The lightweight PyTorch wrapper for ML researchers. Scale your models. Write less boilerplate.
System / PyTorch Version | 1.1 | 1.2 | 1.3 | 1.4 |
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Linux py3.6 | ||||
Linux py3.7 | — | — | ||
OSX py3.6 | — | — | ||
OSX py3.7 | — | — | ||
Windows py3.6 | — | — | ||
Windows py3.7 | — | — |
Simple installation from PyPI
pip install pytorch-lightning
Lightning is a very lightweight wrapper on PyTorch that decouples the science code from the engineering code. It's more of a style-guide than a framework. By refactoring your code, we can automate most of the non-research code.
To use Lightning, simply refactor your research code into the LightningModule format (the science) and Lightning will automate the rest (the engineering). Lightning guarantees tested, correct, modern best practices for the automated parts.
- If you are a researcher, Lightning is infinitely flexible, you can modify everything down to the way .backward is called or distributed is set up.
- If you are a scientist or production team, lightning is very simple to use with best practice defaults.
Everything in Blue!
This is how lightning separates the science (red) from the engineering (blue).
You're probably tired of switching frameworks at this point. But it is a very quick process to refactor into the Lightning format (ie: hours). Check out this tutorial
Use our seed-project aimed at reproducibility!
Every research project starts the same, a model, a training loop, validation loop, etc. As your research advances, you're likely to need distributed training, 16-bit precision, checkpointing, gradient accumulation, etc.
Lightning sets up all the boilerplate state-of-the-art training for you so you can focus on the research.
- How do I use it
- What lightning automates
- Tensorboard integration
- Lightning features
- Examples
- Tutorials
- Asking for help
- Contributing
- Bleeding edge install
- Lightning Design Principles
- Lightning team
- FAQ
Think about Lightning as refactoring your research code instead of using a new framework. The research code goes into a LightningModule which you fit using a Trainer.
The LightningModule defines a system such as seq-2-seq, GAN, etc... It can ALSO define a simple classifier such as the example below.
To use lightning do 2 things:
- Define a LightningModule
WARNING: This syntax is for version 0.5.0+ where abbreviations were removed.
import os import torch from torch.nn import functional as F from torch.utils.data import DataLoader from torchvision.datasets import MNIST from torchvision import transforms import pytorch_lightning as pl class CoolSystem(pl.LightningModule): def __init__(self): super(CoolSystem, self).__init__() # not the best model... self.l1 = torch.nn.Linear(28 * 28, 10) def forward(self, x): return torch.relu(self.l1(x.view(x.size(0), -1))) def training_step(self, batch, batch_idx): # REQUIRED x, y = batch y_hat = self.forward(x) loss = F.cross_entropy(y_hat, y) tensorboard_logs = {'train_loss': loss} return {'loss': loss, 'log': tensorboard_logs} def validation_step(self, batch, batch_idx): # OPTIONAL x, y = batch y_hat = self.forward(x) return {'val_loss': F.cross_entropy(y_hat, y)} def validation_end(self, outputs): # OPTIONAL avg_loss = torch.stack([x['val_loss'] for x in outputs]).mean() tensorboard_logs = {'val_loss': avg_loss} return {'avg_val_loss': avg_loss, 'log': tensorboard_logs} def test_step(self, batch, batch_idx): # OPTIONAL x, y = batch y_hat = self.forward(x) return {'test_loss': F.cross_entropy(y_hat, y)} def test_end(self, outputs): # OPTIONAL avg_loss = torch.stack([x['test_loss'] for x in outputs]).mean() tensorboard_logs = {'test_loss': avg_loss} return {'avg_test_loss': avg_loss, 'log': tensorboard_logs} def configure_optimizers(self): # REQUIRED # can return multiple optimizers and learning_rate schedulers # (LBFGS it is automatically supported, no need for closure function) return torch.optim.Adam(self.parameters(), lr=0.02) @pl.data_loader def train_dataloader(self): # REQUIRED return DataLoader(MNIST(os.getcwd(), train=True, download=True, transform=transforms.ToTensor()), batch_size=32) @pl.data_loader def val_dataloader(self): # OPTIONAL return DataLoader(MNIST(os.getcwd(), train=True, download=True, transform=transforms.ToTensor()), batch_size=32) @pl.data_loader def test_dataloader(self): # OPTIONAL return DataLoader(MNIST(os.getcwd(), train=False, download=True, transform=transforms.ToTensor()), batch_size=32)
- Fit with a trainer
from pytorch_lightning import Trainer model = CoolSystem() # most basic trainer, uses good defaults trainer = Trainer() trainer.fit(model)
Trainer sets up a tensorboard logger, early stopping and checkpointing by default (you can modify all of them or use something other than tensorboard).
Here are more advanced examples
# train on cpu using only 10% of the data (for demo purposes)
trainer = Trainer(max_epochs=1, train_percent_check=0.1)
# train on 4 gpus (lightning chooses GPUs for you)
# trainer = Trainer(max_epochs=1, gpus=4, distributed_backend='ddp')
# train on 4 gpus (you choose GPUs)
# trainer = Trainer(max_epochs=1, gpus=[0, 1, 3, 7], distributed_backend='ddp')
# train on 32 gpus across 4 nodes (make sure to submit appropriate SLURM job)
# trainer = Trainer(max_epochs=1, gpus=8, num_gpu_nodes=4, distributed_backend='ddp')
# train (1 epoch only here for demo)
trainer.fit(model)
# view tensorboard logs
logging.info(f'View tensorboard logs by running\ntensorboard --logdir {os.getcwd()}')
logging.info('and going to http://localhost:6006 on your browser')
When you're all done you can even run the test set separately.
trainer.test()
Could be as complex as seq-2-seq + attention
# define what happens for training here
def training_step(self, batch, batch_idx):
x, y = batch
# define your own forward and loss calculation
hidden_states = self.encoder(x)
# even as complex as a seq-2-seq + attn model
# (this is just a toy, non-working example to illustrate)
start_token = '<SOS>'
last_hidden = torch.zeros(...)
loss = 0
for step in range(max_seq_len):
attn_context = self.attention_nn(hidden_states, start_token)
pred = self.decoder(start_token, attn_context, last_hidden)
last_hidden = pred
pred = self.predict_nn(pred)
loss += self.loss(last_hidden, y[step])
#toy example as well
loss = loss / max_seq_len
return {'loss': loss}
Or as basic as CNN image classification
# define what happens for validation here
def validation_step(self, batch, batch_idx):
x, y = batch
# or as basic as a CNN classification
out = self.forward(x)
loss = my_loss(out, y)
return {'loss': loss}
And you also decide how to collate the output of all validation steps
def validation_end(self, outputs):
"""
Called at the end of validation to aggregate outputs
:param outputs: list of individual outputs of each validation step
:return:
"""
val_loss_mean = 0
val_acc_mean = 0
for output in outputs:
val_loss_mean += output['val_loss']
val_acc_mean += output['val_acc']
val_loss_mean /= len(outputs)
val_acc_mean /= len(outputs)
logs = {'val_loss': val_loss_mean.item(), 'val_acc': val_acc_mean.item()}
result = {'log': logs}
return result
Lightning is fully integrated with tensorboard, MLFlow and supports any logging module.
Lightning also adds a text column with all the hyperparameters for this experiment.
Lightning automates all of the following (each is also configurable):
- Running grid search on a cluster
- Fast dev run
- Logging
- Implement Your Own Distributed (DDP) training
- Multi-GPU & Multi-node
- Training loop
- Hooks
- Configure optimizers
- Validations
- Model saving & Restoring training session
- Basic Lightning use
- 9 key speed features in Pytorch-Lightning
- SLURM, multi-node training with Lightning
Welcome to the Lightning community!
If you have any questions, feel free to:
- read the docs.
- Search through the issues.
- Ask on stackoverflow with the tag pytorch-lightning.
If no one replies to you quickly enough, feel free to post the stackoverflow link to our Gitter chat!
To chat with the rest of us visit our gitter channel!
How do I use Lightning for rapid research?
Here's a walk-through
Why was Lightning created?
Lightning has 3 goals in mind:
- Maximal flexibility while abstracting out the common boilerplate across research projects.
- Reproducibility. If all projects use the LightningModule template, it will be much much easier to understand what's going on and where to look! It will also mean every implementation follows a standard format.
- Democratizing PyTorch power user features. Distributed training? 16-bit? know you need them but don't want to take the time to implement? All good... these come built into Lightning.
How does Lightning compare with Ignite and fast.ai?
Here's a thorough comparison.
Is this another library I have to learn?
Nope! We use pure Pytorch everywhere and don't add unecessary abstractions!
Are there plans to support Python 2?
Nope.
Are there plans to support virtualenv?
Nope. Please use anaconda or miniconda.
Which PyTorch versions do you support?
- PyTorch 1.1.0
# install pytorch 1.1.0 using the official instructions # install test-tube 0.6.7.6 which supports 1.1.0 pip install test-tube==0.6.7.6 # install latest Lightning version without upgrading deps pip install -U --no-deps pytorch-lightning
- PyTorch 1.2.0, 1.3.0, Install via pip as normal
If you can't wait for the next release, install the most up to date code with:
- using GIT (locally clone whole repo with full history)
pip install git+https://github.com/PytorchLightning/pytorch-lightning.git@master --upgrade
- using instant zip (last state of the repo without git history)
pip install https://github.com/PytorchLightning/pytorch-lightning/archive/master.zip --upgrade
You can also install any past release 0.X.Y
from this repository:
pip install https://github.com/PytorchLightning/pytorch-lightning/archive/0.X.Y.zip --upgrade
- William Falcon (williamFalcon) (Lightning founder)
- Jirka Borovec (Borda)
- Ethan Harris (ethanwharris) (Torchbearer founder)
- Matthew Painter (MattPainter01) (Torchbearer founder)
- Nick Eggert (neggert)
- Jeff Ling (jeffling)
- Tullie Murrell (tullie)
If you want to cite the framework feel free to use this (but only if you loved it 😊):
@misc{Falcon2019,
author = {Falcon, W.A. et al.},
title = {PyTorch Lightning},
year = {2019},
publisher = {GitHub},
journal = {GitHub repository},
howpublished = {\url{https://github.com/PytorchLightning/pytorch-lightning}}
}