ppc64le/linux/: torchdata-0.7.1+5e6f7b7 metadata and description
Composable data loading modules for PyTorch
| author | PyTorch Team |
| author_email | [email protected] |
| classifiers |
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| description_content_type | text/markdown |
| license | BSD |
| metadata_version | 2.1 |
| requires_dist |
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| requires_python | >=3.8 |
| File | Tox results | History |
|---|---|---|
torchdata-0.7.1+5e6f7b7-py3-none-any.whl
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TorchData (see note below on current status)
Why TorchData? | Install guide | What are DataPipes? | Beta Usage and Feedback | Contributing | Future Plans
:warning: As of July 2023, we have paused active development on TorchData and have paused new releases. We have learnt a lot from building it and hearing from users, but also believe we need to re-evaluate the technical design and approach given how much the industry has changed since we began the project. During the rest of 2023 we will be re-evaluating our plans in this space. Please reach out if you suggestions or comments (please use #1196 for feedback).
torchdata is a library of common modular data loading primitives for easily constructing flexible and performant data
pipelines.
This library introduces composable Iterable-style and Map-style building blocks called
DataPipes that work well out of the box with the PyTorch's DataLoader. These built-in
DataPipes have the necessary functionalities to reproduce many different datasets in TorchVision and TorchText, namely
loading files (from local or cloud), parsing, caching, transforming, filtering, and many more utilities. To understand
the basic structure of DataPipes, please see What are DataPipes? below, and to see how
DataPipes can be practically composed together into datasets, please see our
examples.
On top of DataPipes, this library provides a new DataLoader2 that allows the execution of these data pipelines in
various settings and execution backends (ReadingService). You can learn more about the new version of DataLoader2 in
our full DataLoader2 documentation. Additional features
are work in progres, such as checkpointing and advanced control of randomness and determinism.
Note that because many features of the original DataLoader have been modularized into DataPipes, their source codes live
as standard DataPipes in pytorch/pytorch
rather than torchdata to preserve backward-compatibility support and functional parity within torch. Regardless, you
can to them by importing them from torchdata.
Why composable data loading?
Over many years of feedback and organic community usage of the PyTorch DataLoader and Dataset, we've found that:
- The original
DataLoaderbundled too many features together, making them difficult to extend, manipulate, or replace. This has created a proliferation of use-case specificDataLoadervariants in the community rather than an ecosystem of interoperable elements. - Many libraries, including each of the PyTorch domain libraries, have rewritten the same data loading utilities over and over again. We can save OSS maintainers time and effort rewriting, debugging, and maintaining these commonly used elements.
These reasons inspired the creation of DataPipe and DataLoader2, with a goal to make data loading components more
flexible and reusable.
Installation
Version Compatibility
The following is the corresponding torchdata versions and supported Python versions.
torch |
torchdata |
python |
|---|---|---|
master / nightly |
main / nightly |
>=3.8, <=3.11 |
2.0.0 |
0.6.0 |
>=3.8, <=3.11 |
1.13.1 |
0.5.1 |
>=3.7, <=3.10 |
1.12.1 |
0.4.1 |
>=3.7, <=3.10 |
1.12.0 |
0.4.0 |
>=3.7, <=3.10 |
1.11.0 |
0.3.0 |
>=3.7, <=3.10 |
Colab
Follow the instructions in this Colab notebook. The notebook also contains a simple usage example.
Local pip or conda
First, set up an environment. We will be installing a PyTorch binary as well as torchdata. If you're using conda, create a conda environment:
conda create --name torchdata
conda activate torchdata
If you wish to use venv instead:
python -m venv torchdata-env
source torchdata-env/bin/activate
Install torchdata:
Using pip:
pip install torchdata
Using conda:
conda install -c pytorch torchdata
You can then proceed to run our examples, such as the IMDb one.
From source
pip install .
If you'd like to include the S3 IO datapipes and aws-sdk-cpp, you may also follow the instructions here
In case building TorchData from source fails, install the nightly version of PyTorch following the linked guide on the contributing page.
From nightly
The nightly version of TorchData is also provided and updated daily from main branch.
Using pip:
pip install --pre torchdata --extra-index-url https://download.pytorch.org/whl/nightly/cpu
Using conda:
conda install torchdata -c pytorch-nightly
What are DataPipes?
Early on, we observed widespread confusion between the PyTorch Dataset which represented reusable loading tooling
(e.g. TorchVision's ImageFolder),
and those that represented pre-built iterators/accessors over actual data corpora (e.g. TorchVision's
ImageNet). This led to an
unfortunate pattern of siloed inheritance of data tooling rather than composition.
DataPipe is simply a renaming and repurposing of the PyTorch Dataset for composed usage. A DataPipe takes in some
access function over Python data structures, __iter__ for IterDataPipes and __getitem__ for MapDataPipes, and
returns a new access function with a slight transformation applied. For example, take a look at this JsonParser, which
accepts an IterDataPipe over file names and raw streams, and produces a new iterator over the filenames and deserialized
data:
import json
class JsonParserIterDataPipe(IterDataPipe):
def __init__(self, source_datapipe, **kwargs) -> None:
self.source_datapipe = source_datapipe
self.kwargs = kwargs
def __iter__(self):
for file_name, stream in self.source_datapipe:
data = stream.read()
yield file_name, json.loads(data, **self.kwargs)
def __len__(self):
return len(self.source_datapipe)
You can see in this example how DataPipes can be easily chained together to compose graphs of transformations that reproduce sophisticated data pipelines, with streamed operation as a first-class citizen.
Under this naming convention, Dataset simply refers to a graph of DataPipes, and a dataset module like ImageNet
can be rebuilt as a factory function returning the requisite composed DataPipes. Note that the vast majority of
built-in features are implemented as IterDataPipes, we encourage the usage of built-in IterDataPipe as much as
possible and convert them to MapDataPipe only when necessary.
DataLoader2
A new, light-weight DataLoader2 is introduced to decouple the overloaded data-manipulation functionalities from
torch.utils.data.DataLoader to DataPipe operations. Besides, certain features can only be achieved with
DataLoader2, such as like checkpointing/snapshotting and switching backend services to perform high-performant
operations.
Please read the full documentation here.
Tutorial
A tutorial of this library is available here on the documentation site. It covers four topics: using DataPipes, working with DataLoader, implementing DataPipes, and working with Cloud Storage Providers.
There is also a tutorial available on how to work with the new DataLoader2.
Usage Examples
We provide a simple usage example in this Colab notebook. It can also be downloaded and executed locally as a Jupyter notebook.
In addition, there are several data loading implementations of popular datasets across different research domains that
use DataPipes. You can find a few selected examples here.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
What should I do if the existing set of DataPipes does not do what I need?
You can implement your own custom DataPipe. If you believe your use case is common enough such that the community can benefit from having your custom DataPipe added to this library, feel free to open a GitHub issue. We will be happy to discuss!
What happens when the Shuffler DataPipe is used with DataLoader?
In order to enable shuffling, you need to add a Shuffler to your DataPipe line. Then, by default, shuffling will
happen at the point where you specified as long as you do not set shuffle=False within DataLoader.
What happens when the Batcher DataPipe is used with DataLoader?
If you choose to use Batcher while setting batch_size > 1 for DataLoader, your samples will be batched more than
once. You should choose one or the other.
Why are there fewer built-in MapDataPipes than IterDataPipes?
By design, there are fewer MapDataPipes than IterDataPipes to avoid duplicate implementations of the same
functionalities as MapDataPipe. We encourage users to use the built-in IterDataPipe for various functionalities, and
convert it to MapDataPipe as needed.
How is multiprocessing handled with DataPipes?
Multi-process data loading is still handled by the DataLoader, see the
DataLoader documentation for more details.
As of PyTorch version >= 1.12.0 (TorchData version >= 0.4.0), data sharding is automatically done for DataPipes within
the DataLoader as long as a ShardingFilter DataPipe exists in your pipeline. Please see the
tutorial for an example.
What is the upcoming plan for DataLoader?
DataLoader2 is in the prototype phase and more features are actively being developed. Please see the
README file in torchdata/dataloader2. If
you would like to experiment with it (or other prototype features), we encourage you to install the nightly version of
this library.
Why is there an Error saying the specified DLL could not be found at the time of importing portalocker?
It only happens for people who runs torchdata on Windows OS as a common problem with pywin32. And, you can find the
reason and the solution for it in the
link.
Contributing
We welcome PRs! See the CONTRIBUTING file.
Beta Usage and Feedback
We'd love to hear from and work with early adopters to shape our designs. Please reach out by raising an issue if you're interested in using this tooling for your project.
License
TorchData is BSD licensed, as found in the LICENSE file.