxnet/pull/12542#discussion_r231700960
########## File path: docs/tutorials/python/module_to_gluon.md ########## @@ -0,0 +1,358 @@ + +# Converting Module API code to the Gluon API + +Sometimes, you find yourself in the situation where the model you want to use has been written using the symbolic Module API rather than the simpler, easier-to-debug, more flexible, imperative Gluon API. In this tutorial, we will give you a comprehensive guide you can use in order to see how you can transform your Module code, to work with the Gluon API. + +The different steps to take into consideration are: + +I) Data loading + +II) Model definition + +III) Loss + +IV) Training Loop + +V) Exporting Models + +VI) Loading Models for Inference + +In the following section we will look at 1:1 mappings between the Module and the Gluon ways of training a neural networks. + +## I - Data Loading + + +```python +from collections import namedtuple +import logging +logging.basicConfig(level=logging.INFO) + +import numpy as np +import mxnet as mx +from mxnet.gluon.data import ArrayDataset, DataLoader +from mxnet.gluon import nn +from mxnet import gluon + +batch_size = 5 +dataset_length = 50 +``` + +#### Module + +When using the Module API we use a [`DataIter`](https://mxnet.incubator.apache.org/api/python/io/io.html?highlight=dataiter#mxnet.io.DataIter), in addition to the data itself, the [`DataIter`](https://mxnet.incubator.apache.org/api/python/io/io.html?highlight=dataiter#mxnet.io.DataIter) contains information about the name of the input symbols. + +Let's create some random data, following the same format as grayscale 28x28 images. + + +```python +train_data = np.random.rand(dataset_length, 28,28).astype('float32') +train_label = np.random.randint(0, 10, (dataset_length,)).astype('float32') +``` + + +```python +data_iter = mx.io.NDArrayIter(data=train_data, label=train_label, batch_size=batch_size, shuffle=False, data_name='data', label_name='softmax_label') +for batch in data_iter: + print(batch.data[0].shape, batch.label[0]) + break +``` + + (5, 28, 28) + [5. 0. 3. 4. 9.] + <NDArray 5 @cpu(0)> + + +#### Gluon + +With Gluon, the preferred method is to use a [`DataLoader`](https://mxnet.incubator.apache.org/api/python/gluon/data.html?highlight=dataloader#mxnet.gluon.data.DataLoader) that make use of a [`Dataset`](https://mxnet.incubator.apache.org/api/python/gluon/data.html?highlight=dataset#mxnet.gluon.data.Dataset) to prefetch asynchronously the data. + + +```python +dataset = ArrayDataset(train_data, train_label) +dataloader = DataLoader(dataset, batch_size=batch_size, shuffle=False, num_workers=0) +for data, label in dataloader: + print(data.shape, label) + break +``` + + (5, 28, 28) + [5. 0. 3. 4. 9.] + <NDArray 5 @cpu(0)> + + +#### Notable differences + +- Gluon keeps a strict separation between data holding, and data loading / fetching. The `Dataset` role is to hold onto some data, in or out of memory, and the `DataLoader` role is to request certain indices of the dataset, in the main thread or through multi-processing workers. This flexible API allows to efficiently pre-fetch data and separate the concerns. +- In the module API, `DataIter` are responsible for both holding the data and iterating through it. Some `DataIter` support multi-threading like the [`ImageRecordIter`](https://mxnet.incubator.apache.org/api/python/io/io.html#mxnet.io.ImageRecordIter), while other don't like the [`NDArrayIter`](https://mxnet.incubator.apache.org/api/python/io/io.html?highlight=ndarrayiter#mxnet.io.NDArrayIter). + +You can checkout the [`Dataset` and `DataLoader` tutorial](https://mxnet.incubator.apache.org/tutorials/gluon/datasets.html). You can either rewrite your code in order to use one of the provided [`Dataset`](https://mxnet.incubator.apache.org/api/python/gluon/data.html?highlight=dataset#mxnet.gluon.data.Dataset) class, like the [`ArrayDataset`](https://mxnet.incubator.apache.org/api/python/gluon/data.html?highlight=arraydataset#mxnet.gluon.data.ArrayDataset) or the [`ImageFolderDataset`](https://mxnet.incubator.apache.org/api/python/gluon/data.html?highlight=imagefolderdataset#mxnet.gluon.data.vision.datasets.ImageFolderDataset), or you can simply wrap your existing [`DataIter`](https://mxnet.incubator.apache.org/api/python/io/io.html?highlight=dataiter#mxnet.io.DataIter) to have a similar usage pattern as a `DataLoader`: + + +```python +class DataIterLoader(): + def __init__(self, data_iter): + self.data_iter = data_iter + + def __iter__(self): + self.data_iter.reset() + return self + + def __next__(self): + batch = self.data_iter.__next__() + assert len(batch.data) == len(batch.label) == 1 + data = batch.data[0] + label = batch.label[0] + return data, label + + def next(self): + return self.__next__() # for Python 2 +``` + + +```python +data_iter = mx.io.NDArrayIter(data=train_data, label=train_label, batch_size=batch_size) +data_iter_loader = DataIterLoader(data_iter) +for data, label in data_iter_loader: + print(data.shape, label) + break +``` + + (5, 28, 28) + [5. 0. 3. 4. 9.] + <NDArray 5 @cpu(0)> + + +## II - Model definition + +Let's look at the model definition from the [MNIST Module Tutorial](https://mxnet.incubator.apache.org/tutorials/python/mnist.html): + + +```python +ctx = mx.cpu() +``` + +#### Module + +For the Module API, you define the data flow by setting `data` keyword argument of one layer to the next. +You then bind the symbolic model to a specific compute context and specify the symbol names for the data and the label. + +```python +def get_module_network(): + data = mx.sym.var('data') + data = mx.sym.flatten(data=data) + fc1 = mx.sym.FullyConnected(data=data, num_hidden=128) + act1 = mx.sym.Activation(data=fc1, act_type="relu") + fc2 = mx.sym.FullyConnected(data=act1, num_hidden = 64) + act2 = mx.sym.Activation(data=fc2, act_type="relu") + fc3 = mx.sym.FullyConnected(data=act2, num_hidden=10) + mlp = mx.sym.SoftmaxOutput(data=fc3, name='softmax') + return mlp + +mlp = get_module_network() +# Bind model to Module +mlp_model = mx.mod.Module(symbol=mlp, context=ctx, data_names=['data'], label_names=['softmax_label']) +``` + +#### Gluon + +In Gluon, for a sequential model like that, you would create a `Sequential` block, in that case a `HybridSequential` block to allow for future hybridization since we are only using hybridizable blocks. Learn more [about hybridization](https://mxnet.incubator.apache.org/tutorials/gluon/hybrid.html). The flow of the data will be automatically set from one layer to the next, since they are held in a `Sequential` block. + + +```python +def get_gluon_network(): + net = nn.HybridSequential() + with net.name_scope(): + net.add( + nn.Flatten(), + nn.Dense(units=128, activation="relu"), + nn.Dense(units=64, activation="relu"), + nn.Dense(units=10) + ) + return net + +net = get_gluon_network() +``` + +## III - Loss + +The loss, that you are trying to minimize using an optimization algorithm like SGD, is defined differently in the Module API than in Gluon. + +In the module API, the loss is part of the network. It has usually a forward pass result, that is the inference value, and a backward pass that is the gradient of the output with respect to that particular loss. + +For example the [sym.SoftmaxOutput](https://mxnet.incubator.apache.org/api/python/symbol/symbol.html?highlight=softmaxout#mxnet.symbol.SoftmaxOutput) is a softmax output in the forward pass and the gradient with respect to the cross-entropy loss in the backward pass. + +In Gluon, it is a lot more transparent. Losses, like the [SoftmaxCrossEntropyLoss](https://mxnet.incubator.apache.org/api/python/gluon/loss.html?highlight=softmaxcross#mxnet.gluon.loss.SoftmaxCrossEntropyLoss), are only computing the actual value of the loss. You then call `.backward()` on the loss value to compute the gradient of the parameters with respect to that loss. At inference time, you simply call `.softmax()` on your output to get the output of your network normalized according to the softmax function. + +#### Module + + +```python +# Softmax with cross entropy loss, directly part of the network +out = mx.sym.SoftmaxOutput(data=mlp, name='softmax') +``` + +#### Gluon + + +```python +# We simply create a loss function we will use in our training loop +loss_fn = gluon.loss.SoftmaxCrossEntropyLoss() +``` + +## IV - Training Loop + +The Module API provides a [`.fit()`](https://mxnet.incubator.apache.org/api/python/module/module.html?highlight=.fit#mxnet.module.BaseModule.fit) functions that takes care of fitting training data to your symbolic model. With Gluon, your execution flow controls the data flow, so you need to write your own loop. It might seems like it is more verbose, but you have a lot more control as to what is happening during the training. +With the [`.fit()`](https://mxnet.incubator.apache.org/api/python/module/module.html?highlight=.fit#mxnet.module.BaseModule.fit) function, you control the metric reporting, checkpointing or weights initialization through a lot of different keyword arguments (check the [docs](https://mxnet.incubator.apache.org/api/python/module/module.html?highlight=.fit#mxnet.module.BaseModule.fit)). That is where you define the optimizer for example. + +With Gluon, you do these operations directly in the training loop, and the optimizer is part of the [`Trainer`](https://mxnet.incubator.apache.org/api/python/gluon/gluon.html?highlight=trainer#mxnet.gluon.Trainer) object that handles the weight updates of your parameters. + +#### Module + + +```python +mlp_model.fit(data_iter, # train data + eval_data=data_iter, # validation data + optimizer='adam', # use SGD to train + force_init=True, + force_rebind=True, + optimizer_params={'learning_rate':0.1}, # use fixed learning rate + eval_metric='acc', # report accuracy during training + num_epoch=5) # train for at most 10 dataset passes +``` + +```INFO:root:Epoch[4] Train-accuracy=0.070000```<!--notebook-skip-line--> + +```INFO:root:Epoch[4] Time cost=0.038```<!--notebook-skip-line--> + +```INFO:root:Epoch[4] Validation-accuracy=0.125000```<!--notebook-skip-line--> + +#### Gluon + + +```python +# Initialize network and trainer +net.initialize(mx.init.Xavier(magnitude=2.24), ctx=ctx) +trainer = gluon.Trainer(net.collect_params(), 'sgd', {'learning_rate': 0.1}) + +# Pick a metric +metric = mx.metric.Accuracy() + +for e in range(5): # start of epoch + + for data, label in dataloader: # start of mini-batch + data = data.as_in_context(ctx) + label = label.as_in_context(ctx) + + with mx.autograd.record(): + output = net(data) # forward pass + loss = loss_fn(output, label) # get loss + loss.backward() # compute gradients + + trainer.step(data.shape[0]) # update weights with SGD + metric.update(label, output) # update the metrics + # end of mini-batch + name, acc = metric.get() + print('training metrics at epoch %d: %s=%f'%(e, name, acc)) + metric.reset() + # end of epoch +``` + +```training metrics at epoch 3: accuracy=0.155000```<!--notebook-skip-line--> + +```training metrics at epoch 4: accuracy=0.145000```<!--notebook-skip-line--> + + +## V - Exporting model + +The ultimate purpose of training a model is to be able to export it and share it, whether it is for deployment or simply reproducibility purposes. + +With the Module API, you can save model using the [`.save_checkpoint()`](https://mxnet.incubator.apache.org/api/python/module/module.html?highlight=save_chec#mxnet.module.Module.save_checkpoint) and get a `-symbol.json` and a `.params` file that represent your network. + +With Gluon, network parameters are associated with a `Block`, but the execution flow is controlled in python through the code in `.forward()` function. Hence only [hybridized networks]() can be exported with a `-symbol.json` and `.params` file using [`.export()`](https://mxnet.incubator.apache.org/api/python/gluon/gluon.html?highlight=export#mxnet.gluon.HybridBlock.export), non-hybridized models can only have their parameters exported using [`.save_parameters()`](https://mxnet.incubator.apache.org/api/python/gluon/gluon.html?highlight=save_pa#mxnet.gluon.Block.save_parameters). Check this great tutorial to learn more: [Saving and Loading Gluon Models](https://mxnet.incubator.apache.org/tutorials/gluon/save_load_params.html). + +#### Module + + +```python +mlp_model.save_checkpoint('module-model', epoch=5) +# nodule-model-0005.params module-model-symbol.json +``` + +```INFO:root:Saved checkpoint to "module-model-0005.params"```<!--notebook-skip-line--> + +#### Gluon + + +```python +# save only the parameters +net.save_parameters('gluon-model.params') +# gluon-model.params +``` + + +```python +# save the parameters and the symbolic representation +net.hybridize() +net(mx.nd.ones((1,1,28,28), ctx)) + +net.export('gluon-model-hybrid', epoch=5) +# gluon-model-hybrid-symbol.json gluon-model-hybrid-0005.params +``` + +## VI - Loading model for inference + +For inference, in the Module API, you need to first load the parameters and symbol, bind the symbol to a module and load the corresponding parameters. You can then pass a batch of data through that module and request the output of the network. +For the Gluon API, it is a lot simpler, you can just load a serialized model in a [`SymbolBlock`](https://mxnet.incubator.apache.org/api/python/gluon/gluon.html?highlight=symbolblo#mxnet.gluon.SymbolBlock) and run inference directly. + +#### Module + +```python +# Load the symbol and parameters +sym, arg_params, aux_params = mx.model.load_checkpoint('module-model', 5) + +# Bind them in a module +mod = mx.mod.Module(symbol=sym, context=ctx, label_names=None) +mod.bind(for_training=False, data_shapes=[('data', (1,1,28,28))], + label_shapes=mod._label_shapes) + +# Set the parameters +mod.set_params(arg_params, aux_params, allow_missing=True) + +# Run the inference +Batch = namedtuple('Batch', ['data']) +mod.forward(Batch([mx.nd.ones((1,28,28))])) +prob = mod.get_outputs()[0].asnumpy() +print("Output probabilities: {}".format(prob)) +``` + +`Output probabilities: [[0.05537598 0.03889056 0.06126577 0.08879893 0.12371024 0.05759033 0.1378248 0.26134694 0.07905186 0.09614458]]`<!--notebook-skip-line--> + +#### Gluon (Symbolic Model) + +```python +net = gluon.SymbolBlock.imports('module-model-symbol.json', ['data', 'softmax_label'], 'module-model-0005.params') +prob = net(mx.nd.ones((1,1,28,28)), mx.nd.ones(1)) # note the second argument here to account for the softmax_label symbol +print("Output probabilities: {}".format(prob.asnumpy())) +``` + +`Output probabilities: [[0.05537598 0.03889056 0.06126577 0.08879893 0.12371024 0.05759033 0.1378248 0.26134694 0.07905186 0.09614458]]`<!--notebook-skip-line--> + +#### Gluon (Imperative Model) + +```python +net = get_gluon_network() +net.load_parameters('gluon-model.params') +prob = net(mx.nd.ones((1,1,28,28))).softmax() +print("Output probabilities: {}".format(prob.asnumpy())) +``` + +`Output probabilities: [[0.01298077 0.00173413 0.01661885 0.3362421 0.00536332 0.02099853 0.01413316 0.5528366 0.0133819 0.02571066]]`<!--notebook-skip-line--> + +## Conclusion + +This tutorial lead you through the steps necessary to train a deep learning model and showed you the differences between the symbolic approach of the Module API and the imperative one of the Gluon API. If you need more elp converting your Module API code to the Gluon API, reach out to the community on the [discuss forum](https://discuss.mxnet.io)! Review comment: nit: 'elp' -> 'help' ---------------------------------------------------------------- This is an automated message from the Apache Git Service. To respond to the message, please log on GitHub and use the URL above to go to the specific comment. For queries about this service, please contact Infrastructure at: [email protected] With regards, Apache Git Services
