Export and run other machine learning models

davidmezzetti

David Mezzetti

Posted on October 14, 2021

Export and run other machine learning models

txtai primarily has support for Hugging Face Transformers and ONNX models. This enables txtai to hook into the rich model framework available in Python, export this functionality via the API to other languages (JavaScript, Java, Go, Rust) and even export and natively load models with ONNX.

What about other machine learning frameworks? Say we have an existing TF-IDF + Logistic Regression model that has been well tuned. Can this model be exported to ONNX and used in txtai for labeling and similarity queries? Or what about a simple PyTorch text classifier? Yes, both of these can be done!

With the onnxmltools library, traditional models from scikit-learn, XGBoost and others can be exported to ONNX and loaded with txtai. Additionally, Hugging Face's trainer module can train generic PyTorch modules. This notebook will walk through all these examples.

Install dependencies

Install txtai and all dependencies. Since this article uses ONNX exports, we need to install the pipeline extras package.

pip install txtai[pipeline,similarity] datasets
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Train a TF-IDF + Logistic Regression model

For this example, we'll load the emotion dataset from Hugging Face datasets and build a TF-IDF + Logistic Regression model with scikit-learn.

The emotion dataset has the following labels:

  • sadness (0)
  • joy (1)
  • love (2)
  • anger (3)
  • fear (4)
  • surprise (5)
from datasets import load_dataset

from sklearn.feature_extraction.text import TfidfVectorizer
from sklearn.linear_model import LogisticRegression
from sklearn.pipeline import Pipeline

ds = load_dataset("emotion")

# Train the model
pipeline = Pipeline([
    ('tfidf', TfidfVectorizer()),
    ('lr', LogisticRegression(max_iter=250))
])

pipeline.fit(ds["train"]["text"], ds["train"]["label"])

# Determine accuracy on validation set
results = pipeline.predict(ds["validation"]["text"])
labels = ds["validation"]["label"]

results = [results[x] == label for x, label in enumerate(labels)]
print("Accuracy =", sum(results) / len(ds["validation"]))
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Accuracy = 0.8595
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86% accuracy - not too bad! While we all get caught up in deep learning and advanced methods, good ole TF-IDF + Logistic Regression is still a solid performer and runs much faster. If that level of accuracy works, no reason to overcomplicate things.

Export and load with txtai

The next section exports this model to ONNX and shows how the model can be used for similarity queries.

from txtai.pipeline import Labels, MLOnnx, Similarity

def tokenize(inputs, **kwargs):
    if isinstance(inputs, str):
        inputs = [inputs]

    return {"input_ids": [[x] for x in inputs]}

def query(model, tokenizer, multilabel=False):
    # Load models into similarity pipeline
    similarity = Similarity((model, tokenizer), dynamic=False)

    # Add labels to model
    similarity.pipeline.model.config.id2label = {0: "sadness", 1: "joy", 2: "love", 3: "anger", 4: "fear", 5: "surprise"}
    similarity.pipeline.model.config.label2id = dict((v, k) for k, v in similarity.pipeline.model.config.id2label.items())

    inputs = ["that caught me off guard", "I didn t see that coming", "i feel bad", "What a wonderful goal!"]
    scores = similarity("joy", inputs, multilabel)
    for uid, score in scores[:5]:
        print(inputs[uid], score)

# Export to ONNX
onnx = MLOnnx()
model = onnx(pipeline)

# Create labels pipeline using scikit-learn ONNX model
sklabels = Labels((model, tokenize), dynamic=False)

# Add labels to model
sklabels.pipeline.model.config.id2label = {0: "sadness", 1: "joy", 2: "love", 3: "anger", 4: "fear", 5: "surprise"}
sklabels.pipeline.model.config.label2id = dict((v, k) for k, v in sklabels.pipeline.model.config.id2label.items())

# Run test query using model
query(model, tokenize, None)
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What a wonderful goal! 0.909473717212677
I didn t see that coming 0.47113093733787537
that caught me off guard 0.42067453265190125
i feel bad 0.019547615200281143
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txtai can use a standard text classification model for similarity queries, where the label(s) are a list of fixed queries. The output above shows the best results for the query "joy".

Train a PyTorch model

The next section defines a simple PyTorch text classifier. The transformers library has a trainer package that supports training PyTorch models, assuming some standard conventions/naming is used.

# Set predictable seeds
import os
import random
import torch

import numpy as np

from torch import nn
from torch.nn import CrossEntropyLoss
from transformers import AutoConfig, AutoTokenizer

from txtai.models import Registry
from txtai.pipeline import HFTrainer

from transformers.modeling_outputs import SequenceClassifierOutput

def seed(seed=42):
    random.seed(seed)
    os.environ['PYTHONHASHSEED'] = str(seed)
    np.random.seed(seed)
    torch.manual_seed(seed)
    torch.cuda.manual_seed(seed)
    torch.backends.cudnn.deterministic = True

class Simple(nn.Module):
    def __init__(self, vocab, dimensions, labels):
        super().__init__()

        self.config = AutoConfig.from_pretrained("bert-base-uncased")
        self.labels = labels

        self.embedding = nn.EmbeddingBag(vocab, dimensions)
        self.classifier = nn.Linear(dimensions, labels)
        self.init_weights()

    def init_weights(self):
        initrange = 0.5
        self.embedding.weight.data.uniform_(-initrange, initrange)
        self.classifier.weight.data.uniform_(-initrange, initrange)
        self.classifier.bias.data.zero_()

    def forward(self, input_ids=None, labels=None, **kwargs):
        embeddings = self.embedding(input_ids)
        logits = self.classifier(embeddings)

        loss = None
        if labels is not None:
            loss_fct = CrossEntropyLoss()
            loss = loss_fct(logits.view(-1, self.labels), labels.view(-1))

        return SequenceClassifierOutput(
            loss=loss,
            logits=logits,
        )

# Set seed for reproducibility
seed()

# Define model
tokenizer = AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained("bert-base-uncased")
model = Simple(tokenizer.vocab_size, 128, len(ds["train"].unique("label")))

# Train model
train = HFTrainer()
model, tokenizer = train((model, tokenizer), ds["train"], per_device_train_batch_size=8, learning_rate=1e-3, num_train_epochs=15, logging_steps=10000)

# Register custom model to fully support pipelines
Registry.register(model)

# Create labels pipeline using PyTorch model
thlabels = Labels((model, tokenizer), dynamic=False)

# Determine accuracy on validation set
results = [row["label"] == thlabels(row["text"])[0][0] for row in ds["validation"]]
print("Accuracy = ", sum(results) / len(ds["validation"]))
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Accuracy =  0.883
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88% accuracy this time. Pretty good for such a simple network and something that could definitely be improved upon.

Once again let's run similarity queries using this model.

query(model, tokenizer)
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What a wonderful goal! 1.0
that caught me off guard 0.9998751878738403
I didn t see that coming 0.7328283190727234
i feel bad 5.2972134609891875e-19
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Same result order as with the scikit-learn model with scoring variations which is expected given this is a completely different model.

Pooled embeddings

The PyTorch model above consists of an embeddings layer with a linear classifier on top of it. What if we take that embeddings layer and use it for similarity queries? Let's give it a try.

from txtai.embeddings import Embeddings

class SimpleEmbeddings(nn.Module):
    def __init__(self, embeddings):
        super().__init__()

        self.embeddings = embeddings

    def forward(self, input_ids=None, **kwargs):
        return (self.embeddings(input_ids),)

embeddings = Embeddings({"method": "pooling", "path": SimpleEmbeddings(model.embedding), "tokenizer": "bert-base-uncased"})
print(embeddings.similarity("mad", ["Glad you found it", "Happy to see you", "I'm angry"]))
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[(2, 0.8323876857757568), (1, -0.11010512709617615), (0, -0.16152513027191162)]
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Definitely looks like the embeddings have stored knowledge. Could these embeddings be good enough to build a semantic search index, especially for sentiment based data, given the training dataset? Possibly. It certainly would run faster than a standard transformer model (see below).

Train a transformer model and compare accuracy/speed

Let's train a standard transformer sequence classifier and compare the accuracy/speed between the two.

train = HFTrainer()
model, tokenizer = train("microsoft/xtremedistil-l6-h384-uncased", ds["train"], logging_steps=2000)

tflabels = Labels((model, tokenizer), dynamic=False)

# Determine accuracy on validation set
results = [row["label"] == tflabels(row["text"])[0][0] for row in ds["validation"]]
print("Accuracy = ", sum(results) / len(ds["validation"]))
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Accuracy =  0.93
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As expected, the accuracy is better. The model above is a distilled model and even better accuracy can be obtained with a model like "roberta-base" with the tradeoff being increased training/inference time.

Speaking of speed, let's compare the speed of these models.

import time

# Test inputs
inputs = ds["test"]["text"]
print("Testing speed of %d items" % len(inputs))

start = time.time()
r1 = sklabels(inputs, multilabel=None)
print("TF-IDF + Logistic Regression time =", time.time() - start)

start = time.time()
r2 = thlabels(inputs)
print("PyTorch time =", time.time() - start)

start = time.time()
r3 = tflabels(inputs)
print("Transformers time =", time.time() - start, "\n")

# Compare model results
for x in range(5):
  print("index: %d" % x)
  print(r1[x][0])
  print(r2[x][0])
  print(r3[x][0], "\n")
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Testing speed of 2000 items
TF-IDF + Logistic Regression time = 1.116208791732788
PyTorch time = 2.2385385036468506
Transformers time = 15.705108880996704 

index: 0
(0, 0.7258279323577881)
(0, 1.0)
(0, 0.998250424861908) 

index: 1
(0, 0.854256272315979)
(0, 1.0)
(0, 0.9981004595756531) 

index: 2
(0, 0.6306578516960144)
(0, 0.9999700784683228)
(0, 0.9981676340103149) 

index: 3
(1, 0.554378092288971)
(1, 0.9998960494995117)
(1, 0.9985388517379761) 

index: 4
(0, 0.8961835503578186)
(0, 1.0)
(0, 0.9981957077980042) 
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Wrapping up

This notebook showed how frameworks outside of Transformers and ONNX can be used as models in txtai.

As seen in the section above, TF-IDF + Logistic Regression is 16 times faster than a distilled Transformers model. A simple PyTorch network is 8 times faster. Depending on your accuracy requirements, it may make sense to use a simpler model to get better runtime performance.

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davidmezzetti
David Mezzetti

Posted on October 14, 2021

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