Source code for monai.networks.utils

# Copyright (c) MONAI Consortium
# Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
# you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
# You may obtain a copy of the License at
#     http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
# Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
# distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
# WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
# See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
# limitations under the License.
"""
Utilities and types for defining networks, these depend on PyTorch.
"""

from __future__ import annotations

import io
import re
import warnings
from collections import OrderedDict
from collections.abc import Callable, Mapping, Sequence
from contextlib import contextmanager
from copy import deepcopy
from typing import Any

import numpy as np
import torch
import torch.nn as nn

from monai.apps.utils import get_logger
from monai.config import PathLike
from monai.utils.misc import ensure_tuple, save_obj, set_determinism
from monai.utils.module import look_up_option, optional_import, pytorch_after
from monai.utils.type_conversion import convert_to_dst_type, convert_to_tensor

onnx, _ = optional_import("onnx")
onnxreference, _ = optional_import("onnx.reference")
onnxruntime, _ = optional_import("onnxruntime")

__all__ = [
    "one_hot",
    "predict_segmentation",
    "normalize_transform",
    "to_norm_affine",
    "normal_init",
    "icnr_init",
    "pixelshuffle",
    "eval_mode",
    "train_mode",
    "get_state_dict",
    "copy_model_state",
    "save_state",
    "convert_to_onnx",
    "convert_to_torchscript",
    "convert_to_trt",
    "meshgrid_ij",
    "meshgrid_xy",
    "replace_modules",
    "replace_modules_temp",
    "look_up_named_module",
    "set_named_module",
    "has_nvfuser_instance_norm",
]

logger = get_logger(module_name=__name__)

_has_nvfuser = None


[docs] def has_nvfuser_instance_norm(): """whether the current environment has InstanceNorm3dNVFuser https://github.com/NVIDIA/apex/blob/23.05-devel/apex/normalization/instance_norm.py#L15-L16 """ global _has_nvfuser if _has_nvfuser is not None: return _has_nvfuser _, _has_nvfuser = optional_import("apex.normalization", name="InstanceNorm3dNVFuser") if not _has_nvfuser: return False try: import importlib importlib.import_module("instance_norm_nvfuser_cuda") except ImportError: _has_nvfuser = False return _has_nvfuser
[docs] def look_up_named_module(name: str, mod, print_all_options=False): """ get the named module in `mod` by the attribute name, for example ``look_up_named_module(net, "features.3.1.attn")`` Args: name: a string representing the module attribute. mod: a pytorch module to be searched (in ``mod.named_modules()``). print_all_options: whether to print all named modules when `name` is not found in `mod`. Defaults to False. Returns: the corresponding pytorch module's subcomponent such as ``net.features[3][1].attn`` """ name_str = look_up_option( name, {n[0] for n in mod.named_modules()}, default=None, print_all_options=print_all_options ) if name_str is None: return None if name_str == "": return mod for n in name_str.split("."): if n.isdigit(): mod = mod[int(n)] else: n = look_up_option(n, {item[0] for item in mod.named_modules()}, default=None, print_all_options=False) if n is None: return None mod = getattr(mod, n) return mod
[docs] def set_named_module(mod, name: str, new_layer): """ look up `name` in `mod` and replace the layer with `new_layer`, return the updated `mod`. Args: mod: a pytorch module to be updated. name: a string representing the target module attribute. new_layer: a new module replacing the corresponding layer at ``mod.name``. Returns: an updated ``mod`` See also: :py:func:`monai.networks.utils.look_up_named_module`. """ mods_attr = name.rsplit(".", 1) submods, attr = mods_attr if len(mods_attr) == 2 else ("", name) if not attr: return new_layer _mod = look_up_named_module(submods, mod) setattr(_mod, attr, new_layer) return mod
[docs] def one_hot(labels: torch.Tensor, num_classes: int, dtype: torch.dtype = torch.float, dim: int = 1) -> torch.Tensor: """ For every value v in `labels`, the value in the output will be either 1 or 0. Each vector along the `dim`-th dimension has the "one-hot" format, i.e., it has a total length of `num_classes`, with a one and `num_class-1` zeros. Note that this will include the background label, thus a binary mask should be treated as having two classes. Args: labels: input tensor of integers to be converted into the 'one-hot' format. Internally `labels` will be converted into integers `labels.long()`. num_classes: number of output channels, the corresponding length of `labels[dim]` will be converted to `num_classes` from `1`. dtype: the data type of the output one_hot label. dim: the dimension to be converted to `num_classes` channels from `1` channel, should be non-negative number. Example: For a tensor `labels` of dimensions [B]1[spatial_dims], return a tensor of dimensions `[B]N[spatial_dims]` when `num_classes=N` number of classes and `dim=1`. .. code-block:: python from monai.networks.utils import one_hot import torch a = torch.randint(0, 2, size=(1, 2, 2, 2)) out = one_hot(a, num_classes=2, dim=0) print(out.shape) # torch.Size([2, 2, 2, 2]) a = torch.randint(0, 2, size=(2, 1, 2, 2, 2)) out = one_hot(a, num_classes=2, dim=1) print(out.shape) # torch.Size([2, 2, 2, 2, 2]) """ # if `dim` is bigger, add singleton dim at the end if labels.ndim < dim + 1: shape = list(labels.shape) + [1] * (dim + 1 - len(labels.shape)) labels = torch.reshape(labels, shape) sh = list(labels.shape) if sh[dim] != 1: raise AssertionError("labels should have a channel with length equal to one.") sh[dim] = num_classes o = torch.zeros(size=sh, dtype=dtype, device=labels.device) labels = o.scatter_(dim=dim, index=labels.long(), value=1) return labels
[docs] def predict_segmentation(logits: torch.Tensor, mutually_exclusive: bool = False, threshold: float = 0.0) -> Any: """ Given the logits from a network, computing the segmentation by thresholding all values above 0 if multi-labels task, computing the `argmax` along the channel axis if multi-classes task, logits has shape `BCHW[D]`. Args: logits: raw data of model output. mutually_exclusive: if True, `logits` will be converted into a binary matrix using a combination of argmax, which is suitable for multi-classes task. Defaults to False. threshold: thresholding the prediction values if multi-labels task. """ if not mutually_exclusive: return (logits >= threshold).int() if logits.shape[1] == 1: warnings.warn("single channel prediction, `mutually_exclusive=True` ignored, use threshold instead.") return (logits >= threshold).int() return logits.argmax(1, keepdim=True)
[docs] def normalize_transform( shape, device: torch.device | str | None = None, dtype: torch.dtype | None = None, align_corners: bool = False, zero_centered: bool = False, ) -> torch.Tensor: """ Compute an affine matrix according to the input shape. The transform normalizes the homogeneous image coordinates to the range of `[-1, 1]`. Currently the following source coordinates are supported: - `align_corners=False`, `zero_centered=False`, normalizing from ``[-0.5, d-0.5]``. - `align_corners=True`, `zero_centered=False`, normalizing from ``[0, d-1]``. - `align_corners=False`, `zero_centered=True`, normalizing from ``[-(d-1)/2, (d-1)/2]``. - `align_corners=True`, `zero_centered=True`, normalizing from ``[-d/2, d/2]``. Args: shape: input spatial shape, a sequence of integers. device: device on which the returned affine will be allocated. dtype: data type of the returned affine align_corners: if True, consider -1 and 1 to refer to the centers of the corner pixels rather than the image corners. See also: https://pytorch.org/docs/stable/nn.functional.html#torch.nn.functional.grid_sample zero_centered: whether the coordinates are normalized from a zero-centered range, default to `False`. Setting this flag and `align_corners` will jointly specify the normalization source range. """ shape = convert_to_tensor(shape, torch.float64, device=device, wrap_sequence=True, track_meta=False) norm = shape.clone().detach().to(dtype=torch.float64, device=device) # no in-place change if align_corners: norm[norm <= 1.0] = 2.0 norm = 2.0 / (norm if zero_centered else norm - 1.0) norm = torch.diag(torch.cat((norm, torch.ones((1,), dtype=torch.float64, device=device)))) if not zero_centered: # else shift is 0 norm[:-1, -1] = -1.0 else: norm[norm <= 0.0] = 2.0 norm = 2.0 / (norm - 1.0 if zero_centered else norm) norm = torch.diag(torch.cat((norm, torch.ones((1,), dtype=torch.float64, device=device)))) if not zero_centered: norm[:-1, -1] = 1.0 / shape - 1.0 norm = norm.unsqueeze(0).to(dtype=dtype) norm.requires_grad = False return norm # type: ignore
[docs] def to_norm_affine( affine: torch.Tensor, src_size: Sequence[int], dst_size: Sequence[int], align_corners: bool = False, zero_centered: bool = False, ) -> torch.Tensor: """ Given ``affine`` defined for coordinates in the pixel space, compute the corresponding affine for the normalized coordinates. Args: affine: Nxdxd batched square matrix src_size: source image spatial shape dst_size: target image spatial shape align_corners: if True, consider -1 and 1 to refer to the centers of the corner pixels rather than the image corners. See also: https://pytorch.org/docs/stable/nn.functional.html#torch.nn.functional.grid_sample zero_centered: whether the coordinates are normalized from a zero-centered range, default to `False`. See also: :py:func:`monai.networks.utils.normalize_transform`. Raises: TypeError: When ``affine`` is not a ``torch.Tensor``. ValueError: When ``affine`` is not Nxdxd. ValueError: When ``src_size`` or ``dst_size`` dimensions differ from ``affine``. """ if not isinstance(affine, torch.Tensor): raise TypeError(f"affine must be a torch.Tensor but is {type(affine).__name__}.") if affine.ndimension() != 3 or affine.shape[1] != affine.shape[2]: raise ValueError(f"affine must be Nxdxd, got {tuple(affine.shape)}.") sr = affine.shape[1] - 1 if sr != len(src_size) or sr != len(dst_size): raise ValueError(f"affine suggests {sr}D, got src={len(src_size)}D, dst={len(dst_size)}D.") src_xform = normalize_transform(src_size, affine.device, affine.dtype, align_corners, zero_centered) dst_xform = normalize_transform(dst_size, "cpu", affine.dtype, align_corners, zero_centered) return src_xform @ affine @ convert_to_dst_type(np.linalg.inv(dst_xform.numpy()), dst=affine)[0] # monai#5983
[docs] def normal_init( m, std: float = 0.02, normal_func: Callable[[torch.Tensor, float, float], Any] = torch.nn.init.normal_ ) -> None: """ Initialize the weight and bias tensors of `m' and its submodules to values from a normal distribution with a stddev of `std'. Weight tensors of convolution and linear modules are initialized with a mean of 0, batch norm modules with a mean of 1. The callable `normal_func', used to assign values, should have the same arguments as its default normal_(). This can be used with `nn.Module.apply` to visit submodules of a network. """ cname = m.__class__.__name__ if getattr(m, "weight", None) is not None and (cname.find("Conv") != -1 or cname.find("Linear") != -1): normal_func(m.weight.data, 0.0, std) if getattr(m, "bias", None) is not None: nn.init.constant_(m.bias.data, 0.0) elif cname.find("BatchNorm") != -1: normal_func(m.weight.data, 1.0, std) nn.init.constant_(m.bias.data, 0)
[docs] def icnr_init(conv, upsample_factor, init=nn.init.kaiming_normal_): """ ICNR initialization for 2D/3D kernels adapted from Aitken et al.,2017 , "Checkerboard artifact free sub-pixel convolution". """ out_channels, in_channels, *dims = conv.weight.shape scale_factor = upsample_factor ** len(dims) oc2 = int(out_channels / scale_factor) kernel = torch.zeros([oc2, in_channels] + dims) kernel = init(kernel) kernel = kernel.transpose(0, 1) kernel = kernel.reshape(oc2, in_channels, -1) kernel = kernel.repeat(1, 1, scale_factor) kernel = kernel.reshape([in_channels, out_channels] + dims) kernel = kernel.transpose(0, 1) conv.weight.data.copy_(kernel)
[docs] def pixelshuffle(x: torch.Tensor, spatial_dims: int, scale_factor: int) -> torch.Tensor: """ Apply pixel shuffle to the tensor `x` with spatial dimensions `spatial_dims` and scaling factor `scale_factor`. See: Shi et al., 2016, "Real-Time Single Image and Video Super-Resolution Using a nEfficient Sub-Pixel Convolutional Neural Network." See: Aitken et al., 2017, "Checkerboard artifact free sub-pixel convolution". Args: x: Input tensor spatial_dims: number of spatial dimensions, typically 2 or 3 for 2D or 3D scale_factor: factor to rescale the spatial dimensions by, must be >=1 Returns: Reshuffled version of `x`. Raises: ValueError: When input channels of `x` are not divisible by (scale_factor ** spatial_dims) """ dim, factor = spatial_dims, scale_factor input_size = list(x.size()) batch_size, channels = input_size[:2] scale_divisor = factor**dim if channels % scale_divisor != 0: raise ValueError( f"Number of input channels ({channels}) must be evenly " f"divisible by scale_factor ** dimensions ({factor}**{dim}={scale_divisor})." ) org_channels = int(channels // scale_divisor) output_size = [batch_size, org_channels] + [d * factor for d in input_size[2:]] indices = list(range(2, 2 + 2 * dim)) indices = indices[dim:] + indices[:dim] permute_indices = [0, 1] for idx in range(dim): permute_indices.extend(indices[idx::dim]) x = x.reshape([batch_size, org_channels] + [factor] * dim + input_size[2:]) x = x.permute(permute_indices).reshape(output_size) return x
[docs] @contextmanager def eval_mode(*nets: nn.Module): """ Set network(s) to eval mode and then return to original state at the end. Args: nets: Input network(s) Examples .. code-block:: python t=torch.rand(1,1,16,16) p=torch.nn.Conv2d(1,1,3) print(p.training) # True with eval_mode(p): print(p.training) # False print(p(t).sum().backward()) # will correctly raise an exception as gradients are calculated """ # Get original state of network(s). # Check the training attribute in case it's TensorRT based models which don't have this attribute. training = [n for n in nets if hasattr(n, "training") and n.training] try: # set to eval mode with torch.no_grad(): yield [n.eval() if hasattr(n, "eval") else n for n in nets] finally: # Return required networks to training for n in training: if hasattr(n, "train"): n.train()
[docs] @contextmanager def train_mode(*nets: nn.Module): """ Set network(s) to train mode and then return to original state at the end. Args: nets: Input network(s) Examples .. code-block:: python t=torch.rand(1,1,16,16) p=torch.nn.Conv2d(1,1,3) p.eval() print(p.training) # False with train_mode(p): print(p.training) # True print(p(t).sum().backward()) # No exception """ # Get original state of network(s) # Check the training attribute in case it's TensorRT based models which don't have this attribute. eval_list = [n for n in nets if hasattr(n, "training") and (not n.training)] try: # set to train mode with torch.set_grad_enabled(True): yield [n.train() if hasattr(n, "train") else n for n in nets] finally: # Return required networks to eval_list for n in eval_list: if hasattr(n, "eval"): n.eval()
[docs] def get_state_dict(obj: torch.nn.Module | Mapping): """ Get the state dict of input object if has `state_dict`, otherwise, return object directly. For data parallel model, automatically convert it to regular model first. Args: obj: input object to check and get the state_dict. """ if isinstance(obj, (nn.DataParallel, nn.parallel.DistributedDataParallel)): obj = obj.module return obj.state_dict() if hasattr(obj, "state_dict") else obj
[docs] def copy_model_state( dst: torch.nn.Module | Mapping, src: torch.nn.Module | Mapping, dst_prefix="", mapping=None, exclude_vars=None, inplace=True, filter_func=None, ): """ Compute a module state_dict, of which the keys are the same as `dst`. The values of `dst` are overwritten by the ones from `src` whenever their keys match. The method provides additional `dst_prefix` for the `dst` key when matching them. `mapping` can be a `{"src_key": "dst_key"}` dict, indicating `dst[dst_prefix + dst_key] = src[src_key]`. This function is mainly to return a model state dict for loading the `src` model state into the `dst` model, `src` and `dst` can have different dict keys, but their corresponding values normally have the same shape. Args: dst: a pytorch module or state dict to be updated. src: a pytorch module or state dict used to get the values used for the update. dst_prefix: `dst` key prefix, so that `dst[dst_prefix + src_key]` will be assigned to the value of `src[src_key]`. mapping: a `{"src_key": "dst_key"}` dict, indicating that `dst[dst_prefix + dst_key]` to be assigned to the value of `src[src_key]`. exclude_vars: a regular expression to match the `dst` variable names, so that their values are not overwritten by `src`. inplace: whether to set the `dst` module with the updated `state_dict` via `load_state_dict`. This option is only available when `dst` is a `torch.nn.Module`. filter_func: a filter function used to filter the weights to be loaded. See 'filter_swinunetr' in "monai.networks.nets.swin_unetr.py". Examples: .. code-block:: python from monai.networks.nets import BasicUNet from monai.networks.utils import copy_model_state model_a = BasicUNet(in_channels=1, out_channels=4) model_b = BasicUNet(in_channels=1, out_channels=2) model_a_b, changed, unchanged = copy_model_state( model_a, model_b, exclude_vars="conv_0.conv_0", inplace=False) # dst model updated: 76 of 82 variables. model_a.load_state_dict(model_a_b) # <All keys matched successfully> Returns: an OrderedDict of the updated `dst` state, the changed, and unchanged keys. """ src_dict = get_state_dict(src) dst_dict = OrderedDict(get_state_dict(dst)) to_skip = {s_key for s_key in src_dict if exclude_vars and re.compile(exclude_vars).search(s_key)} # update dst with items from src all_keys, updated_keys = list(dst_dict), list() for s, val in src_dict.items(): dst_key = f"{dst_prefix}{s}" if dst_key in dst_dict and dst_key not in to_skip and dst_dict[dst_key].shape == val.shape: dst_dict[dst_key] = val updated_keys.append(dst_key) for s in mapping if mapping else {}: dst_key = f"{dst_prefix}{mapping[s]}" if dst_key in dst_dict and dst_key not in to_skip: if dst_dict[dst_key].shape != src_dict[s].shape: warnings.warn(f"Param. shape changed from {dst_dict[dst_key].shape} to {src_dict[s].shape}.") dst_dict[dst_key] = src_dict[s] updated_keys.append(dst_key) if filter_func is not None: for key, value in src_dict.items(): new_pair = filter_func(key, value) if new_pair is not None and new_pair[0] not in to_skip: dst_dict[new_pair[0]] = new_pair[1] updated_keys.append(new_pair[0]) updated_keys = sorted(set(updated_keys)) unchanged_keys = sorted(set(all_keys).difference(updated_keys)) logger.info(f"'dst' model updated: {len(updated_keys)} of {len(dst_dict)} variables.") if inplace and isinstance(dst, torch.nn.Module): if isinstance(dst, (nn.DataParallel, nn.parallel.DistributedDataParallel)): dst = dst.module dst.load_state_dict(dst_dict) # type: ignore return dst_dict, updated_keys, unchanged_keys
[docs] def save_state(src: torch.nn.Module | dict, path: PathLike, **kwargs): """ Save the state dict of input source data with PyTorch `save`. It can save `nn.Module`, `state_dict`, a dictionary of `nn.Module` or `state_dict`. And automatically convert the data parallel module to regular module. For example:: save_state(net, path) save_state(net.state_dict(), path) save_state({"net": net, "opt": opt}, path) net_dp = torch.nn.DataParallel(net) save_state(net_dp, path) Refer to: https://pytorch.org/ignite/v0.4.8/generated/ignite.handlers.DiskSaver.html. Args: src: input data to save, can be `nn.Module`, `state_dict`, a dictionary of `nn.Module` or `state_dict`. path: target file path to save the input object. kwargs: other args for the `save_obj` except for the `obj` and `path`. default `func` is `torch.save()`, details of the args: https://pytorch.org/docs/stable/generated/torch.save.html. """ ckpt: dict = {} if isinstance(src, dict): for k, v in src.items(): ckpt[k] = get_state_dict(v) else: ckpt = get_state_dict(src) save_obj(obj=ckpt, path=path, **kwargs)
[docs] def convert_to_onnx( model: nn.Module, inputs: Sequence[Any], input_names: Sequence[str] | None = None, output_names: Sequence[str] | None = None, opset_version: int | None = None, dynamic_axes: Mapping[str, Mapping[int, str]] | Mapping[str, Sequence[int]] | None = None, filename: Any | None = None, verify: bool = False, device: torch.device | None = None, use_ort: bool = False, ort_provider: Sequence[str] | None = None, rtol: float = 1e-4, atol: float = 0.0, use_trace: bool = True, **kwargs, ): """ Utility to convert a model into ONNX model and optionally verify with ONNX or onnxruntime. See also: https://pytorch.org/docs/stable/onnx.html for how to convert a PyTorch model to ONNX. Args: model: source PyTorch model to save. inputs: input sample data used by pytorch.onnx.export. It is also used in ONNX model verification. input_names: optional input names of the ONNX model. output_names: optional output names of the ONNX model. opset_version: version of the (ai.onnx) opset to target. Must be >= 7 and not exceed the latest opset version supported by PyTorch, for more details: https://github.com/onnx/onnx/blob/main/docs/Operators.md and https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/blob/master/torch/onnx/_constants.py dynamic_axes: specifies axes of tensors as dynamic (i.e. known only at run-time). If set to None, the exported model will have the shapes of all input and output tensors set to match given ones, for more details: https://pytorch.org/docs/stable/onnx.html#torch.onnx.export. filename: optional filename to save the ONNX model, if None, don't save the ONNX model. verify: whether to verify the ONNX model with ONNX or onnxruntime. device: target PyTorch device to verify the model, if None, use CUDA if available. use_ort: whether to use onnxruntime to verify the model. ort_provider": onnxruntime provider to use, default is ["CPUExecutionProvider"]. rtol: the relative tolerance when comparing the outputs of PyTorch model and TorchScript model. atol: the absolute tolerance when comparing the outputs of PyTorch model and TorchScript model. use_trace: whether to use `torch.jit.trace` to export the torchscript model. kwargs: other arguments except `obj` for `torch.jit.script()` to convert model, for more details: https://pytorch.org/docs/master/generated/torch.jit.script.html. """ model.eval() with torch.no_grad(): torch_versioned_kwargs = {} if use_trace: # let torch.onnx.export to trace the model. mode_to_export = model else: if not pytorch_after(1, 10): if "example_outputs" not in kwargs: # https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/blob/release/1.9/torch/onnx/__init__.py#L182 raise TypeError( "example_outputs is required in scripting mode before PyTorch 1.10." "Please provide example outputs or use trace mode to export onnx model." ) torch_versioned_kwargs["example_outputs"] = kwargs["example_outputs"] del kwargs["example_outputs"] mode_to_export = torch.jit.script(model, **kwargs) if filename is None: f = io.BytesIO() torch.onnx.export( mode_to_export, tuple(inputs), f=f, input_names=input_names, output_names=output_names, dynamic_axes=dynamic_axes, opset_version=opset_version, **torch_versioned_kwargs, ) onnx_model = onnx.load_model_from_string(f.getvalue()) else: torch.onnx.export( mode_to_export, tuple(inputs), f=filename, input_names=input_names, output_names=output_names, dynamic_axes=dynamic_axes, opset_version=opset_version, **torch_versioned_kwargs, ) onnx_model = onnx.load(filename) if verify: if device is None: device = torch.device("cuda" if torch.cuda.is_available() else "cpu") inputs = [i.to(device) if isinstance(i, torch.Tensor) else i for i in inputs] model = model.to(device) with torch.no_grad(): set_determinism(seed=0) torch_out = ensure_tuple(model(*inputs), True) set_determinism(seed=0) model_input_names = [i.name for i in onnx_model.graph.input] input_dict = dict(zip(model_input_names, [i.cpu().numpy() for i in inputs])) if use_ort: ort_sess = onnxruntime.InferenceSession( onnx_model.SerializeToString(), providers=ort_provider if ort_provider else ["CPUExecutionProvider"] ) onnx_out = ort_sess.run(None, input_dict) else: sess = onnxreference.ReferenceEvaluator(onnx_model) onnx_out = sess.run(None, input_dict) set_determinism(seed=None) # compare onnx/ort and PyTorch results for r1, r2 in zip(torch_out, onnx_out): if isinstance(r1, torch.Tensor): assert_fn = torch.testing.assert_close if pytorch_after(1, 11) else torch.testing.assert_allclose assert_fn(r1.cpu(), convert_to_tensor(r2, dtype=r1.dtype), rtol=rtol, atol=atol) # type: ignore return onnx_model
[docs] def convert_to_torchscript( model: nn.Module, filename_or_obj: Any | None = None, extra_files: dict | None = None, verify: bool = False, inputs: Sequence[Any] | None = None, device: torch.device | None = None, rtol: float = 1e-4, atol: float = 0.0, use_trace: bool = False, **kwargs, ): """ Utility to convert a model into TorchScript model and save to file, with optional input / output data verification. Args: model: source PyTorch model to save. filename_or_obj: if not None, specify a file-like object (has to implement write and flush) or a string containing a file path name to save the TorchScript model. extra_files: map from filename to contents which will be stored as part of the save model file. for more details: https://pytorch.org/docs/stable/generated/torch.jit.save.html. verify: whether to verify the input and output of TorchScript model. if `filename_or_obj` is not None, load the saved TorchScript model and verify. inputs: input test data to verify model, should be a sequence of data, every item maps to a argument of `model()` function. device: target device to verify the model, if None, use CUDA if available. rtol: the relative tolerance when comparing the outputs of PyTorch model and TorchScript model. atol: the absolute tolerance when comparing the outputs of PyTorch model and TorchScript model. use_trace: whether to use `torch.jit.trace` to export the TorchScript model. kwargs: other arguments except `obj` for `torch.jit.script()` or `torch.jit.trace()` (if use_trace is True) to convert model, for more details: https://pytorch.org/docs/master/generated/torch.jit.script.html. """ model.eval() with torch.no_grad(): if use_trace: if inputs is None: raise ValueError("Missing input data for tracing convert.") script_module = torch.jit.trace(model, example_inputs=inputs, **kwargs) else: script_module = torch.jit.script(model, **kwargs) if filename_or_obj is not None: torch.jit.save(m=script_module, f=filename_or_obj, _extra_files=extra_files) if verify: if device is None: device = torch.device("cuda" if torch.cuda.is_available() else "cpu") if inputs is None: raise ValueError("Missing input data for verification.") inputs = [i.to(device) if isinstance(i, torch.Tensor) else i for i in inputs] ts_model = torch.jit.load(filename_or_obj) if filename_or_obj is not None else script_module ts_model.eval().to(device) model = model.to(device) with torch.no_grad(): set_determinism(seed=0) torch_out = ensure_tuple(model(*inputs)) set_determinism(seed=0) torchscript_out = ensure_tuple(ts_model(*inputs)) set_determinism(seed=None) # compare TorchScript and PyTorch results for r1, r2 in zip(torch_out, torchscript_out): if isinstance(r1, torch.Tensor) or isinstance(r2, torch.Tensor): assert_fn = torch.testing.assert_close if pytorch_after(1, 11) else torch.testing.assert_allclose assert_fn(r1, r2, rtol=rtol, atol=atol) # type: ignore return script_module
def _onnx_trt_compile( onnx_model, min_shape: Sequence[int], opt_shape: Sequence[int], max_shape: Sequence[int], device: int, precision: str, input_names: Sequence[str] | None, output_names: Sequence[str] | None, ): """ This function takes an ONNX model as input, exports it to a TensorRT engine, wraps the TensorRT engine to a TensorRT engine-based TorchScript model and return the TorchScript model. Args: onnx_model: the source ONNX model to compile. min_shape: the minimum input shape of the converted TensorRT model. opt_shape: the optimization input shape of the model, on which the TensorRT optimizes. max_shape: the maximum input shape of the converted TensorRT model. device: the target GPU index to convert and verify the model. precision: the weight precision of the converted TensorRT engine-based TorchScript model. Should be 'fp32' or 'fp16'. input_names: optional input names of the ONNX model. Should be a sequence like `['input_0', 'input_1', ..., 'input_N']` where N equals to the number of the model inputs. output_names: optional output names of the ONNX model. Should be a sequence like `['output_0', 'output_1', ..., 'output_N']` where N equals to the number of the model outputs. """ trt, _ = optional_import("tensorrt", "8.5.3") torch_tensorrt, _ = optional_import("torch_tensorrt", "1.4.0") input_shapes = (min_shape, opt_shape, max_shape) # default to an empty list to fit the `torch_tensorrt.ts.embed_engine_in_new_module` function. input_names = [] if not input_names else input_names output_names = [] if not output_names else output_names # set up the TensorRT builder torch_tensorrt.set_device(device) logger = trt.Logger(trt.Logger.WARNING) builder = trt.Builder(logger) network = builder.create_network(1 << int(trt.NetworkDefinitionCreationFlag.EXPLICIT_BATCH)) profile = builder.create_optimization_profile() if input_names: profile.set_shape(input_names[0], *input_shapes) # parse the ONNX model parser = trt.OnnxParser(network, logger) success = parser.parse(onnx_model.SerializeToString()) if not success: parser_error_message = "" for idx in range(parser.num_errors): parser_error_message += parser.get_error(idx).desc() + "\n" raise Exception(f"TensorRT cannot parse the ONNX model, due to:\n{parser_error_message}") # set up the conversion configuration config = builder.create_builder_config() config.set_memory_pool_limit(trt.MemoryPoolType.WORKSPACE, 1 << 31) config.add_optimization_profile(profile) if precision == "fp16": config.set_flag(trt.BuilderFlag.FP16) serialized_engine = builder.build_serialized_network(network, config) f = io.BytesIO() f.write(serialized_engine) # wrap the serialized TensorRT engine back to a TorchScript module. trt_model = torch_tensorrt.ts.embed_engine_in_new_module( f.getvalue(), torch.device(f"cuda:{device}"), input_names, output_names ) return trt_model
[docs] def convert_to_trt( model: nn.Module, precision: str, input_shape: Sequence[int], dynamic_batchsize: Sequence[int] | None = None, use_trace: bool = False, filename_or_obj: Any | None = None, verify: bool = False, device: int | None = None, use_onnx: bool | None = False, onnx_input_names: Sequence[str] | None = ("input_0",), onnx_output_names: Sequence[str] | None = ("output_0",), rtol: float = 1e-2, atol: float = 0.0, **kwargs, ): """ Utility to export a model into a TensorRT engine-based TorchScript model with optional input / output data verification. There are two ways to export a model: 1, Torch-TensorRT way: PyTorch module ---> TorchScript module ---> TensorRT engine-based TorchScript. 2, ONNX-TensorRT way: PyTorch module ---> TorchScript module ---> ONNX model ---> TensorRT engine ---> TensorRT engine-based TorchScript. When exporting through the first way, some models suffer from the slowdown problem, since Torch-TensorRT may only convert a little part of the PyTorch model to the TensorRT engine. However when exporting through the second way, some Python data structures like `dict` are not supported. And some TorchScript models are not supported by the ONNX if exported through `torch.jit.script`. Args: model: a source PyTorch model to convert. precision: the weight precision of the converted TensorRT engine based TorchScript models. Should be 'fp32' or 'fp16'. input_shape: the input shape that is used to convert the model. Should be a list like [N, C, H, W] or [N, C, H, W, D]. dynamic_batchsize: a sequence with three elements to define the batch size range of the input for the model to be converted. Should be a sequence like [MIN_BATCH, OPT_BATCH, MAX_BATCH]. After converted, the batchsize of model input should between `MIN_BATCH` and `MAX_BATCH` and the `OPT_BATCH` is the best performance batchsize that the TensorRT tries to fit. The `OPT_BATCH` should be the most frequently used input batchsize in the application, default to None. use_trace: whether using `torch.jit.trace` to convert the PyTorch model to a TorchScript model and then convert to a TensorRT engine based TorchScript model or an ONNX model (if `use_onnx` is True), default to False. filename_or_obj: if not None, specify a file-like object (has to implement write and flush) or a string containing a file path name to load the TensorRT engine based TorchScript model for verifying. verify: whether to verify the input and output of the TensorRT engine based TorchScript model. device: the target GPU index to convert and verify the model. If None, use #0 GPU. use_onnx: whether to use the ONNX-TensorRT way to export the TensorRT engine-based TorchScript model. onnx_input_names: optional input names of the ONNX model. This arg is only useful when `use_onnx` is True. Should be a sequence like `('input_0', 'input_1', ..., 'input_N')` where N equals to the number of the model inputs. If not given, will use `('input_0',)`, which supposes the model only has one input. onnx_output_names: optional output names of the ONNX model. This arg is only useful when `use_onnx` is True. Should be a sequence like `('output_0', 'output_1', ..., 'output_N')` where N equals to the number of the model outputs. If not given, will use `('output_0',)`, which supposes the model only has one output. rtol: the relative tolerance when comparing the outputs between the PyTorch model and TensorRT model. atol: the absolute tolerance when comparing the outputs between the PyTorch model and TensorRT model. kwargs: other arguments except `module`, `inputs`, `enabled_precisions` and `device` for `torch_tensorrt.compile()` to compile model, for more details: https://pytorch.org/TensorRT/py_api/torch_tensorrt.html#torch-tensorrt-py. """ torch_tensorrt, _ = optional_import("torch_tensorrt", version="1.4.0") if not torch.cuda.is_available(): raise Exception("Cannot find any GPU devices.") if not input_shape: raise ValueError("Missing the input shape for model convert.") if not dynamic_batchsize: warnings.warn(f"There is no dynamic batch range. The converted model only takes {input_shape} shape input.") if (dynamic_batchsize is not None) and (len(dynamic_batchsize) != 3): warnings.warn(f"The dynamic batch range sequence should have 3 elements, but got {dynamic_batchsize} elements.") device = device if device else 0 target_device = torch.device(f"cuda:{device}") if device else torch.device("cuda:0") convert_precision = torch.float32 if precision == "fp32" else torch.half inputs = [torch.rand(ensure_tuple(input_shape)).to(target_device)] def scale_batch_size(input_shape: Sequence[int], scale_num: int): scale_shape = [*input_shape] scale_shape[0] *= scale_num return scale_shape # Use the dynamic batchsize range to generate the min, opt and max model input shape if dynamic_batchsize: min_input_shape = scale_batch_size(input_shape, dynamic_batchsize[0]) opt_input_shape = scale_batch_size(input_shape, dynamic_batchsize[1]) max_input_shape = scale_batch_size(input_shape, dynamic_batchsize[2]) else: min_input_shape = opt_input_shape = max_input_shape = input_shape # convert the torch model to a TorchScript model on target device model = model.eval().to(target_device) ir_model = convert_to_torchscript(model, device=target_device, inputs=inputs, use_trace=use_trace) ir_model.eval() if use_onnx: # set the batch dim as dynamic dynamic_axes = {k: {0: "batchsize"} for k in onnx_input_names} if onnx_input_names else {} dynamic_axes.update({k: {0: "batchsize"} for k in onnx_output_names} if onnx_output_names else {}) ir_model = convert_to_onnx( model, inputs, onnx_input_names, onnx_output_names, use_trace=use_trace, dynamic_axes=dynamic_axes ) # convert the model through the ONNX-TensorRT way trt_model = _onnx_trt_compile( ir_model, min_shape=min_input_shape, opt_shape=opt_input_shape, max_shape=max_input_shape, device=device, precision=precision, input_names=onnx_input_names, output_names=onnx_output_names, ) else: # convert the model through the Torch-TensorRT way ir_model.to(target_device) with torch.no_grad(): with torch.cuda.device(device=device): input_placeholder = [ torch_tensorrt.Input( min_shape=min_input_shape, opt_shape=opt_input_shape, max_shape=max_input_shape ) ] trt_model = torch_tensorrt.compile( ir_model, inputs=input_placeholder, enabled_precisions=convert_precision, device=target_device, **kwargs, ) # verify the outputs between the TensorRT model and PyTorch model if verify: if inputs is None: raise ValueError("Missing input data for verification.") trt_model = torch.jit.load(filename_or_obj) if filename_or_obj is not None else trt_model with torch.no_grad(): set_determinism(seed=0) torch_out = ensure_tuple(model(*inputs)) set_determinism(seed=0) trt_out = ensure_tuple(trt_model(*inputs)) set_determinism(seed=None) # compare TorchScript and PyTorch results for r1, r2 in zip(torch_out, trt_out): if isinstance(r1, torch.Tensor) or isinstance(r2, torch.Tensor): assert_fn = torch.testing.assert_close if pytorch_after(1, 11) else torch.testing.assert_allclose assert_fn(r1, r2, rtol=rtol, atol=atol) # type: ignore return trt_model
def meshgrid_ij(*tensors): if torch.meshgrid.__kwdefaults__ is not None and "indexing" in torch.meshgrid.__kwdefaults__: return torch.meshgrid(*tensors, indexing="ij") # new api pytorch after 1.10 return torch.meshgrid(*tensors) def meshgrid_xy(*tensors): if torch.meshgrid.__kwdefaults__ is not None and "indexing" in torch.meshgrid.__kwdefaults__: return torch.meshgrid(*tensors, indexing="xy") # new api pytorch after 1.10 return torch.meshgrid(tensors[1], tensors[0], *tensors[2:]) def _replace_modules( parent: torch.nn.Module, name: str, new_module: torch.nn.Module, out: list[tuple[str, torch.nn.Module]], strict_match: bool = True, match_device: bool = True, ) -> None: """ Helper function for :py:class:`monai.networks.utils.replace_modules`. """ if match_device: devices = list({i.device for i in parent.parameters()}) # if only one device for whole of model if len(devices) == 1: new_module.to(devices[0]) idx = name.find(".") # if there is "." in name, call recursively if idx != -1: parent_name = name[:idx] parent = getattr(parent, parent_name) name = name[idx + 1 :] _out: list[tuple[str, torch.nn.Module]] = [] _replace_modules(parent, name, new_module, _out) # prepend the parent name out += [(f"{parent_name}.{r[0]}", r[1]) for r in _out] # no "." in module name, do the actual replacing else: if strict_match: old_module = getattr(parent, name) setattr(parent, name, new_module) out += [(name, old_module)] else: for mod_name, _ in parent.named_modules(): if name in mod_name: _replace_modules(parent, mod_name, deepcopy(new_module), out, strict_match=True)
[docs] def replace_modules( parent: torch.nn.Module, name: str, new_module: torch.nn.Module, strict_match: bool = True, match_device: bool = True, ) -> list[tuple[str, torch.nn.Module]]: """ Replace sub-module(s) in a parent module. The name of the module to be replace can be nested e.g., `features.denseblock1.denselayer1.layers.relu1`. If this is the case (there are "." in the module name), then this function will recursively call itself. Args: parent: module that contains the module to be replaced name: name of module to be replaced. Can include ".". new_module: `torch.nn.Module` to be placed at position `name` inside `parent`. This will be deep copied if `strict_match == False` multiple instances are independent. strict_match: if `True`, module name must `== name`. If false then `name in named_modules()` will be used. `True` can be used to change just one module, whereas `False` can be used to replace all modules with similar name (e.g., `relu`). match_device: if `True`, the device of the new module will match the model. Requires all of `parent` to be on the same device. Returns: List of tuples of replaced modules. Element 0 is module name, element 1 is the replaced module. Raises: AttributeError: if `strict_match` is `True` and `name` is not a named module in `parent`. """ out: list[tuple[str, torch.nn.Module]] = [] _replace_modules(parent, name, new_module, out, strict_match, match_device) return out
[docs] @contextmanager def replace_modules_temp( parent: torch.nn.Module, name: str, new_module: torch.nn.Module, strict_match: bool = True, match_device: bool = True, ): """ Temporarily replace sub-module(s) in a parent module (context manager). See :py:class:`monai.networks.utils.replace_modules`. """ replaced: list[tuple[str, torch.nn.Module]] = [] try: # replace _replace_modules(parent, name, new_module, replaced, strict_match, match_device) yield finally: # revert for name, module in replaced: _replace_modules(parent, name, module, [], strict_match=True, match_device=match_device)
def freeze_layers(model: nn.Module, freeze_vars=None, exclude_vars=None): """ A utilty function to help freeze specific layers. Args: model: a source PyTorch model to freeze layer. freeze_vars: a regular expression to match the `model` variable names, so that their `requires_grad` will set to `False`. exclude_vars: a regular expression to match the `model` variable names, except for matched variable names, other `requires_grad` will set to `False`. Raises: ValueError: when freeze_vars and exclude_vars are both specified. """ if freeze_vars is not None and exclude_vars is not None: raise ValueError("Incompatible values: freeze_vars and exclude_vars are both specified.") src_dict = get_state_dict(model) frozen_keys = list() if freeze_vars is not None: to_freeze = {s_key for s_key in src_dict if freeze_vars and re.compile(freeze_vars).search(s_key)} for name, param in model.named_parameters(): if name in to_freeze: param.requires_grad = False frozen_keys.append(name) elif not param.requires_grad: param.requires_grad = True warnings.warn( f"The freeze_vars does not include {param}, but requires_grad is False, change it to True." ) if exclude_vars is not None: to_exclude = {s_key for s_key in src_dict if exclude_vars and re.compile(exclude_vars).search(s_key)} for name, param in model.named_parameters(): if name not in to_exclude: param.requires_grad = False frozen_keys.append(name) elif not param.requires_grad: param.requires_grad = True warnings.warn(f"The exclude_vars includes {param}, but requires_grad is False, change it to True.") logger.info(f"{len(frozen_keys)} of {len(src_dict)} variables frozen.")