fontr.fontr package
Submodules
fontr.fontr.autoencoder module
- class Autoencoder(lr)[source]
Bases:
LightningModule
Autoencoder based on the Autoencoder described in “DeepFont: Identify Your Font from An Image” paper
- 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. Optimization with multiple optimizers only works in the manual optimization mode.
- 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
.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
Some things to know:
Lightning calls
.backward()
and.step()
automatically in case of automatic optimization.If a 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 optimizer.If you use
torch.optim.LBFGS
, Lightning handles the closure function automatically for you.If you use multiple optimizers, you will have to switch to ‘manual optimization’ mode and step them yourself.
If you need to control how often the optimizer steps, override the
optimizer_step()
hook.
- forward(x)[source]
Same as
torch.nn.Module.forward()
.- Parameters:
*args – Whatever you decide to pass into the forward method.
**kwargs – Keyword arguments are also possible.
- Returns:
Your model’s output
- test_step(batch, batch_idx)[source]
Operates on a single batch of data from the test set. In this step you’d normally generate examples or calculate anything of interest such as accuracy.
- Parameters:
batch – The output of your
DataLoader
.batch_idx (
int
) – The index of this batch.dataloader_id – The index of the dataloader that produced this batch. (only if multiple test dataloaders used).
- Returns:
Any of.
Any object or value
None
- Testing will skip to the next batch
# if you have one test dataloader: def test_step(self, batch, batch_idx): ... # if you have multiple test dataloaders: def test_step(self, batch, batch_idx, dataloader_idx=0): ...
Examples:
# CASE 1: A single test dataset def test_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) test_acc = torch.sum(y == labels_hat).item() / (len(y) * 1.0) # log the outputs! self.log_dict({'test_loss': loss, 'test_acc': test_acc})
If you pass in multiple test dataloaders,
test_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 test dataloaders def test_step(self, batch, batch_idx, dataloader_idx=0): # dataloader_idx tells you which dataset this is. ...
Note
If you don’t need to test you don’t need to implement this method.
Note
When the
test_step()
is called, the model has been put in eval mode and PyTorch gradients have been disabled. At the end of the test epoch, the model goes back to training mode and gradients are enabled.
- 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 batch
- 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
To use multiple optimizers, you can switch to ‘manual optimization’ and control their stepping:
def __init__(self): super().__init__() self.automatic_optimization = False # Multiple optimizers (e.g.: GANs) def training_step(self, batch, batch_idx): opt1, opt2 = self.optimizers() # do training_step with encoder ... opt1.step() # do training_step with decoder ... opt2.step()
Note
When
accumulate_grad_batches
> 1, the loss returned here will be automatically normalized byaccumulate_grad_batches
internally.
- 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.
- Parameters:
batch – The output of your
DataLoader
.batch_idx (
int
) – 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
# 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.
fontr.fontr.classifier module
- class Classifier(lr, autoencoder=None, nclasses=2383, dropout=0.1)[source]
Bases:
LightningModule
- __init__(lr, autoencoder=None, nclasses=2383, dropout=0.1)[source]
Construct a font classifier object as described in “DeepFont: Identify Your Font from An Image” paper # noqa: E501
- Parameters:
lr (float) – learning rate.
autoencoder (Optional[Autoencoder], optional) – Autoencoder to initialize lower layers with. Defaults to None. # noqa: E501
nclasses (int) – number of classes. Defaults to 2383.
- 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. Optimization with multiple optimizers only works in the manual optimization mode.
- 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
.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
Some things to know:
Lightning calls
.backward()
and.step()
automatically in case of automatic optimization.If a 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 optimizer.If you use
torch.optim.LBFGS
, Lightning handles the closure function automatically for you.If you use multiple optimizers, you will have to switch to ‘manual optimization’ mode and step them yourself.
If you need to control how often the optimizer steps, override the
optimizer_step()
hook.
- forward(x)[source]
Same as
torch.nn.Module.forward()
.- Parameters:
*args – Whatever you decide to pass into the forward method.
**kwargs – Keyword arguments are also possible.
- Returns:
Your model’s output
- predict_step(x, batch_idx, dataloader_idx=0)[source]
Step function called during
predict()
. By default, it callsforward()
. Override to add any processing logic.The
predict_step()
is used to scale inference on multi-devices.To prevent an OOM error, it is possible to use
BasePredictionWriter
callback to write the predictions to disk or database after each batch or on epoch end.The
BasePredictionWriter
should be used while using a spawn based accelerator. This happens forTrainer(strategy="ddp_spawn")
or training on 8 TPU cores withTrainer(accelerator="tpu", devices=8)
as predictions won’t be returned.Example
class MyModel(LightningModule): def predict_step(self, batch, batch_idx, dataloader_idx=0): return self(batch) dm = ... model = MyModel() trainer = Trainer(accelerator="gpu", devices=2) predictions = trainer.predict(model, dm)
- Parameters:
batch – Current batch.
batch_idx (
int
) – Index of current batch.dataloader_idx (
int
) – Index of the current dataloader.
- Returns:
Predicted output
- test_step(batch, batch_idx)[source]
Operates on a single batch of data from the test set. In this step you’d normally generate examples or calculate anything of interest such as accuracy.
- Parameters:
batch – The output of your
DataLoader
.batch_idx (
int
) – The index of this batch.dataloader_id – The index of the dataloader that produced this batch. (only if multiple test dataloaders used).
- Returns:
Any of.
Any object or value
None
- Testing will skip to the next batch
# if you have one test dataloader: def test_step(self, batch, batch_idx): ... # if you have multiple test dataloaders: def test_step(self, batch, batch_idx, dataloader_idx=0): ...
Examples:
# CASE 1: A single test dataset def test_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) test_acc = torch.sum(y == labels_hat).item() / (len(y) * 1.0) # log the outputs! self.log_dict({'test_loss': loss, 'test_acc': test_acc})
If you pass in multiple test dataloaders,
test_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 test dataloaders def test_step(self, batch, batch_idx, dataloader_idx=0): # dataloader_idx tells you which dataset this is. ...
Note
If you don’t need to test you don’t need to implement this method.
Note
When the
test_step()
is called, the model has been put in eval mode and PyTorch gradients have been disabled. At the end of the test epoch, the model goes back to training mode and gradients are enabled.
- 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 batch
- 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
To use multiple optimizers, you can switch to ‘manual optimization’ and control their stepping:
def __init__(self): super().__init__() self.automatic_optimization = False # Multiple optimizers (e.g.: GANs) def training_step(self, batch, batch_idx): opt1, opt2 = self.optimizers() # do training_step with encoder ... opt1.step() # do training_step with decoder ... opt2.step()
Note
When
accumulate_grad_batches
> 1, the loss returned here will be automatically normalized byaccumulate_grad_batches
internally.
- 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.
- Parameters:
batch – The output of your
DataLoader
.batch_idx (
int
) – 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
# 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.
fontr.fontr.logger module
fontr.fontr.transforms module
- class AddGaussianNoise(mean=0.0, std=1.0)[source]
Bases:
Module
Adds gaussian noise to a given tensor