How to Hack Any Transformers Model

The 🤗 Transformers library offers a collection of pre-trained models and tools for natural language processing, vision, and beyond. While these models cover a wide range of applications, you might encounter use cases that aren’t supported out of the box. Customizing models can unlock new possibilities, such as adding new layers, altering architectures, or optimizing attention mechanisms. This guide will show you how to modify existing Transformers models to fit your specific needs. The great thing is, you don’t have to step away from the Transformers framework to make these changes. You can actually modify models directly in Transformers and still take advantage of features like the Trainer API, PreTrainedModel, and efficient fine-tuning with tools like PEFT.

In this guide, we’ll walk you through how to customize existing Transformers models to meet your requirements—without losing the benefits of the ecosystem.

You’ll learn how to:

We encourage you to contribute your own hacks and share them here with the community1

Example: Modifying the Attention Mechanism in the Segment Anything Model (SAM)

The Segment Anything Model (SAM) is a state-of-the-art model for image segmentation. In its default implementation, SAM uses a combined query-key-value (qkv) projection in its attention mechanism. However, you might want to fine-tune only specific components of the attention mechanism, such as the query (q) and value (v) projections, to reduce the number of trainable parameters and computational resources required.

Motivation

By splitting the combined qkv projection into separate q, k, and v projections, you can apply techniques like LoRA (Low-Rank Adaptation) to only the q and v projections. This approach allows you to:

Implementation

Step 1: Create a Custom Attention Class

Next, subclass the original SamVisionAttention class and modify it to have separate q, k, and v projections.

import torch
import torch.nn as nn
from transformers.models.sam.modeling_sam import SamVisionAttention

class SamVisionAttentionSplit(SamVisionAttention, nn.Module):
    def __init__(self, config, window_size):
        super().__init__(config, window_size)
        del self.qkv
        # Separate q, k, v projections
        self.q = nn.Linear(config.hidden_size, config.hidden_size, bias=config.qkv_bias)
        self.k = nn.Linear(config.hidden_size, config.hidden_size, bias=config.qkv_bias)
        self.v = nn.Linear(config.hidden_size, config.hidden_size, bias=config.qkv_bias)
        self._register_load_state_dict_pre_hook(self.split_q_k_v_load_hook)

    def split_q_k_v_load_hook(self, state_dict, prefix, *args):
        keys_to_delete = []
        for key in list(state_dict.keys()):
            if "qkv." in key:
                # Split q, k, v from the combined projection
                q, k, v = state_dict[key].chunk(3, dim=0)
                # Replace with individual q, k, v projections
                state_dict[key.replace("qkv.", "q.")] = q
                state_dict[key.replace("qkv.", "k.")] = k
                state_dict[key.replace("qkv.", "v.")] = v
                # Mark the old qkv key for deletion
                keys_to_delete.append(key)
        
        # Remove old qkv keys
        for key in keys_to_delete:
            del state_dict[key]

    def forward(self, hidden_states: torch.Tensor, output_attentions=False) -> torch.Tensor:
        batch_size, height, width, _ = hidden_states.shape
        qkv_shapes = (batch_size *  self.num_attention_heads,  height * width, -1)
        query = self.q(hidden_states).reshape((batch_size,  height * width,self.num_attention_heads, -1)).permute(0,2,1,3).reshape(qkv_shapes)
        key = self.k(hidden_states).reshape((batch_size,  height * width,self.num_attention_heads, -1)).permute(0,2,1,3).reshape(qkv_shapes)
        value = self.v(hidden_states).reshape((batch_size,  height * width,self.num_attention_heads, -1)).permute(0,2,1,3).reshape(qkv_shapes)

        attn_weights = (query * self.scale) @ key.transpose(-2, -1)

        if self.use_rel_pos:
            attn_weights = self.add_decomposed_rel_pos(
                attn_weights, query, self.rel_pos_h, self.rel_pos_w, (height, width), (height, width)
            )

        attn_weights = torch.nn.functional.softmax(attn_weights, dtype=torch.float32, dim=-1).to(query.dtype)
        attn_probs = nn.functional.dropout(attn_weights, p=self.dropout, training=self.training)
        attn_output = (attn_probs @ value).reshape(batch_size, self.num_attention_heads, height, width, -1)
        attn_output = attn_output.permute(0, 2, 3, 1, 4).reshape(batch_size, height, width, -1)
        attn_output = self.proj(attn_output)

        if output_attentions:
            outputs = (attn_output, attn_weights)
        else:
            outputs = (attn_output, None)
        return outputs

Explanation:

Step 2: Replace the Original Attention Class

Replace the original SamVisionAttention class with your custom class so that the model uses the modified attention mechanism.

from transformers import SamModel
from transformers.models.sam import modeling_sam

# Replace the attention class in the modeling_sam module
modeling_sam.SamVisionAttention = SamVisionAttentionSplit

# Load the pre-trained SAM model
model = SamModel.from_pretrained("facebook/sam-vit-base")

Explanation:

Step 3: Apply LoRA to Specific Projections

With separate q, k, and v projections, you can now apply LoRA to specific components, such as the q and v projections.

from peft import LoraConfig, get_peft_model

config = LoraConfig(
    r=16,
    lora_alpha=32,
    target_modules=["q", "v"],  # Apply LoRA to q and v projections
    lora_dropout=0.1,
    task_type="mask-generation"
)

# Apply LoRA to the model
model = get_peft_model(model, config)

Explanation:

Step 4: Verify the Number of Trainable Parameters

It’s simple to verify the number of trainable parameters and see what impact your modification had.

model.print_trainable_parameters()

Expected Output:

trainable params: 608,256 || all params: 94,343,728 || trainable%: 0.6447
trainable params: 912,384 || all params: 94,647,856 || trainable%: 0.9640 # with k 

Contributing Your Own Hacks

Modifying pre-trained models can open up new avenues for research and application. By understanding and adjusting the internal mechanisms of models like SAM, you can tailor them to your specific needs, optimize performance, and experiment with new ideas.

If you’ve developed your own hacks for Transformers models and would like to share them, consider contributing to this doc.

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