torch.hub
Pytorch Hub is a pre-trained model repository designed to facilitate research reproducibility.
Publishing models
Pytorch Hub supports publishing pre-trained models(model definitions and pre-trained weights) to a github repository by adding a simple hubconf.py
file;
hubconf.py
can have multiple entrypoints. Each entrypoint is defined as a python function (example: a pre-trained model you want to publish).
def entrypoint_name(*args, **kwargs): # args & kwargs are optional, for models which take positional/keyword arguments. ...
How to implement an entrypoint?
Here is a code snippet specifies an entrypoint for resnet18
model if we expand the implementation in pytorch/vision/hubconf.py
. In most case importing the right function in hubconf.py
is sufficient. Here we just want to use the expanded version as an example to show how it works. You can see the full script in pytorch/vision repo
dependencies = ['torch'] from torchvision.models.resnet import resnet18 as _resnet18 # resnet18 is the name of entrypoint def resnet18(pretrained=False, **kwargs): """ # This docstring shows up in hub.help() Resnet18 model pretrained (bool): kwargs, load pretrained weights into the model """ # Call the model, load pretrained weights model = _resnet18(pretrained=pretrained, **kwargs) return model
-
dependencies
variable is a list of package names required to load the model. Note this might be slightly different from dependencies required for training a model. -
args
andkwargs
are passed along to the real callable function. - Docstring of the function works as a help message. It explains what does the model do and what are the allowed positional/keyword arguments. It’s highly recommended to add a few examples here.
- Entrypoint function can either return a model(nn.module), or auxiliary tools to make the user workflow smoother, e.g. tokenizers.
- Callables prefixed with underscore are considered as helper functions which won’t show up in
torch.hub.list()
. - Pretrained weights can either be stored locally in the github repo, or loadable by
torch.hub.load_state_dict_from_url()
. If less than 2GB, it’s recommended to attach it to a project release and use the url from the release. In the example abovetorchvision.models.resnet.resnet18
handlespretrained
, alternatively you can put the following logic in the entrypoint definition.
if pretrained: # For checkpoint saved in local github repo, e.g. <RELATIVE_PATH_TO_CHECKPOINT>=weights/save.pth dirname = os.path.dirname(__file__) checkpoint = os.path.join(dirname, <RELATIVE_PATH_TO_CHECKPOINT>) state_dict = torch.load(checkpoint) model.load_state_dict(state_dict) # For checkpoint saved elsewhere checkpoint = 'https://download.pytorch.org/models/resnet18-5c106cde.pth' model.load_state_dict(torch.hub.load_state_dict_from_url(checkpoint, progress=False))
Important Notice
- The published models should be at least in a branch/tag. It can’t be a random commit.
Loading models from Hub
Pytorch Hub provides convenient APIs to explore all available models in hub through torch.hub.list()
, show docstring and examples through torch.hub.help()
and load the pre-trained models using torch.hub.load()
.
-
torch.hub.list(github, force_reload=False)
[source] -
List all entrypoints available in
github
hubconf.- Parameters
-
-
github (string) – a string with format “repo_owner/repo_name[:tag_name]” with an optional tag/branch. The default branch is
master
if not specified. Example: ‘pytorch/vision[:hub]’ -
force_reload (bool, optional) – whether to discard the existing cache and force a fresh download. Default is
False
.
-
github (string) – a string with format “repo_owner/repo_name[:tag_name]” with an optional tag/branch. The default branch is
- Returns
-
a list of available entrypoint names
- Return type
-
entrypoints
Example
>>> entrypoints = torch.hub.list('pytorch/vision', force_reload=True)
-
torch.hub.help(github, model, force_reload=False)
[source] -
Show the docstring of entrypoint
model
.- Parameters
-
-
github (string) – a string with format <repo_owner/repo_name[:tag_name]> with an optional tag/branch. The default branch is
master
if not specified. Example: ‘pytorch/vision[:hub]’ - model (string) – a string of entrypoint name defined in repo’s hubconf.py
-
force_reload (bool, optional) – whether to discard the existing cache and force a fresh download. Default is
False
.
-
github (string) – a string with format <repo_owner/repo_name[:tag_name]> with an optional tag/branch. The default branch is
Example
>>> print(torch.hub.help('pytorch/vision', 'resnet18', force_reload=True))
-
torch.hub.load(repo_or_dir, model, *args, **kwargs)
[source] -
Load a model from a github repo or a local directory.
Note: Loading a model is the typical use case, but this can also be used to for loading other objects such as tokenizers, loss functions, etc.
If
source
is'github'
,repo_or_dir
is expected to be of the formrepo_owner/repo_name[:tag_name]
with an optional tag/branch.If
source
is'local'
,repo_or_dir
is expected to be a path to a local directory.- Parameters
-
-
repo_or_dir (string) – repo name (
repo_owner/repo_name[:tag_name]
), ifsource = 'github'
; or a path to a local directory, ifsource = 'local'
. -
model (string) – the name of a callable (entrypoint) defined in the repo/dir’s
hubconf.py
. -
*args (optional) – the corresponding args for callable
model
. -
source (string, optional) –
'github'
|'local'
. Specifies howrepo_or_dir
is to be interpreted. Default is'github'
. -
force_reload (bool, optional) – whether to force a fresh download of the github repo unconditionally. Does not have any effect if
source = 'local'
. Default isFalse
. -
verbose (bool, optional) – If
False
, mute messages about hitting local caches. Note that the message about first download cannot be muted. Does not have any effect ifsource = 'local'
. Default isTrue
. -
**kwargs (optional) – the corresponding kwargs for callable
model
.
-
repo_or_dir (string) – repo name (
- Returns
-
The output of the
model
callable when called with the given*args
and**kwargs
.
Example
>>> # from a github repo >>> repo = 'pytorch/vision' >>> model = torch.hub.load(repo, 'resnet50', pretrained=True) >>> # from a local directory >>> path = '/some/local/path/pytorch/vision' >>> model = torch.hub.load(path, 'resnet50', pretrained=True)
-
torch.hub.download_url_to_file(url, dst, hash_prefix=None, progress=True)
[source] -
Download object at the given URL to a local path.
- Parameters
-
- url (string) – URL of the object to download
-
dst (string) – Full path where object will be saved, e.g.
/tmp/temporary_file
-
hash_prefix (string, optional) – If not None, the SHA256 downloaded file should start with
hash_prefix
. Default: None - progress (bool, optional) – whether or not to display a progress bar to stderr Default: True
Example
>>> torch.hub.download_url_to_file('https://s3.amazonaws.com/pytorch/models/resnet18-5c106cde.pth', '/tmp/temporary_file')
-
torch.hub.load_state_dict_from_url(url, model_dir=None, map_location=None, progress=True, check_hash=False, file_name=None)
[source] -
Loads the Torch serialized object at the given URL.
If downloaded file is a zip file, it will be automatically decompressed.
If the object is already present in
model_dir
, it’s deserialized and returned. The default value ofmodel_dir
is<hub_dir>/checkpoints
wherehub_dir
is the directory returned byget_dir()
.- Parameters
-
- url (string) – URL of the object to download
- model_dir (string, optional) – directory in which to save the object
- map_location (optional) – a function or a dict specifying how to remap storage locations (see torch.load)
- progress (bool, optional) – whether or not to display a progress bar to stderr. Default: True
-
check_hash (bool, optional) – If True, the filename part of the URL should follow the naming convention
filename-<sha256>.ext
where<sha256>
is the first eight or more digits of the SHA256 hash of the contents of the file. The hash is used to ensure unique names and to verify the contents of the file. Default: False -
file_name (string, optional) – name for the downloaded file. Filename from
url
will be used if not set.
Example
>>> state_dict = torch.hub.load_state_dict_from_url('https://s3.amazonaws.com/pytorch/models/resnet18-5c106cde.pth')
Running a loaded model:
Note that *args
and **kwargs
in torch.hub.load()
are used to instantiate a model. After you have loaded a model, how can you find out what you can do with the model? A suggested workflow is
-
dir(model)
to see all available methods of the model. -
help(model.foo)
to check what argumentsmodel.foo
takes to run
To help users explore without referring to documentation back and forth, we strongly recommend repo owners make function help messages clear and succinct. It’s also helpful to include a minimal working example.
Where are my downloaded models saved?
The locations are used in the order of
- Calling
hub.set_dir(<PATH_TO_HUB_DIR>)
-
$TORCH_HOME/hub
, if environment variableTORCH_HOME
is set. -
$XDG_CACHE_HOME/torch/hub
, if environment variableXDG_CACHE_HOME
is set. ~/.cache/torch/hub
-
torch.hub.get_dir()
[source] -
Get the Torch Hub cache directory used for storing downloaded models & weights.
If
set_dir()
is not called, default path is$TORCH_HOME/hub
where environment variable$TORCH_HOME
defaults to$XDG_CACHE_HOME/torch
.$XDG_CACHE_HOME
follows the X Design Group specification of the Linux filesystem layout, with a default value~/.cache
if the environment variable is not set.
-
torch.hub.set_dir(d)
[source] -
Optionally set the Torch Hub directory used to save downloaded models & weights.
- Parameters
-
d (string) – path to a local folder to save downloaded models & weights.
Caching logic
By default, we don’t clean up files after loading it. Hub uses the cache by default if it already exists in the directory returned by get_dir()
.
Users can force a reload by calling hub.load(..., force_reload=True)
. This will delete the existing github folder and downloaded weights, reinitialize a fresh download. This is useful when updates are published to the same branch, users can keep up with the latest release.
Known limitations:
Torch hub works by importing the package as if it was installed. There’re some side effects introduced by importing in Python. For example, you can see new items in Python caches sys.modules
and sys.path_importer_cache
which is normal Python behavior.
A known limitation that worth mentioning here is user CANNOT load two different branches of the same repo in the same python process. It’s just like installing two packages with the same name in Python, which is not good. Cache might join the party and give you surprises if you actually try that. Of course it’s totally fine to load them in separate processes.
© 2019 Torch Contributors
Licensed under the 3-clause BSD License.
https://pytorch.org/docs/1.8.0/hub.html