I was trying to do a simple thing which was train a linear model with Stochastic Gradient Descent (SGD) using torch:
import numpy as np
import torch
from torch.autograd import Variable
import pdb
def get_batch2(X,Y,M,dtype):
X,Y = X.data.numpy(), Y.data.numpy()
N = len(Y)
valid_indices = np.array( range(N) )
batch_indices = np.random.choice(valid_indices,size=M,replace=False)
batch_xs = torch.FloatTensor(X[batch_indices,:]).type(dtype)
batch_ys = torch.FloatTensor(Y[batch_indices]).type(dtype)
return Variable(batch_xs, requires_grad=False), Variable(batch_ys, requires_grad=False)
def poly_kernel_matrix( x,D ):
N = len(x)
Kern = np.zeros( (N,D+1) )
for n in range(N):
for d in range(D+1):
Kern[n,d] = x[n]**d;
return Kern
## data params
N=5 # data set size
Degree=4 # number dimensions/features
D_sgd = Degree+1
##
x_true = np.linspace(0,1,N) # the real data points
y = np.sin(2*np.pi*x_true)
y.shape = (N,1)
## TORCH
dtype = torch.FloatTensor
# dtype = torch.cuda.FloatTensor # Uncomment this to run on GPU
X_mdl = poly_kernel_matrix( x_true,Degree )
X_mdl = Variable(torch.FloatTensor(X_mdl).type(dtype), requires_grad=False)
y = Variable(torch.FloatTensor(y).type(dtype), requires_grad=False)
## SGD mdl
w_init = torch.zeros(D_sgd,1).type(dtype)
W = Variable(w_init, requires_grad=True)
M = 5 # mini-batch size
eta = 0.1 # step size
for i in range(500):
batch_xs, batch_ys = get_batch2(X_mdl,y,M,dtype)
# Forward pass: compute predicted y using operations on Variables
y_pred = batch_xs.mm(W)
# Compute and print loss using operations on Variables. Now loss is a Variable of shape (1,) and loss.data is a Tensor of shape (1,); loss.data[0] is a scalar value holding the loss.
loss = (1/N)*(y_pred - batch_ys).pow(2).sum()
# Use autograd to compute the backward pass. Now w will have gradients
loss.backward()
# Update weights using gradient descent; w1.data are Tensors,
# w.grad are Variables and w.grad.data are Tensors.
W.data -= eta * W.grad.data
# Manually zero the gradients after updating weights
W.grad.data.zero_()
#
c_sgd = W.data.numpy()
X_mdl = X_mdl.data.numpy()
y = y.data.numpy()
#
Xc_pinv = np.dot(X_mdl,c_sgd)
print('J(c_sgd) = ', (1/N)*(np.linalg.norm(y-Xc_pinv)**2) )
print('loss = ',loss.data[0])
the code runs fine and all though my get_batch2
method seems really dum/naive, its probably because I am new to pytorch but I have not found a good place where they discuss how to retrieve data batches. I went through their tutorials (http://pytorch.org/tutorials/beginner/pytorch_with_examples.html) and through the data set (http://pytorch.org/tutorials/beginner/data_loading_tutorial.html) with no luck. The tutorials all seem to assume that one already has the batch and batch-size at the beginning and then proceeds to train with that data without changing it (specifically look at http://pytorch.org/tutorials/beginner/pytorch_with_examples.html#pytorch-variables-and-autograd).
So my question is do I really need to turn my data back into numpy so that I can fetch some random sample of it and then turn it back to pytorch with Variable to be able to train in memory? Is there no way to get mini-batches with torch?
I looked at a few functions torch provides but with no luck:
#pdb.set_trace()
#valid_indices = torch.arange(0,N).numpy()
#valid_indices = np.array( range(N) )
#batch_indices = np.random.choice(valid_indices,size=M,replace=False)
#indices = torch.LongTensor(batch_indices)
#batch_xs, batch_ys = torch.index_select(X_mdl, 0, indices), torch.index_select(y, 0, indices)
#batch_xs,batch_ys = torch.index_select(X_mdl, 0, indices), torch.index_select(y, 0, indices)
even though the code I provided works fine I am worried that its not an efficient implementation AND that if I were to use GPUs that there would be a considerable further slow down (because my guess it putting things in memory and then fetching them back to put them GPU like that is silly).
I implemented a new one based on the answer that suggested to use torch.index_select()
:
def get_batch2(X,Y,M):
'''
get batch for pytorch model
'''
# TODO fix and make it nicer, there is pytorch forum question
#X,Y = X.data.numpy(), Y.data.numpy()
X,Y = X, Y
N = X.size()[0]
batch_indices = torch.LongTensor( np.random.randint(0,N+1,size=M) )
pdb.set_trace()
batch_xs = torch.index_select(X,0,batch_indices)
batch_ys = torch.index_select(Y,0,batch_indices)
return Variable(batch_xs, requires_grad=False), Variable(batch_ys, requires_grad=False)
however, this seems to have issues because it does not work if X,Y
are NOT variables...which is really odd. I added this to the pytorch forum: https://discuss.pytorch.org/t/how-to-get-mini-batches-in-pytorch-in-a-clean-and-efficient-way/10322
Right now what I am struggling with is making this work for gpu. My most current version:
def get_batch2(X,Y,M,dtype):
'''
get batch for pytorch model
'''
# TODO fix and make it nicer, there is pytorch forum question
#X,Y = X.data.numpy(), Y.data.numpy()
X,Y = X, Y
N = X.size()[0]
if dtype == torch.cuda.FloatTensor:
batch_indices = torch.cuda.LongTensor( np.random.randint(0,N,size=M) )# without replacement
else:
batch_indices = torch.LongTensor( np.random.randint(0,N,size=M) ).type(dtype) # without replacement
pdb.set_trace()
batch_xs = torch.index_select(X,0,batch_indices)
batch_ys = torch.index_select(Y,0,batch_indices)
return Variable(batch_xs, requires_grad=False), Variable(batch_ys, requires_grad=False)
the error:
RuntimeError: tried to construct a tensor from a int sequence, but found an item of type numpy.int64 at index (0)
I don't get it, do I really have to do:
ints = [ random.randint(0,N) for i i range(M)]
to get the integers?
It would also be ideal if the data could be a variable. It seems that it torch.index_select
does not work for Variable
type data.
this list of integers thing still doesn't work:
TypeError: torch.addmm received an invalid combination of arguments - got (int, torch.cuda.FloatTensor, int, torch.cuda.FloatTensor, torch.FloatTensor, out=torch.cuda.FloatTensor), but expected one of:
* (torch.cuda.FloatTensor source, torch.cuda.FloatTensor mat1, torch.cuda.FloatTensor mat2, *, torch.cuda.FloatTensor out)
* (torch.cuda.FloatTensor source, torch.cuda.sparse.FloatTensor mat1, torch.cuda.FloatTensor mat2, *, torch.cuda.FloatTensor out)
* (float beta, torch.cuda.FloatTensor source, torch.cuda.FloatTensor mat1, torch.cuda.FloatTensor mat2, *, torch.cuda.FloatTensor out)
* (torch.cuda.FloatTensor source, float alpha, torch.cuda.FloatTensor mat1, torch.cuda.FloatTensor mat2, *, torch.cuda.FloatTensor out)
* (float beta, torch.cuda.FloatTensor source, torch.cuda.sparse.FloatTensor mat1, torch.cuda.FloatTensor mat2, *, torch.cuda.FloatTensor out)
* (torch.cuda.FloatTensor source, float alpha, torch.cuda.sparse.FloatTensor mat1, torch.cuda.FloatTensor mat2, *, torch.cuda.FloatTensor out)
* (float beta, torch.cuda.FloatTensor source, float alpha, torch.cuda.FloatTensor mat1, torch.cuda.FloatTensor mat2, *, torch.cuda.FloatTensor out)
didn't match because some of the arguments have invalid types: (int, torch.cuda.FloatTensor, int, torch.cuda.FloatTensor, torch.FloatTensor, out=torch.cuda.FloatTensor)
* (float beta, torch.cuda.FloatTensor source, float alpha, torch.cuda.sparse.FloatTensor mat1, torch.cuda.FloatTensor mat2, *, torch.cuda.FloatTensor out)
didn't match because some of the arguments have invalid types: (int, torch.cuda.FloatTensor, int, torch.cuda.FloatTensor, torch.FloatTensor, out=torch.cuda.FloatTensor)
Create a class that is a subclass of
torch.utils.data.Dataset
and pass it to atorch.utils.data.Dataloader
. Below is an example for my project.If I'm understanding your code correctly, your
get_batch2
function appears to be taking random mini-batches from your dataset without tracking which indices you've used already in an epoch. The issue with this implementation is that it likely will not make use of all of your data.The way I usually do batching is creating a random permutation of all the possible vertices using
torch.randperm(N)
and loop through them in batches. For example:If you like to copy and paste, make sure you define your optimizer, model, and lossfunction somewhere before the start of the epoch loop.
With regards to your error, try using
torch.from_numpy(np.random.randint(0,N,size=M)).long()
instead oftorch.LongTensor(np.random.randint(0,N,size=M))
. I'm not sure if this will solve the error you are getting, but it will solve a future error.Use data loaders.
Data Set
First you define a dataset. You can use packages datasets in
torchvision.datasets
or useImageFolder
dataset class which follows the structure of Imagenet.Transforms
Transforms are very useful for preprocessing loaded data on the fly. If you are using images, you have to use the
ToTensor()
transform to convert loaded images fromPIL
totorch.tensor
. More transforms can be packed into a composit transform as follows.Data Loader
Then you define a data loader which prepares the next batch while training. You can set number of threads for data loading.
For training, you just enumerate on the data loader.
NumPy Stuff
Yes. You have to convert
torch.tensor
tonumpy
using.numpy()
method to work on it. If you are using CUDA you have to download the data from GPU to CPU first using the.cpu()
method before calling.numpy()
. Personally, coming from MATLAB background, I prefer to do most of the work with torch tensor, then convert data to numpy only for visualisation. Also bear in mind that torch stores data in a channel-first mode while numpy and PIL work with channel-last. This means you need to usenp.rollaxis
to move the channel axis to the last. A sample code is below.Logging
The best method I found to visualise the feature maps is using tensor board. A code is available at yunjey/pytorch-tutorial.
Not sure what you were trying to do. W.r.t. batching you wouldn't have to convert to numpy. You could just use index_select() , e.g.:
The rest of the code would have to be changed as well though.
My guess, you would like to create a get_batch function that concatenates your X tensors and Y tensors. Something like:
Then during training you select, e.g. max_batch_size = 32, examples through slicing.
You can use
torch.utils.data
assuming you have loaded the data from the directory, in train and test numpy arrays, you can inherit from
torch.utils.data.Dataset
class to create your dataset objectThen, create your dataset object
Finally, use
DataLoader
to create your mini-batches