Object Detection¶
This package lists contributed object detection models.
Note
We rely on the community to keep these updated and working. If something doesn’t work, we’d really appreciate a contribution to fix!
Faster R-CNN¶
- class pl_bolts.models.detection.faster_rcnn.faster_rcnn_module.FasterRCNN(learning_rate=0.0001, num_classes=91, backbone=None, fpn=True, pretrained=False, pretrained_backbone=True, trainable_backbone_layers=3, **kwargs)[source]
Bases:
pytorch_lightning.core.module.LightningModule
Warning
The feature FasterRCNN is currently marked under review. The compatibility with other Lightning projects is not guaranteed and API may change at any time. The API and functionality may change without warning in future releases. More details: https://lightning-bolts.readthedocs.io/en/latest/stability.html
PyTorch Lightning implementation of Faster R-CNN: Towards Real-Time Object Detection with Region Proposal Networks.
Paper authors: Shaoqing Ren, Kaiming He, Ross Girshick, Jian Sun
- Model implemented by:
Teddy Koker <https://github.com/teddykoker>
- During training, the model expects both the input tensors, as well as targets (list of dictionary), containing:
boxes (FloatTensor[N, 4]): the ground truth boxes in [x1, y1, x2, y2] format.
labels (Int64Tensor[N]): the class label for each ground truh box
CLI command:
# PascalVOC python faster_rcnn_module.py --gpus 1 --pretrained True
- Parameters
num_classes¶ (
int
) – number of detection classes (including background)backbone¶ (
Union
[str
,Module
,None
]) – Pretained backbone CNN architecture or torch.nn.Module instance.fpn¶ (
bool
) – If True, creates a Feature Pyramind Network on top of Resnet based CNNs.pretrained¶ (
bool
) – if true, returns a model pre-trained on COCO train2017pretrained_backbone¶ (
bool
) – if true, returns a model with backbone pre-trained on Imagenettrainable_backbone_layers¶ (
int
) – number of trainable resnet layers starting from final block
- configure_optimizers()[source]
Choose what optimizers and learning-rate schedulers to use in your optimization. Normally you’d need one. But in the case of GANs or similar you might have multiple.
- Returns
Any of these 6 options.
Single optimizer.
List or Tuple of optimizers.
Two lists - The first list has multiple optimizers, and the second has multiple LR schedulers (or multiple
lr_scheduler_config
).Dictionary, with an
"optimizer"
key, and (optionally) a"lr_scheduler"
key whose value is a single LR scheduler orlr_scheduler_config
.Tuple of dictionaries as described above, with an optional
"frequency"
key.None - Fit will run without any optimizer.
The
lr_scheduler_config
is a dictionary which contains the scheduler and its associated configuration. The default configuration is shown below.lr_scheduler_config = { # REQUIRED: The scheduler instance "scheduler": lr_scheduler, # The unit of the scheduler's step size, could also be 'step'. # 'epoch' updates the scheduler on epoch end whereas 'step' # updates it after a optimizer update. "interval": "epoch", # How many epochs/steps should pass between calls to # `scheduler.step()`. 1 corresponds to updating the learning # rate after every epoch/step. "frequency": 1, # Metric to to monitor for schedulers like `ReduceLROnPlateau` "monitor": "val_loss", # If set to `True`, will enforce that the value specified 'monitor' # is available when the scheduler is updated, thus stopping # training if not found. If set to `False`, it will only produce a warning "strict": True, # If using the `LearningRateMonitor` callback to monitor the # learning rate progress, this keyword can be used to specify # a custom logged name "name": None, }
When there are schedulers in which the
.step()
method is conditioned on a value, such as thetorch.optim.lr_scheduler.ReduceLROnPlateau
scheduler, Lightning requires that thelr_scheduler_config
contains the keyword"monitor"
set to the metric name that the scheduler should be conditioned on.# The ReduceLROnPlateau scheduler requires a monitor def configure_optimizers(self): optimizer = Adam(...) return { "optimizer": optimizer, "lr_scheduler": { "scheduler": ReduceLROnPlateau(optimizer, ...), "monitor": "metric_to_track", "frequency": "indicates how often the metric is updated" # If "monitor" references validation metrics, then "frequency" should be set to a # multiple of "trainer.check_val_every_n_epoch". }, } # In the case of two optimizers, only one using the ReduceLROnPlateau scheduler def configure_optimizers(self): optimizer1 = Adam(...) optimizer2 = SGD(...) scheduler1 = ReduceLROnPlateau(optimizer1, ...) scheduler2 = LambdaLR(optimizer2, ...) return ( { "optimizer": optimizer1, "lr_scheduler": { "scheduler": scheduler1, "monitor": "metric_to_track", }, }, {"optimizer": optimizer2, "lr_scheduler": scheduler2}, )
Metrics can be made available to monitor by simply logging it using
self.log('metric_to_track', metric_val)
in yourLightningModule
.Note
The
frequency
value specified in a dict along with theoptimizer
key is an int corresponding to the number of sequential batches optimized with the specific optimizer. It should be given to none or to all of the optimizers. There is a difference between passing multiple optimizers in a list, and passing multiple optimizers in dictionaries with a frequency of 1:In the former case, all optimizers will operate on the given batch in each optimization step.
In the latter, only one optimizer will operate on the given batch at every step.
This is different from the
frequency
value specified in thelr_scheduler_config
mentioned above.def configure_optimizers(self): optimizer_one = torch.optim.SGD(self.model.parameters(), lr=0.01) optimizer_two = torch.optim.SGD(self.model.parameters(), lr=0.01) return [ {"optimizer": optimizer_one, "frequency": 5}, {"optimizer": optimizer_two, "frequency": 10}, ]
In this example, the first optimizer will be used for the first 5 steps, the second optimizer for the next 10 steps and that cycle will continue. If an LR scheduler is specified for an optimizer using the
lr_scheduler
key in the above dict, the scheduler will only be updated when its optimizer is being used.Examples:
# most cases. no learning rate scheduler def configure_optimizers(self): return Adam(self.parameters(), lr=1e-3) # multiple optimizer case (e.g.: GAN) def configure_optimizers(self): gen_opt = Adam(self.model_gen.parameters(), lr=0.01) dis_opt = Adam(self.model_dis.parameters(), lr=0.02) return gen_opt, dis_opt # example with learning rate schedulers def configure_optimizers(self): gen_opt = Adam(self.model_gen.parameters(), lr=0.01) dis_opt = Adam(self.model_dis.parameters(), lr=0.02) dis_sch = CosineAnnealing(dis_opt, T_max=10) return [gen_opt, dis_opt], [dis_sch] # example with step-based learning rate schedulers # each optimizer has its own scheduler def configure_optimizers(self): gen_opt = Adam(self.model_gen.parameters(), lr=0.01) dis_opt = Adam(self.model_dis.parameters(), lr=0.02) gen_sch = { 'scheduler': ExponentialLR(gen_opt, 0.99), 'interval': 'step' # called after each training step } dis_sch = CosineAnnealing(dis_opt, T_max=10) # called every epoch return [gen_opt, dis_opt], [gen_sch, dis_sch] # example with optimizer frequencies # see training procedure in `Improved Training of Wasserstein GANs`, Algorithm 1 # https://arxiv.org/abs/1704.00028 def configure_optimizers(self): gen_opt = Adam(self.model_gen.parameters(), lr=0.01) dis_opt = Adam(self.model_dis.parameters(), lr=0.02) n_critic = 5 return ( {'optimizer': dis_opt, 'frequency': n_critic}, {'optimizer': gen_opt, 'frequency': 1} )
Note
Some things to know:
Lightning calls
.backward()
and.step()
on each optimizer as needed.If learning rate scheduler is specified in
configure_optimizers()
with key"interval"
(default “epoch”) in the scheduler configuration, Lightning will call the scheduler’s.step()
method automatically in case of automatic optimization.If you use 16-bit precision (
precision=16
), Lightning will automatically handle the optimizers.If you use multiple optimizers,
training_step()
will have an additionaloptimizer_idx
parameter.If you use
torch.optim.LBFGS
, Lightning handles the closure function automatically for you.If you use multiple optimizers, gradients will be calculated only for the parameters of current optimizer at each training step.
If you need to control how often those optimizers step or override the default
.step()
schedule, override theoptimizer_step()
hook.
- forward(x)[source]
Same as
torch.nn.Module.forward()
.
- training_step(batch, batch_idx)[source]
Here you compute and return the training loss and some additional metrics for e.g. the progress bar or logger.
- Parameters
batch¶ (
Tensor
| (Tensor
, …) | [Tensor
, …]) – The output of yourDataLoader
. A tensor, tuple or list.batch_idx¶ (
int
) – Integer displaying index of this batchoptimizer_idx¶ (
int
) – When using multiple optimizers, this argument will also be present.hiddens¶ (
Any
) – Passed in iftruncated_bptt_steps
> 0.
- Returns
Any of.
Tensor
- The loss tensordict
- A dictionary. Can include any keys, but must include the key'loss'
None
- Training will skip to the next batch. This is only for automatic optimization.This is not supported for multi-GPU, TPU, IPU, or DeepSpeed.
In this step you’d normally do the forward pass and calculate the loss for a batch. You can also do fancier things like multiple forward passes or something model specific.
Example:
def training_step(self, batch, batch_idx): x, y, z = batch out = self.encoder(x) loss = self.loss(out, x) return loss
If you define multiple optimizers, this step will be called with an additional
optimizer_idx
parameter.# Multiple optimizers (e.g.: GANs) def training_step(self, batch, batch_idx, optimizer_idx): if optimizer_idx == 0: # do training_step with encoder ... if optimizer_idx == 1: # do training_step with decoder ...
If you add truncated back propagation through time you will also get an additional argument with the hidden states of the previous step.
# Truncated back-propagation through time def training_step(self, batch, batch_idx, hiddens): # hiddens are the hidden states from the previous truncated backprop step out, hiddens = self.lstm(data, hiddens) loss = ... return {"loss": loss, "hiddens": hiddens}
Note
The loss value shown in the progress bar is smoothed (averaged) over the last values, so it differs from the actual loss returned in train/validation step.
Note
When
accumulate_grad_batches
> 1, the loss returned here will be automatically normalized byaccumulate_grad_batches
internally.
- validation_epoch_end(outs)[source]
Called at the end of the validation epoch with the outputs of all validation steps.
# the pseudocode for these calls val_outs = [] for val_batch in val_data: out = validation_step(val_batch) val_outs.append(out) validation_epoch_end(val_outs)
- Parameters
outputs¶ – List of outputs you defined in
validation_step()
, or if there are multiple dataloaders, a list containing a list of outputs for each dataloader.- Returns
None
Note
If you didn’t define a
validation_step()
, this won’t be called.Examples
With a single dataloader:
def validation_epoch_end(self, val_step_outputs): for out in val_step_outputs: ...
With multiple dataloaders, outputs will be a list of lists. The outer list contains one entry per dataloader, while the inner list contains the individual outputs of each validation step for that dataloader.
def validation_epoch_end(self, outputs): for dataloader_output_result in outputs: dataloader_outs = dataloader_output_result.dataloader_i_outputs self.log("final_metric", final_value)
- validation_step(batch, batch_idx)[source]
Operates on a single batch of data from the validation set. In this step you’d might generate examples or calculate anything of interest like accuracy.
# the pseudocode for these calls val_outs = [] for val_batch in val_data: out = validation_step(val_batch) val_outs.append(out) validation_epoch_end(val_outs)
- Parameters
batch¶ – The output of your
DataLoader
.batch_idx¶ – The index of this batch.
dataloader_idx¶ – The index of the dataloader that produced this batch. (only if multiple val dataloaders used)
- Returns
Any object or value
None
- Validation will skip to the next batch
# pseudocode of order val_outs = [] for val_batch in val_data: out = validation_step(val_batch) if defined("validation_step_end"): out = validation_step_end(out) val_outs.append(out) val_outs = validation_epoch_end(val_outs)
# if you have one val dataloader: def validation_step(self, batch, batch_idx): ... # if you have multiple val dataloaders: def validation_step(self, batch, batch_idx, dataloader_idx=0): ...
Examples:
# CASE 1: A single validation dataset def validation_step(self, batch, batch_idx): x, y = batch # implement your own out = self(x) loss = self.loss(out, y) # log 6 example images # or generated text... or whatever sample_imgs = x[:6] grid = torchvision.utils.make_grid(sample_imgs) self.logger.experiment.add_image('example_images', grid, 0) # calculate acc labels_hat = torch.argmax(out, dim=1) val_acc = torch.sum(y == labels_hat).item() / (len(y) * 1.0) # log the outputs! self.log_dict({'val_loss': loss, 'val_acc': val_acc})
If you pass in multiple val dataloaders,
validation_step()
will have an additional argument. We recommend setting the default value of 0 so that you can quickly switch between single and multiple dataloaders.# CASE 2: multiple validation dataloaders def validation_step(self, batch, batch_idx, dataloader_idx=0): # dataloader_idx tells you which dataset this is. ...
Note
If you don’t need to validate you don’t need to implement this method.
Note
When the
validation_step()
is called, the model has been put in eval mode and PyTorch gradients have been disabled. At the end of validation, the model goes back to training mode and gradients are enabled.
RetinaNet¶
- class pl_bolts.models.detection.retinanet.retinanet_module.RetinaNet(learning_rate=0.0001, num_classes=91, backbone=None, fpn=True, pretrained=False, pretrained_backbone=True, trainable_backbone_layers=3, **kwargs)[source]
Bases:
pytorch_lightning.core.module.LightningModule
Warning
The feature RetinaNet is currently marked under review. The compatibility with other Lightning projects is not guaranteed and API may change at any time. The API and functionality may change without warning in future releases. More details: https://lightning-bolts.readthedocs.io/en/latest/stability.html
PyTorch Lightning implementation of RetinaNet.
Paper: Focal Loss for Dense Object Detection.
Paper authors: Tsung-Yi Lin, Priya Goyal, Ross Girshick, Kaiming He, Piotr Dollár
- Model implemented by:
Aditya Oke <https://github.com/oke-aditya>
- During training, the model expects both the input tensors, as well as targets (list of dictionary), containing:
boxes (FloatTensor[N, 4]): the ground truth boxes in [x1, y1, x2, y2] format.
labels (Int64Tensor[N]): the class label for each ground truh box
CLI command:
# PascalVOC using LightningCLI python retinanet_module.py --trainer.gpus 1 --model.pretrained True
- Parameters
num_classes¶ (
int
) – number of detection classes (including background)backbone¶ (
Optional
[str
]) – Pretained backbone CNN architecture.fpn¶ (
bool
) – If True, creates a Feature Pyramind Network on top of Resnet based CNNs.pretrained¶ (
bool
) – if true, returns a model pre-trained on COCO train2017pretrained_backbone¶ (
bool
) – if true, returns a model with backbone pre-trained on Imagenettrainable_backbone_layers¶ (
int
) – number of trainable resnet layers starting from final block
- configure_optimizers()[source]
Choose what optimizers and learning-rate schedulers to use in your optimization. Normally you’d need one. But in the case of GANs or similar you might have multiple.
- Returns
Any of these 6 options.
Single optimizer.
List or Tuple of optimizers.
Two lists - The first list has multiple optimizers, and the second has multiple LR schedulers (or multiple
lr_scheduler_config
).Dictionary, with an
"optimizer"
key, and (optionally) a"lr_scheduler"
key whose value is a single LR scheduler orlr_scheduler_config
.Tuple of dictionaries as described above, with an optional
"frequency"
key.None - Fit will run without any optimizer.
The
lr_scheduler_config
is a dictionary which contains the scheduler and its associated configuration. The default configuration is shown below.lr_scheduler_config = { # REQUIRED: The scheduler instance "scheduler": lr_scheduler, # The unit of the scheduler's step size, could also be 'step'. # 'epoch' updates the scheduler on epoch end whereas 'step' # updates it after a optimizer update. "interval": "epoch", # How many epochs/steps should pass between calls to # `scheduler.step()`. 1 corresponds to updating the learning # rate after every epoch/step. "frequency": 1, # Metric to to monitor for schedulers like `ReduceLROnPlateau` "monitor": "val_loss", # If set to `True`, will enforce that the value specified 'monitor' # is available when the scheduler is updated, thus stopping # training if not found. If set to `False`, it will only produce a warning "strict": True, # If using the `LearningRateMonitor` callback to monitor the # learning rate progress, this keyword can be used to specify # a custom logged name "name": None, }
When there are schedulers in which the
.step()
method is conditioned on a value, such as thetorch.optim.lr_scheduler.ReduceLROnPlateau
scheduler, Lightning requires that thelr_scheduler_config
contains the keyword"monitor"
set to the metric name that the scheduler should be conditioned on.# The ReduceLROnPlateau scheduler requires a monitor def configure_optimizers(self): optimizer = Adam(...) return { "optimizer": optimizer, "lr_scheduler": { "scheduler": ReduceLROnPlateau(optimizer, ...), "monitor": "metric_to_track", "frequency": "indicates how often the metric is updated" # If "monitor" references validation metrics, then "frequency" should be set to a # multiple of "trainer.check_val_every_n_epoch". }, } # In the case of two optimizers, only one using the ReduceLROnPlateau scheduler def configure_optimizers(self): optimizer1 = Adam(...) optimizer2 = SGD(...) scheduler1 = ReduceLROnPlateau(optimizer1, ...) scheduler2 = LambdaLR(optimizer2, ...) return ( { "optimizer": optimizer1, "lr_scheduler": { "scheduler": scheduler1, "monitor": "metric_to_track", }, }, {"optimizer": optimizer2, "lr_scheduler": scheduler2}, )
Metrics can be made available to monitor by simply logging it using
self.log('metric_to_track', metric_val)
in yourLightningModule
.Note
The
frequency
value specified in a dict along with theoptimizer
key is an int corresponding to the number of sequential batches optimized with the specific optimizer. It should be given to none or to all of the optimizers. There is a difference between passing multiple optimizers in a list, and passing multiple optimizers in dictionaries with a frequency of 1:In the former case, all optimizers will operate on the given batch in each optimization step.
In the latter, only one optimizer will operate on the given batch at every step.
This is different from the
frequency
value specified in thelr_scheduler_config
mentioned above.def configure_optimizers(self): optimizer_one = torch.optim.SGD(self.model.parameters(), lr=0.01) optimizer_two = torch.optim.SGD(self.model.parameters(), lr=0.01) return [ {"optimizer": optimizer_one, "frequency": 5}, {"optimizer": optimizer_two, "frequency": 10}, ]
In this example, the first optimizer will be used for the first 5 steps, the second optimizer for the next 10 steps and that cycle will continue. If an LR scheduler is specified for an optimizer using the
lr_scheduler
key in the above dict, the scheduler will only be updated when its optimizer is being used.Examples:
# most cases. no learning rate scheduler def configure_optimizers(self): return Adam(self.parameters(), lr=1e-3) # multiple optimizer case (e.g.: GAN) def configure_optimizers(self): gen_opt = Adam(self.model_gen.parameters(), lr=0.01) dis_opt = Adam(self.model_dis.parameters(), lr=0.02) return gen_opt, dis_opt # example with learning rate schedulers def configure_optimizers(self): gen_opt = Adam(self.model_gen.parameters(), lr=0.01) dis_opt = Adam(self.model_dis.parameters(), lr=0.02) dis_sch = CosineAnnealing(dis_opt, T_max=10) return [gen_opt, dis_opt], [dis_sch] # example with step-based learning rate schedulers # each optimizer has its own scheduler def configure_optimizers(self): gen_opt = Adam(self.model_gen.parameters(), lr=0.01) dis_opt = Adam(self.model_dis.parameters(), lr=0.02) gen_sch = { 'scheduler': ExponentialLR(gen_opt, 0.99), 'interval': 'step' # called after each training step } dis_sch = CosineAnnealing(dis_opt, T_max=10) # called every epoch return [gen_opt, dis_opt], [gen_sch, dis_sch] # example with optimizer frequencies # see training procedure in `Improved Training of Wasserstein GANs`, Algorithm 1 # https://arxiv.org/abs/1704.00028 def configure_optimizers(self): gen_opt = Adam(self.model_gen.parameters(), lr=0.01) dis_opt = Adam(self.model_dis.parameters(), lr=0.02) n_critic = 5 return ( {'optimizer': dis_opt, 'frequency': n_critic}, {'optimizer': gen_opt, 'frequency': 1} )
Note
Some things to know:
Lightning calls
.backward()
and.step()
on each optimizer as needed.If learning rate scheduler is specified in
configure_optimizers()
with key"interval"
(default “epoch”) in the scheduler configuration, Lightning will call the scheduler’s.step()
method automatically in case of automatic optimization.If you use 16-bit precision (
precision=16
), Lightning will automatically handle the optimizers.If you use multiple optimizers,
training_step()
will have an additionaloptimizer_idx
parameter.If you use
torch.optim.LBFGS
, Lightning handles the closure function automatically for you.If you use multiple optimizers, gradients will be calculated only for the parameters of current optimizer at each training step.
If you need to control how often those optimizers step or override the default
.step()
schedule, override theoptimizer_step()
hook.
- forward(x)[source]
Same as
torch.nn.Module.forward()
.
- training_step(batch, batch_idx)[source]
Here you compute and return the training loss and some additional metrics for e.g. the progress bar or logger.
- Parameters
batch¶ (
Tensor
| (Tensor
, …) | [Tensor
, …]) – The output of yourDataLoader
. A tensor, tuple or list.batch_idx¶ (
int
) – Integer displaying index of this batchoptimizer_idx¶ (
int
) – When using multiple optimizers, this argument will also be present.hiddens¶ (
Any
) – Passed in iftruncated_bptt_steps
> 0.
- Returns
Any of.
Tensor
- The loss tensordict
- A dictionary. Can include any keys, but must include the key'loss'
None
- Training will skip to the next batch. This is only for automatic optimization.This is not supported for multi-GPU, TPU, IPU, or DeepSpeed.
In this step you’d normally do the forward pass and calculate the loss for a batch. You can also do fancier things like multiple forward passes or something model specific.
Example:
def training_step(self, batch, batch_idx): x, y, z = batch out = self.encoder(x) loss = self.loss(out, x) return loss
If you define multiple optimizers, this step will be called with an additional
optimizer_idx
parameter.# Multiple optimizers (e.g.: GANs) def training_step(self, batch, batch_idx, optimizer_idx): if optimizer_idx == 0: # do training_step with encoder ... if optimizer_idx == 1: # do training_step with decoder ...
If you add truncated back propagation through time you will also get an additional argument with the hidden states of the previous step.
# Truncated back-propagation through time def training_step(self, batch, batch_idx, hiddens): # hiddens are the hidden states from the previous truncated backprop step out, hiddens = self.lstm(data, hiddens) loss = ... return {"loss": loss, "hiddens": hiddens}
Note
The loss value shown in the progress bar is smoothed (averaged) over the last values, so it differs from the actual loss returned in train/validation step.
Note
When
accumulate_grad_batches
> 1, the loss returned here will be automatically normalized byaccumulate_grad_batches
internally.
- validation_epoch_end(outs)[source]
Called at the end of the validation epoch with the outputs of all validation steps.
# the pseudocode for these calls val_outs = [] for val_batch in val_data: out = validation_step(val_batch) val_outs.append(out) validation_epoch_end(val_outs)
- Parameters
outputs¶ – List of outputs you defined in
validation_step()
, or if there are multiple dataloaders, a list containing a list of outputs for each dataloader.- Returns
None
Note
If you didn’t define a
validation_step()
, this won’t be called.Examples
With a single dataloader:
def validation_epoch_end(self, val_step_outputs): for out in val_step_outputs: ...
With multiple dataloaders, outputs will be a list of lists. The outer list contains one entry per dataloader, while the inner list contains the individual outputs of each validation step for that dataloader.
def validation_epoch_end(self, outputs): for dataloader_output_result in outputs: dataloader_outs = dataloader_output_result.dataloader_i_outputs self.log("final_metric", final_value)
- validation_step(batch, batch_idx)[source]
Operates on a single batch of data from the validation set. In this step you’d might generate examples or calculate anything of interest like accuracy.
# the pseudocode for these calls val_outs = [] for val_batch in val_data: out = validation_step(val_batch) val_outs.append(out) validation_epoch_end(val_outs)
- Parameters
batch¶ – The output of your
DataLoader
.batch_idx¶ – The index of this batch.
dataloader_idx¶ – The index of the dataloader that produced this batch. (only if multiple val dataloaders used)
- Returns
Any object or value
None
- Validation will skip to the next batch
# pseudocode of order val_outs = [] for val_batch in val_data: out = validation_step(val_batch) if defined("validation_step_end"): out = validation_step_end(out) val_outs.append(out) val_outs = validation_epoch_end(val_outs)
# if you have one val dataloader: def validation_step(self, batch, batch_idx): ... # if you have multiple val dataloaders: def validation_step(self, batch, batch_idx, dataloader_idx=0): ...
Examples:
# CASE 1: A single validation dataset def validation_step(self, batch, batch_idx): x, y = batch # implement your own out = self(x) loss = self.loss(out, y) # log 6 example images # or generated text... or whatever sample_imgs = x[:6] grid = torchvision.utils.make_grid(sample_imgs) self.logger.experiment.add_image('example_images', grid, 0) # calculate acc labels_hat = torch.argmax(out, dim=1) val_acc = torch.sum(y == labels_hat).item() / (len(y) * 1.0) # log the outputs! self.log_dict({'val_loss': loss, 'val_acc': val_acc})
If you pass in multiple val dataloaders,
validation_step()
will have an additional argument. We recommend setting the default value of 0 so that you can quickly switch between single and multiple dataloaders.# CASE 2: multiple validation dataloaders def validation_step(self, batch, batch_idx, dataloader_idx=0): # dataloader_idx tells you which dataset this is. ...
Note
If you don’t need to validate you don’t need to implement this method.
Note
When the
validation_step()
is called, the model has been put in eval mode and PyTorch gradients have been disabled. At the end of validation, the model goes back to training mode and gradients are enabled.
YOLO¶
- class pl_bolts.models.detection.yolo.yolo_module.YOLO(network, optimizer=<class 'torch.optim.sgd.SGD'>, optimizer_params={'lr': 0.001, 'momentum': 0.9, 'weight_decay': 0.0005}, lr_scheduler=<class 'pl_bolts.optimizers.lr_scheduler.LinearWarmupCosineAnnealingLR'>, lr_scheduler_params={'max_epochs': 300, 'warmup_epochs': 1, 'warmup_start_lr': 0.0}, confidence_threshold=0.2, nms_threshold=0.45, max_predictions_per_image=-1)[source]
Bases:
pytorch_lightning.core.module.LightningModule
Warning
The feature YOLO is currently marked under review. The compatibility with other Lightning projects is not guaranteed and API may change at any time. The API and functionality may change without warning in future releases. More details: https://lightning-bolts.readthedocs.io/en/latest/stability.html
PyTorch Lightning implementation of YOLOv3 and YOLOv4.
YOLOv3 paper: Joseph Redmon and Ali Farhadi
YOLOv4 paper: Alexey Bochkovskiy, Chien-Yao Wang, and Hong-Yuan Mark Liao
Implementation: Seppo Enarvi
The network architecture can be read from a Darknet configuration file using the
YOLOConfiguration
class, or created by some other means, and provided as a list of PyTorch modules.The input from the data loader is expected to be a list of images. Each image is a tensor with shape
[channels, height, width]
. The images from a single batch will be stacked into a single tensor, so the sizes have to match. Different batches can have different image sizes, as long as the size is divisible by the ratio in which the network downsamples the input.During training, the model expects both the input tensors and a list of targets. Each target is a dictionary containing:
boxes (
FloatTensor[N, 4]
): the ground-truth boxes in (x1, y1, x2, y2) formatlabels (
Int64Tensor[N]
): the class label for each ground-truth box
forward()
method returns all predictions from all detection layers in all images in one tensor with shape[images, predictors, classes + 5]
. The coordinates are scaled to the input image size. During training it also returns a dictionary containing the classification, box overlap, and confidence losses.During inference, the model requires only the input tensors.
infer()
method filters and processes the predictions. The processed output includes the following tensors:boxes (
FloatTensor[N, 4]
): predicted bounding box (x1, y1, x2, y2) coordinates in image spacescores (
FloatTensor[N]
): detection confidenceslabels (
Int64Tensor[N]
): the predicted labels for each image
Weights can be loaded from a Darknet model file using
load_darknet_weights()
.CLI command:
# PascalVOC wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/AlexeyAB/darknet/master/cfg/yolov4-tiny-3l.cfg python yolo_module.py --config yolov4-tiny-3l.cfg --data_dir . --gpus 8 --batch_size 8
- Parameters
network¶ (
ModuleList
) – A list of network modules. This can be obtained from a Darknet configuration using theget_network()
method.optimizer¶ (
Type
[Optimizer
]) – Which optimizer class to use for training.optimizer_params¶ (
Dict
[str
,Any
]) – Parameters to pass to the optimizer constructor.lr_scheduler¶ (
Type
[_LRScheduler
]) – Which learning rate scheduler class to use for training.lr_scheduler_params¶ (
Dict
[str
,Any
]) – Parameters to pass to the learning rate scheduler constructor.confidence_threshold¶ (
float
) – Postprocessing will remove bounding boxes whose confidence score is not higher than this threshold.nms_threshold¶ (
float
) – Non-maximum suppression will remove bounding boxes whose IoU with a higher confidence box is higher than this threshold, if the predicted categories are equal.max_predictions_per_image¶ (
int
) – If non-negative, keep at most this number of highest-confidence predictions per image.
- configure_optimizers()[source]
Constructs the optimizer and learning rate scheduler.
- forward(images, targets=None)[source]
Runs a forward pass through the network (all layers listed in
self.network
), and if training targets are provided, computes the losses from the detection layers.Detections are concatenated from the detection layers. Each image will produce N * num_anchors * grid_height * grid_width detections, where N depends on the number of detection layers. For one detection layer N = 1, and each detection layer increases it by a number that depends on the size of the feature map on that layer. For example, if the feature map is twice as wide and high as the grid, the layer will add four times more features.
- Parameters
- Returns
Detections, and if targets were provided, a dictionary of losses. Detections are shaped
[batch_size, num_predictors, num_classes + 5]
, wherenum_predictors
is the total number of cells in all detection layers times the number of boxes predicted by one cell. The predicted box coordinates are in (x1, y1, x2, y2) format and scaled to the input image size.- Return type
- infer(image)[source]
Feeds an image to the network and returns the detected bounding boxes, confidence scores, and class labels.
- load_darknet_weights(weight_file)[source]
Loads weights to layer modules from a pretrained Darknet model.
One may want to continue training from the pretrained weights, on a dataset with a different number of object categories. The number of kernels in the convolutional layers just before each detection layer depends on the number of output classes. The Darknet solution is to truncate the weight file and stop reading weights at the first incompatible layer. For this reason the function silently leaves the rest of the layers unchanged, when the weight file ends.
- Parameters
weight_file¶ – A file object containing model weights in the Darknet binary format.
- test_step(batch, batch_idx)[source]
Evaluates a batch of data from the test set.
- training_step(batch, batch_idx)[source]
Computes the training loss.
- Parameters
- Return type
- Returns
A dictionary that includes the training loss in ‘loss’.
- validation_step(batch, batch_idx)[source]
Evaluates a batch of data from the validation set.