Awesome
<div align="center"> <img src="https://www.jwfromm.com/images/Riptide-logo.png" width="400"> </div>Riptide is a collection of functions, scripts, and tools that enable ultra low-bitwidth neural networks to be easily trained and deployed at high speeds. Riptide is built on top of Tensorflow for training and TVM for deployment. Riptide models uses a novel operator called Fused Glue to replace all floating point operations inside of a binary neural network. By combining Fused Glue layers with other optimizations such as Bitpack Fusion, Riptide is able to generate models that run 4-12X faster than floating point equivalents on the Raspberry Pi. For full implementation details see our paper, which was presented at MLSys 2020 and can be found here.
Getting Started
Requirements
Riptide works best with Tensorflow 2.1. If you don't have tensorflow,
you can install it with pip install tensorflow
.
Next, we can install the prerequisites to TVM
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install -y python3 \\
python3-dev \\
python3-setuptools gcc \\
libtinfo-dev zlib1g-dev \\
build-essential \\
cmake \\
libedit-dev \\
libxml2-dev
pip3 install --user numpy \\
decorator \\
attrs \\
tornado \\
psutil \\
xgboost
Installing Riptide
First, recursively clone Riptide (which has a custom fork of TVM as a submodule).
git clone --recursive git@github.com:jwfromm/riptide.git
Next we need to build the TVM submodule and set up our environment variables to properly detect it.
cd Riptide/tvm && mkdir build && cp cmake/config.cmake build && cd build
cmake ..
make -j4
export TVM_HOME={RiptideLocation}/tvm
export PYTHONPATH=$TVM_HOME/python:$TVM_HOME/topi/python:$PYTHONPATH
Note that if you want to compile a model for an embedded platform like the
Raspberry Pi, you'll need to install llvm-dev
and set USE_LLVM
to ON
in
config.cmake
.
Consider adding the above environment variables to your .bashrc
to save
time later.
You should now be able to import Riptide in Python and are ready to train and deploy a binary model!
We also provide a prebuilt docker image in Riptide/docker
to make deployment
of Riptide across environments easier.
Training a Binary Model
Riptide provides implementations of various binary layers and functions in
binary_layers.py
and binary_funcs.py respectively. Although you don't need to examine or change these
files to train a model, they are written to be easy to read and adjust for other low-bit algorithms.
We provide a selection of binary models and their floating point equivalents in riptide/models.
These include Alexnet, VGGNet, various Resnets, and SqueezeNet. You can create your own binary models by using
BinaryConv2D
, BinaryDense
, and BatchNormalization
imported from
binary_layers.
To train a model, navigate to scripts and take a look at train_imagenet.py. This script provides a simple
and efficient interface for training models on the ImageNet Dataset. We use Tensorflow Datasets
to prepare and load images so you'll first need to download ImageNet and have tfds.load
generate tfrecords.
Once ImageNet is ready, you can start a training job as follows:
python train_imagenet.py --model alexnet --experiment 2A1W --gpus 0,1,2,3 --binary --bits 2 --model_dir ~/models
This will start training an alexnet binarized with 2 bit activations and 1 bit weights on 4 GPUs.
Checkpoints and tensorboard logs will be saved to model_dir/alexnet_2A1W
. Riptide automatically logs
quite a bit of useful information during training including binary histograms that are pretty neat.
To look at these logs run.
tensorboard --logdir ~/models/
Then open a browser and navigate to localhost:6006.
Training should take somewhere between a day or two to a few weeks depending on your model and number of GPUs. Once finished, you can load the trained model as follows:
First recreate the model architecture.
import tensorflow as tf
from riptide.binary.binary_funcs import *
from riptide.binary.binary_layers import Config
from riptide.get_models import get_model
actQ = DQuantize
weightQ = XQuantize
config = Config(actQ=actQ, weightQ=weightQ, bits=2.0)
with config:
model = get_model('alexnet')
Then we can load the checkpoint weights after initializing shapes.
dummy_in = tf.keras.layers.Input(shape=[224, 224, 3], batch_size=1)
dummy_out = model(dummy_in)
model.load_weights('~/models/alexnet_2A2W/model.ckpt-xxxxx)
Where xxxxx
is the checkpoint identifier you want to load.
Deploying a Binary Model
Once you've trained a binary model and are ready to run it on something like a Raspberry Pi, it's quite simple to convert the keras model and weights into a Relay representation.
import tvm
from tvm import relay
mod, params = relay.frontend.from_keras(
model,
shape={'input_1': [1, 224, 224, 3]},
layout='NHWC')
Then, we can compile the relay graph for a specific hardware platform, in this case an ARM cpu.
target = tvm.garget.arm_cpu("rasp3b")
with relay.build_config(opt_level=3):
graph, lib, params = relay.build(mod, target=target, params=params)
The output of relay.build
is a set of artifacts that can be used
to run our network on an ARM CPU using the TVM runtime. One simple
way to do that is through a TVM RPC server.
from tvm import autotvm
from tvm.contrib import util
import tvm.contrib.graph_runtime as runtime
# Export the runtime library
tmp = util.tempdir()
lib_fname = tmp.relpath('net.tar')
lib.export_library(lib_fname)
# Connect to the RPC server.
remote = autotvm.measure.request_remote(
'rasp3b', 'tracker', 9191, timeout=10000)
# Upload library and prepare to run.
remote.upload(lib_fname)
rlib = remote.load_module('net.tar')
# Create TVM runtime.
module = runtime.create(graph, rlib, ctx)
# Upload model parameters.
module.set_input(**params)
# Set input and run the model
module.set_input(0, np.random.uniform(size=(1, 224, 224, 3)))
module.run()
print(module.get_output(0))
)
We can also easily measure runtime using a TVM time_evaluator
.
ftimer = module.module.time_evaluator(
"run", remote.cpu(), number=10, repeat=1)
prof_res = np.array(ftimer().results) * 1000 # Convert to milliseconds
print("Mean inference time (std dev): %.2f ms (%.2f ms)" %
(np.mean(prof_res), np.std(prof_res)))
Other Useful Things
There are a bunch of potentially useful Jupyter notebooks located in notebooks. Digging through some might help find useful examples depending on what you're trying to do.
We also provide an implementation of Riptide inside of the LARQ library, which is a similar binary network training framework. If you're interested in this implementation please see the riptide branch of our fork and the corresponding riptide branch of the LARQ model zoo.