The primary objective for Deep Lake is to enable users to manage their data more easily so they can train better ML models. This tutorial shows you how to train an object detection and instance segmentation model while streaming data from a Deep Lake dataset stored in the cloud.
Since these models are often complex, this tutorial will focus on data-preprocessing for connecting the data to the model. The user should take additional steps to scale up the code for logging, collecting additional metrics, model testing, and running on GPUs.
This tutorial is inspired by this PyTorch tutorial on training object detection and segmentation models.
Data Preprocessing
The first step is to select a dataset for training. This tutorial uses the COCO dataset that has already been converted into Deep Lake format. It is a multi-modal image dataset that contains bounding boxes, segmentation masks, keypoints, and other data.
import deeplakeimport numpy as npimport mathimport sysimport timeimport torchvisionimport albumentations as Afrom albumentations.pytorch import ToTensorV2import torchfrom torchvision.models.detection.faster_rcnn import FastRCNNPredictorfrom torchvision.models.detection.mask_rcnn import MaskRCNNPredictorimport torchvision.models.detection.mask_rcnn# Connect to the training datasetds_train = deeplake.load('hub://activeloop/coco-train')
Note that the dataset can be visualized at the link printed by the deeplake.load command above.
For complex dataset like this one, it's critical to carefully define the pre-processing function that returns the torch tensors that are use for training. Here we use an Albumentations augmentation pipeline combined with additional pre-processing steps that are necessary for this particular model.
# Augmentation pipeline using Albumentationstform_train = A.Compose([ A.RandomSizedBBoxSafeCrop(width=128, height=128, erosion_rate =0.2), A.HorizontalFlip(p=0.5), A.Normalize(mean=(0.485, 0.456, 0.406), std=(0.229, 0.224, 0.225)),ToTensorV2(), # transpose_mask = True], bbox_params=A.BboxParams(format='pascal_voc', label_fields=['class_labels', 'bbox_ids'], min_area=25, min_visibility=0.6)) # 'label_fields' and 'box_ids' are all the fields that will be cut when a bounding box is cut.
# Transformation function for pre-processing the deeplake sample before sending it to the modeldeftransform(sample_in):# Convert boxes to Pascal VOC format boxes = coco_2_pascal(sample_in['boxes'])# Convert any grayscale images to RGB images = sample_in['images']if images.shape[2] ==1: images = np.repeat(images, int(3/images.shape[2]), axis =2)# Pass all data to the Albumentations transformation# Mask must be converted to a list transformed = tform_train(image = images, masks = [sample_in['masks'][:,:,i].astype(np.uint8) for i in range(sample_in['masks'].shape[2])],
bboxes = boxes, bbox_ids = np.arange(boxes.shape[0]), class_labels = sample_in['categories'], )# Convert boxes and labels from lists to torch tensors, because Albumentations does not do that automatically. # Be very careful with rounding and casting to integers, becuase that can create bounding boxes with invalid dimensions
labels_torch = torch.tensor(transformed['class_labels'], dtype = torch.int64) boxes_torch = torch.zeros((len(transformed['bboxes']), 4), dtype = torch.int64)for b, box inenumerate(transformed['bboxes']): boxes_torch[b,:] = torch.tensor(np.round(box))# Filter out the masks that were dropped by filtering of bounding box area and visibility masks_torch = torch.zeros((len(transformed['bbox_ids']), transformed['image'].shape[1], transformed['image'].shape[2]), dtype = torch.int64)
iflen(transformed['bbox_ids'])>0: masks_torch = torch.tensor(np.stack([transformed['masks'][i] for i in transformed['bbox_ids']], axis = 0), dtype = torch.uint8)
# Put annotations in a separate object target = {'masks': masks_torch, 'labels': labels_torch, 'boxes': boxes_torch}return transformed['image'], target# Conversion script for bounding boxes from coco to Pascal VOC formatdefcoco_2_pascal(boxes): # Convert bounding boxes to Pascal VOC format and clip bounding boxes to make sure they have non-negative width and height
return np.stack((boxes[:,0], boxes[:,1], boxes[:,0]+np.clip(boxes[:,2], 1, None), boxes[:,1]+np.clip(boxes[:,3], 1, None)), axis = 1)
defcollate_fn(batch):returntuple(zip(*batch))
You can now create a PyTorch dataloader that connects the Deep Lake dataset to the PyTorch model using the provided method ds.pytorch(). This method automatically applies the transformation function and takes care of random shuffling (if desired). The num_workers parameter can be used to parallelize data preprocessing, which is critical for ensuring that preprocessing does not bottleneck the overall training workflow.
Since the dataset contains many tensors that are not used for training, a list of tensors for loading is specified in order to avoid streaming of unused data.
batch_size =8train_loader = ds_train.pytorch(num_workers =2, shuffle =False, tensors = ['images', 'masks', 'categories', 'boxes'], # Specify the tensors that are needed, so we don't load unused data
transform = transform, batch_size = batch_size, collate_fn = collate_fn)
Model Definition
This tutorial uses a pre-trained torchvision neural network from the torchvision.models module.
Training is performed on a GPU if possible. Otherwise, it's on a CPU.
# Helper function for loading the modeldefget_model_instance_segmentation(num_classes):# Load an instance segmentation model pre-trained on COCO model = torchvision.models.detection.maskrcnn_resnet50_fpn(pretrained=True)# Get number of input features for the classifier in_features = model.roi_heads.box_predictor.cls_score.in_features# replace the pre-trained head with a new one model.roi_heads.box_predictor =FastRCNNPredictor(in_features, num_classes)# Get the number of input features for the mask classifier in_features_mask = model.roi_heads.mask_predictor.conv5_mask.in_channels hidden_layer =256# Replace the mask predictor with a new one model.roi_heads.mask_predictor =MaskRCNNPredictor(in_features_mask, hidden_layer, num_classes)return model
Let's initialize the model and optimizer.
model =get_model_instance_segmentation(num_classes)model.to(device)# Specity the optimizerparams = [p for p in model.parameters()if p.requires_grad]optimizer = torch.optim.SGD(params, lr=0.005, momentum=0.9, weight_decay=0.0005)
Training the Model
Helper functions for training and testing the model are defined. Note that the output from Deep Lake's PyTorch dataloader is fed into the model just like data from ordinary PyTorch dataloaders.
# Helper function for training for 1 epochdeftrain_one_epoch(model,optimizer,data_loader,device): model.train() start_time = time.time()for i, data inenumerate(data_loader): images =list(image.to(device) for image in data[0]) targets = [{k: v.to(device)for k, v in t.items()}for t in data[1]] loss_dict =model(images, targets) losses =sum(loss for loss in loss_dict.values()) loss_value = losses.item()# Print performance statistics batch_time = time.time() speed = (i+1)/(batch_time-start_time)print('[%5d] loss: %.3f, speed: %.2f'% (i, loss_value, speed))ifnot math.isfinite(loss_value):print(f"Loss is {loss_value}, stopping training")print(loss_dict)break optimizer.zero_grad() losses.backward() optimizer.step()
The model and data are ready for training 🚀!
# Train the model for 1 epochnum_epochs =1for epoch inrange(num_epochs):# loop over the dataset multiple timesprint("------------------ Training Epoch {} ------------------".format(epoch+1))train_one_epoch(model, optimizer, train_loader, device)# --- Insert Testing Code Here ---print('Finished Training')
Congrats! You successfully trained an object detection and instance segmentation model while streaming data directly from the cloud! 🎉