Repository providing a wide range of self-supervised pretrained models for computer vision tasks.

Overview

Hierarchical Pretraining: Research Repository

This is a research repository for reproducing the results from the project "Self-supervised pretraining improves self-supervised pretraining." You can find the arXiv prepint here: https://arxiv.org/abs/2103.12718

Installation

# repo
git clone [email protected]:cjrd/base-training.git

# setup environment
conda create -n hpt python=3.7 ipython
conda activate hpt

# NOTE: if you are not using CUDA 10.2, you need to change the 10.2 in this file appropriately
# (check CUDA version with e.g. `cat /usr/local/cuda/version.txt`)
conda install pytorch==1.6.0 torchvision==0.7.0 cudatoolkit=10.2 -c pytorch

# install local submodules
cd OpenSelfSup
pip install -v -e .

Data installation

The data you need will depend on your goals, but generally speaking, download the RESISC-45 dataset to make sure you have everything working correctly.

Pretrained Models

cd OpenSelfSup/data/basetrain_chkpts/
./download-pretrained-models.sh

RESISC-45

RESISC-45 contains 31,500 aerial images, covering 45 scene classes with 700 images in each class.

# cd to the directory where you want the data, $DATA
wget https://people.eecs.berkeley.edu/~cjrd/data/resisc45.tar.gz
tar xf resisc45.tar.gz

# replace/set $DATA and $CODE as appropriate
ln -s $DATA/resisc45 $CODE/OpenSelfSup/data/resisc45/all

Verify Install

Check installation by pretraining using mocov2, extracting the model weights, evaluating the representations, and then viewing the results:

cd OpenSelfSup

# Sanity check: MoCo for 20 epoch on 4 gpus
./tools/dist_train.sh configs/selfsup/moco/r50_v2_resisc_in_basetrain_20ep.py 4

# make some variables so its clear what's happening
CHECKPOINT=work_dirs/selfsup/moco/r50_v2_resisc_in_basetrain_20ep/epoch_20.pth
BACKBONE=work_dirs/selfsup/moco/r50_v2_resisc_in_basetrain_20ep/epoch_20_moco_in_basetrain.pth
# Extract the backbone
python tools/extract_backbone_weights.py ${CHECKPOINT} ${BACKBONE}

# Evaluate the representations
./benchmarks/dist_train_linear.sh configs/benchmarks/linear_classification/resisc45/r50_last.py ${BACKBONE}

# View the results
cd work_dirs
# you may need to install tensorboard
tensorboard --logdir .

Base Training

Right now we assume ImageNet base trained models.

cd OpenSelfSup/data/basetrain_chkpts/
./download-pretrained-models.sh

Pretraining With a New Dataset

We have a handy set of config generators to make pretraining with a new dataset easy and consistent!

FIRST, you will need the image pixel mean/std of your dataset, if you don't have it, you can do:

./compute-dataset-pixel-mean-std.py --data /path/to/image-folder --numworkers 20 --batchsize 256

where image-folder has the structure from ImageFolder in pytorch
class/image-name.jp[e]g
or whatever image extension you're using

if your dataset is not arranged in this way, you can either: (i) use symlinks to put it in this structure (ii) update the above script to read in your data

NEXT, copy the pretraining template

cd utils
cp templates/pretraining-config-template.sh pretrain-configs/my-dataset-config.sh
# edit pretrain-configs/my-dataset-config.sh

# once edited, generate the project
./gen-pretrain-project.sh pretrain-configs/my-dataset-config.sh

What just happened? We generated a bunch of pretraining configs in the following location (take a loot at all of these files to get a feel for how this works):

OpenSelfSup/configs/hpt-pretrain/${shortname}

NEXT, you're ready to kick off a trial run to make sure the pretraining is working as expected =)

# the `-t` flag means `trial`: it'll only run 1 20 epoch pretraining
 ./utils/pretrain-runner.sh -t -d OpenSelfSup/configs/hpt-pretrain/${shortname}

NEXT, if this works, kick off the full training. NOTE: you can kick this off multiple times as long as the config directories share the same filesystem

# simply removing the `-t` flag from above
 ./utils/pretrain-runner.sh -d OpenSelfSup/configs/hpt-pretrain/${shortname}

NEXT, if you want to perform BYOL pretraining, add -b flag.

# simply add the `-b` flag to above. Currently, we only do it on Chexpert, Resisc, and Bdd for Exp3
 ./utils/pretrain-runner.sh -d OpenSelfSup/configs/hpt-pretrain/${shortname} -b

Congratulations: you've launch a full hierarchical pretraining experiment.

FAQs/PROBLEMS?

  • How does pretrain-runner.sh keep track of what's been pretrained?
    • In each config directory, it creates a .pretrain-status folder to keep track of what's processing/finished. See them with e.g. find OpenSelfSup/configs/hpt-pretrain -name '.pretrain-status'
  • How to redo a pretraining, e.g. because it crashed or something changed? Remove the
    • Remove the associate .proc or .done file. Find these e.g.
    find OpenSelfSup/configs/hpt-pretrain -name '.proc'
    find OpenSelfSup/configs/hpt-pretrain -name '.done'

Evaluating Pretrained Representations

This has been simplified to simply:

./utils/pretrain-evaluator.sh -b OpenSelfSup/work_dirs/hpt-pretrain/${shortname}/ -d OpenSelfSup/configs/hpt-pretrain/${shortname}

where -b is the backbone directory and -d is the config directory. This command also works for cross-dataset evaluation (e.g. evaluate models trained on Resic45 and evaluate on UC Merced dataset).

FAQ

Where are the checkpoints and logs? E.g., if you pass in configs/hpt-pretrain/resisc as the config directory, then the working directories for this evalution is e.g. work_dirs/hpt-pretrain/resisc/linear-eval/....

Finetuning

Assuming you generated the pretraining project as specified above, finetuning is as simple as:

./utils/finetune-runner.sh -d ./OpenSelfSup/configs/hpt-pretrain/${shortname}/finetune/ -b ./OpenSelfSup/work_dirs/hpt-pretrain/${shortname}/

where -b is the backbone directory and -d is the config directory Note: to finetune using other backbones, simply pass in a different backbone directory (the script searches for final_backbone.pth files in the provided directory tree)

Finetuning only on pretrained checkpoints with BEST linear analysis

First, specify the pretraining epochs which gives the best linear evaluation result in ./utils/top-linear-analysis-ckpts.txt. Here is an example:

# dataset best-moco-bt best-sup-bt best-no-bt
chest_xray_kids 5000 10000 100000
resisc 5000 50000 100000
chexpert 50000 50000 400000

, in which for chest_xray_kids dataset, 5000-iters, 10000-iters, 100000-iters are the best pretrained models under moco base-training, imagenet-supervised base-training, and no base-training, respectively.

Second, run the following command to perform finetuning only on the best checkpoints (same as above, except that the change of script name):

./utils/finetune-runner-top-only.sh -d ./OpenSelfSup/configs/hpt-pretrain/${shortname}/finetune/ -b ./OpenSelfSup/work_dirs/hpt-pretrain/${shortname}

Pretraining on top of pretraining

Using the output of previously pretrained models, it is very easy to correctly setup pretraining on top of the pretraining. Simply create a new config

utils/pretrain-configs/dataname1-dataname2.sh

(see resisc-ucmerced.sh for an example)

and then set the basetrained models to be the final_backbone.pth from the output of the last pretrained. e.g. for using resisc-45 outputs:

export basetrain_weights=(
    "work_dirs/hpt-pretrain/resisc/moco_v2_800ep_basetrain/50000-iters/final_backbone.pth"

    "work_dirs/hpt-pretrain/resisc/imagenet_r50_supervised_basetrain/50000-iters/final_backbone.pth"

    "work_dirs/hpt-pretrain/resisc/no_basetrain/200000-iters/final_backbone.pth"
)

(see resisc-ucmerced.sh for an example)

To select which backbones to use, evaluate the linear performance from the various source outputs (e.g. all the resisc pretrained outputs) on the target data (e.g. on uc-merced data).

Then simply generate the project and execute the pretraining as normal:

./gen-pretrain-project.sh pretrain-configs/dataname1-dataname2.sh

./pretrain-runner.sh -d OpenSelfSup/configs/hpt-pretrain/$dataname1-dataname2

Object Detection / Semantic Segmentation

Object detection/segmentation uses detectron2 and takes place in the directory

OpenSelfSup/benchmarks/detection

First: Check if the dataset configs you need are already present in configs. E.g. if you're working with CoCo, you'll see the following 2 configs:

configs/coco_R_50_C4_2x.yaml
configs/coco_R_50_C4_2x_moco.yaml

We'll use the config with the _moco suffix for all obj det and segmentation. If your configs already exist, skip the next step.

Next: assuming your configs do not exist, set up the configs you need for your dataset by copying an existing set of configs

cp configs/coco_R_50_C4_2x.yaml ${MYDATA}_R50_C4_2x.yaml
cp configs/coco_R_50_C4_2x_moco.yaml ${MYDATA}_R50_C4_2x_moco.yaml

Edit ${MYDATA}_R50_C4_2x.yaml and set MIN_SIZE_TRAIN and MIN_SIZE_TEST to be appropriate for your dataset. Also, rename TRAIN and TEST to have your dataset name, set MASK_ON to True if doing semantic segmentation, and update STEPS and MAX_ITER if running the training for a different amount of time is appropriate (check relevant publications / codebases to set the training schedule).

Edit ${MYDATA}_R50_C4_2x_moco.yaml and set PIXEL_MEAN and PIXEL_STD (use compute-dataset-pixel-mean-std.py script above, if you don't know them).

Then, edit train_net.py and add the appropriate data registry lines for your train/val data

register_coco_instances("dataname_train", {}, "obj-labels-in-coco-format_train.json", "datasets/dataname/dataname_train")
register_coco_instances("dataname_val", {}, "obj-labels-in-coco-format_val.json", "datasets/dataname/dataname_val")

Then, setup symlinks to your data under datasets/dataname/dataname_train and datasets/dataname/dataname_val, where you replace dataname with your dataname used in the config/registry.

Next, convert your backbone(s) to detectron format, e.g. (NOTE: I recommend keeping backbones in the same directory that they are originally present in, and appending a -detectron2 suffix)

python convert-pretrain-to-detectron2.py ../../data/basetrain_chkpts/imagenet_r50_supervised.pth ../../data/basetrain_chkpts/imagenet_r50_supervised-detectron2.pth

Next kick off training

python train_net.py --config-file configs/DATANAME_R_50_C4_24k_moco.yaml --num-gpus 4 OUTPUT_DIR results/${UNIQUE_DATANAME_EXACTLY_DESCRIBING_THIS_RUN}/ TEST.EVAL_PERIOD 2000 MODEL.WEIGHTS ../../data/basetrain_chkpts/imagenet_r50_supervised-detectron2.pth SOLVER.CHECKPOINT_PERIOD ${INT_HOW_OFTEN_TO_CHECKPOINT}

results will be in results/${UNIQUE_DATANAME_EXACTLY_DESCRIBING_THIS_RUN}, and you can use tensorboard to view them.

Commit and Share Results

Run the following command to grab all results (linear analysis, finetunes, etc) and put them into the appropriate json results file in results/:

./utils/update-all-results.sh

You can verify the results in results and then add the new/updated results file to git and commit.

Did you get an error message such as:

!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Please investigate as your results may not be complete.
(see errors in file: base-training/utils/tmp/errors.txt)

will not include partial result for base-training/utils/../OpenSelfSup/work_dirs/hpt-pretrain/resisc/finetune/1000-labels/imagenet_r50_supervised_basetrain/50000-iters-2500-iter-0_01-lr-finetune/20200911_170916.log.json
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

This means that this particular evaluation run did not appear to run for enough iterations. Investigate the provided log file, rerun any necessary evaluations, and remove the offending log file.

Debugging this script this script finds the top val accuracy, and save the corresponding test accuracy using the following script:

./utils/agg-results.sh

which outputs results to utils/tmp/results.txt and errors to utils/tmp/errors.txt. Look at this file if your results aren't being generated correctly.

Generate plots

cd utils
python plot-results.py

See plots in directory plot-results (you can also pass in a --data flag to only generate plots for a specific dataset, e.g. python plot-results.py --data resisc)

To plot the eval & test acc curves, use ./utils/plot.py

cd utils
python plot.py --fname PLOT_NAME --folder FOLDER_CONTAINING_DIFFERENT_.PTH_FOLDERs

To Generate plot for full finetuning, do

bash utils/plot-results-exp-2.sh

See plot in directory plot-results/exp-2.

To Generate plot for HPT Pretraining, do

bash utils/plot-results-exp-3.sh

See plot in directory plot-results/exp-3.

Getting activations for similarity measures

Run get_acts.py with a model used for a classifaction task (one that has a test/val set).
Alternatively, run dist_get_acts as follows:

bash dist_get_acts.sh ${CFG} ${CHECKPOINT} [--grab_conv...]

Default behavior is to grab the entire batch of linear layers. Setting --grab_conv will capture a single batch of all convolutional layers.
Layers will be saved in ${WORK_DIR}/model_acts.npz. The npz contains a dictionary which maps layer names to the activations. TODO: add similarity documentation. Similarity measures will be a seperate PR.

Important Notes:

  • If not using the provided experiment management scripts: add a new config file for each base training, even small variations, since the evaluation stage assumes a unique filename for each config (otherwise the checkpoints will overwrite the .previous versions).
  • If not using 4 GPUs, update the learning rate to new_lr = old_lr * new_ngpus / 4

Adding new repositories

  1. Add new repositories as a subtree to the base repository (next to this readme), e.g. this is what I used for OpenSelfSup (subtree cheatsheet):
git remote add openselfsup [email protected]:open-mmlab/OpenSelfSup.git
git fetch openselfsup
git subtree add --prefix=OpenSelfSup openselfsup/master --squash
  1. After updating your conda env for the new repo, update the conda-env.yml file as follows:
conda env export --from-history > conda-env.yml

Debugging and Developing Within OpenSelfSup

Here's a command that will allow breakpoints (WARNING: the results with the debug=true flag SHOULD NOT BE USED -- they disable sync batch norms and are not comparable to other results):

# from OpenSelfSup/
# replace with your desired config
python tools/train.py configs/hpt-pretrain/resisc/moco_v2_800ep_basetrain/500-iters.py --work_dir work_dirs/debug --debug

Owner
Colorado Reed
CS PhD student at Berkeley
Colorado Reed
Official repository for the paper F, B, Alpha Matting

FBA Matting Official repository for the paper F, B, Alpha Matting. This paper and project is under heavy revision for peer reviewed publication, and s

Marco Forte 404 Jan 05, 2023
A annotation of yolov5-5.0

代码版本:0714 commit #4000 $ git clone https://github.com/ultralytics/yolov5 $ cd yolov5 $ git checkout 720aaa65c8873c0d87df09e3c1c14f3581d4ea61 这个代码只是注释版

Laughing 229 Dec 17, 2022
Using the provided dataset which includes various book features, in order to predict the price of books, using various proposed methods and models.

Using the provided dataset which includes various book features, in order to predict the price of books, using various proposed methods and models.

Nikolas Petrou 1 Jan 13, 2022
Code for Towards Streaming Perception (ECCV 2020) :car:

sAP — Code for Towards Streaming Perception ECCV Best Paper Honorable Mention Award Feb 2021: Announcing the Streaming Perception Challenge (CVPR 2021

Martin Li 85 Dec 22, 2022
The Video-based Accident Detection System built in Python

Accident-detection-system About the Project This Repository contains the Video-based Accident Detection System built in Python. Contributors Yukta Gop

SURYAVANSHI SNEHAL BALKRISHNA 50 Dec 07, 2022
Large scale and asynchronous Hyperparameter Optimization at your fingertip.

Syne Tune This package provides state-of-the-art distributed hyperparameter optimizers (HPO) where trials can be evaluated with several backend option

Amazon Web Services - Labs 236 Jan 01, 2023
CondenseNet: Light weighted CNN for mobile devices

CondenseNets This repository contains the code (in PyTorch) for "CondenseNet: An Efficient DenseNet using Learned Group Convolutions" paper by Gao Hua

Shichen Liu 690 Nov 30, 2022
A deep learning based semantic search platform that computes similarity scores between provided query and documents

semanticsearch This is a deep learning based semantic search platform that computes similarity scores between provided query and documents. Documents

1 Nov 30, 2021
reimpliment of DFANet: Deep Feature Aggregation for Real-Time Semantic Segmentation

DFANet This repo is an unofficial pytorch implementation of DFANet:Deep Feature Aggregation for Real-Time Semantic Segmentation log 2019.4.16 After 48

shen hui xiang 248 Oct 21, 2022
[CIKM 2019] Code and dataset for "Fi-GNN: Modeling Feature Interactions via Graph Neural Networks for CTR Prediction"

FiGNN for CTR prediction The code and data for our paper in CIKM2019: Fi-GNN: Modeling Feature Interactions via Graph Neural Networks for CTR Predicti

Big Data and Multi-modal Computing Group, CRIPAC 75 Dec 30, 2022
A clean and robust Pytorch implementation of PPO on continuous action space.

PPO-Continuous-Pytorch I found the current implementation of PPO on continuous action space is whether somewhat complicated or not stable. And this is

XinJingHao 56 Dec 16, 2022
A PyTorch library and evaluation platform for end-to-end compression research

CompressAI CompressAI (compress-ay) is a PyTorch library and evaluation platform for end-to-end compression research. CompressAI currently provides: c

InterDigital 680 Jan 06, 2023
Imaging, analysis, and simulation software for radio interferometry

ehtim (eht-imaging) Python modules for simulating and manipulating VLBI data and producing images with regularized maximum likelihood methods. This ve

Andrew Chael 5.2k Dec 28, 2022
An example of Scatterbrain implementation (combining local attention and Performer)

An example of Scatterbrain implementation (combining local attention and Performer)

HazyResearch 97 Jan 02, 2023
QRec: A Python Framework for quick implementation of recommender systems (TensorFlow Based)

Introduction QRec is a Python framework for recommender systems (Supported by Python 3.7.4 and Tensorflow 1.14+) in which a number of influential and

Yu 1.4k Jan 01, 2023
Source code of D-HAN: Dynamic News Recommendation with Hierarchical Attention Network

D-HAN The source code of D-HAN This is the source code of D-HAN: Dynamic News Recommendation with Hierarchical Attention Network. However, only the co

30 Sep 22, 2022
Adversarial Texture Optimization from RGB-D Scans (CVPR 2020).

AdversarialTexture Adversarial Texture Optimization from RGB-D Scans (CVPR 2020). Scanning Data Download Please refer to data directory for details. B

Jingwei Huang 153 Nov 28, 2022
The Python ensemble sampling toolkit for affine-invariant MCMC

emcee The Python ensemble sampling toolkit for affine-invariant MCMC emcee is a stable, well tested Python implementation of the affine-invariant ense

Dan Foreman-Mackey 1.3k Dec 31, 2022
ByteTrack: Multi-Object Tracking by Associating Every Detection Box

ByteTrack ByteTrack is a simple, fast and strong multi-object tracker. ByteTrack: Multi-Object Tracking by Associating Every Detection Box Yifu Zhang,

Yifu Zhang 2.9k Jan 04, 2023
Ensemble Visual-Inertial Odometry (EnVIO)

Ensemble Visual-Inertial Odometry (EnVIO) Authors : Jae Hyung Jung, Yeongkwon Choe, and Chan Gook Park 1. Overview This is a ROS package of Ensemble V

Jae Hyung Jung 95 Jan 03, 2023