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# Migrating from previous packages | |
## Migrating from transformers `v3.x` to `v4.x` | |
A couple of changes were introduced when the switch from version 3 to version 4 was done. Below is a summary of the | |
expected changes: | |
#### 1. AutoTokenizers and pipelines now use fast (rust) tokenizers by default. | |
The python and rust tokenizers have roughly the same API, but the rust tokenizers have a more complete feature set. | |
This introduces two breaking changes: | |
- The handling of overflowing tokens between the python and rust tokenizers is different. | |
- The rust tokenizers do not accept integers in the encoding methods. | |
##### How to obtain the same behavior as v3.x in v4.x | |
- The pipelines now contain additional features out of the box. See the [token-classification pipeline with the `grouped_entities` flag](main_classes/pipelines#transformers.TokenClassificationPipeline). | |
- The auto-tokenizers now return rust tokenizers. In order to obtain the python tokenizers instead, the user may use the `use_fast` flag by setting it to `False`: | |
In version `v3.x`: | |
```py | |
from transformers import AutoTokenizer | |
tokenizer = AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained("bert-base-cased") | |
``` | |
to obtain the same in version `v4.x`: | |
```py | |
from transformers import AutoTokenizer | |
tokenizer = AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained("bert-base-cased", use_fast=False) | |
``` | |
#### 2. SentencePiece is removed from the required dependencies | |
The requirement on the SentencePiece dependency has been lifted from the `setup.py`. This is done so that we may have a channel on anaconda cloud without relying on `conda-forge`. This means that the tokenizers that depend on the SentencePiece library will not be available with a standard `transformers` installation. | |
This includes the **slow** versions of: | |
- `XLNetTokenizer` | |
- `AlbertTokenizer` | |
- `CamembertTokenizer` | |
- `MBartTokenizer` | |
- `PegasusTokenizer` | |
- `T5Tokenizer` | |
- `ReformerTokenizer` | |
- `XLMRobertaTokenizer` | |
##### How to obtain the same behavior as v3.x in v4.x | |
In order to obtain the same behavior as version `v3.x`, you should install `sentencepiece` additionally: | |
In version `v3.x`: | |
```bash | |
pip install transformers | |
``` | |
to obtain the same in version `v4.x`: | |
```bash | |
pip install transformers[sentencepiece] | |
``` | |
or | |
```bash | |
pip install transformers sentencepiece | |
``` | |
#### 3. The architecture of the repo has been updated so that each model resides in its folder | |
The past and foreseeable addition of new models means that the number of files in the directory `src/transformers` keeps growing and becomes harder to navigate and understand. We made the choice to put each model and the files accompanying it in their own sub-directories. | |
This is a breaking change as importing intermediary layers using a model's module directly needs to be done via a different path. | |
##### How to obtain the same behavior as v3.x in v4.x | |
In order to obtain the same behavior as version `v3.x`, you should update the path used to access the layers. | |
In version `v3.x`: | |
```bash | |
from transformers.modeling_bert import BertLayer | |
``` | |
to obtain the same in version `v4.x`: | |
```bash | |
from transformers.models.bert.modeling_bert import BertLayer | |
``` | |
#### 4. Switching the `return_dict` argument to `True` by default | |
The [`return_dict` argument](main_classes/output) enables the return of dict-like python objects containing the model outputs, instead of the standard tuples. This object is self-documented as keys can be used to retrieve values, while also behaving as a tuple as users may retrieve objects by index or by slice. | |
This is a breaking change as the limitation of that tuple is that it cannot be unpacked: `value0, value1 = outputs` will not work. | |
##### How to obtain the same behavior as v3.x in v4.x | |
In order to obtain the same behavior as version `v3.x`, you should specify the `return_dict` argument to `False`, either in the model configuration or during the forward pass. | |
In version `v3.x`: | |
```bash | |
model = BertModel.from_pretrained("bert-base-cased") | |
outputs = model(**inputs) | |
``` | |
to obtain the same in version `v4.x`: | |
```bash | |
model = BertModel.from_pretrained("bert-base-cased") | |
outputs = model(**inputs, return_dict=False) | |
``` | |
or | |
```bash | |
model = BertModel.from_pretrained("bert-base-cased", return_dict=False) | |
outputs = model(**inputs) | |
``` | |
#### 5. Removed some deprecated attributes | |
Attributes that were deprecated have been removed if they had been deprecated for at least a month. The full list of deprecated attributes can be found in [#8604](https://github.com/huggingface/transformers/pull/8604). | |
Here is a list of these attributes/methods/arguments and what their replacements should be: | |
In several models, the labels become consistent with the other models: | |
- `masked_lm_labels` becomes `labels` in `AlbertForMaskedLM` and `AlbertForPreTraining`. | |
- `masked_lm_labels` becomes `labels` in `BertForMaskedLM` and `BertForPreTraining`. | |
- `masked_lm_labels` becomes `labels` in `DistilBertForMaskedLM`. | |
- `masked_lm_labels` becomes `labels` in `ElectraForMaskedLM`. | |
- `masked_lm_labels` becomes `labels` in `LongformerForMaskedLM`. | |
- `masked_lm_labels` becomes `labels` in `MobileBertForMaskedLM`. | |
- `masked_lm_labels` becomes `labels` in `RobertaForMaskedLM`. | |
- `lm_labels` becomes `labels` in `BartForConditionalGeneration`. | |
- `lm_labels` becomes `labels` in `GPT2DoubleHeadsModel`. | |
- `lm_labels` becomes `labels` in `OpenAIGPTDoubleHeadsModel`. | |
- `lm_labels` becomes `labels` in `T5ForConditionalGeneration`. | |
In several models, the caching mechanism becomes consistent with the other models: | |
- `decoder_cached_states` becomes `past_key_values` in all BART-like, FSMT and T5 models. | |
- `decoder_past_key_values` becomes `past_key_values` in all BART-like, FSMT and T5 models. | |
- `past` becomes `past_key_values` in all CTRL models. | |
- `past` becomes `past_key_values` in all GPT-2 models. | |
Regarding the tokenizer classes: | |
- The tokenizer attribute `max_len` becomes `model_max_length`. | |
- The tokenizer attribute `return_lengths` becomes `return_length`. | |
- The tokenizer encoding argument `is_pretokenized` becomes `is_split_into_words`. | |
Regarding the `Trainer` class: | |
- The `Trainer` argument `tb_writer` is removed in favor of the callback `TensorBoardCallback(tb_writer=...)`. | |
- The `Trainer` argument `prediction_loss_only` is removed in favor of the class argument `args.prediction_loss_only`. | |
- The `Trainer` attribute `data_collator` should be a callable. | |
- The `Trainer` method `_log` is deprecated in favor of `log`. | |
- The `Trainer` method `_training_step` is deprecated in favor of `training_step`. | |
- The `Trainer` method `_prediction_loop` is deprecated in favor of `prediction_loop`. | |
- The `Trainer` method `is_local_master` is deprecated in favor of `is_local_process_zero`. | |
- The `Trainer` method `is_world_master` is deprecated in favor of `is_world_process_zero`. | |
Regarding the `TFTrainer` class: | |
- The `TFTrainer` argument `prediction_loss_only` is removed in favor of the class argument `args.prediction_loss_only`. | |
- The `Trainer` method `_log` is deprecated in favor of `log`. | |
- The `TFTrainer` method `_prediction_loop` is deprecated in favor of `prediction_loop`. | |
- The `TFTrainer` method `_setup_wandb` is deprecated in favor of `setup_wandb`. | |
- The `TFTrainer` method `_run_model` is deprecated in favor of `run_model`. | |
Regarding the `TrainingArguments` class: | |
- The `TrainingArguments` argument `evaluate_during_training` is deprecated in favor of `evaluation_strategy`. | |
Regarding the Transfo-XL model: | |
- The Transfo-XL configuration attribute `tie_weight` becomes `tie_words_embeddings`. | |
- The Transfo-XL modeling method `reset_length` becomes `reset_memory_length`. | |
Regarding pipelines: | |
- The `FillMaskPipeline` argument `topk` becomes `top_k`. | |
## Migrating from pytorch-transformers to π€ Transformers | |
Here is a quick summary of what you should take care of when migrating from `pytorch-transformers` to π€ Transformers. | |
### Positional order of some models' keywords inputs (`attention_mask`, `token_type_ids`...) changed | |
To be able to use Torchscript (see #1010, #1204 and #1195) the specific order of some models **keywords inputs** (`attention_mask`, `token_type_ids`...) has been changed. | |
If you used to call the models with keyword names for keyword arguments, e.g. `model(inputs_ids, attention_mask=attention_mask, token_type_ids=token_type_ids)`, this should not cause any change. | |
If you used to call the models with positional inputs for keyword arguments, e.g. `model(inputs_ids, attention_mask, token_type_ids)`, you may have to double check the exact order of input arguments. | |
## Migrating from pytorch-pretrained-bert | |
Here is a quick summary of what you should take care of when migrating from `pytorch-pretrained-bert` to π€ Transformers | |
### Models always output `tuples` | |
The main breaking change when migrating from `pytorch-pretrained-bert` to π€ Transformers is that the models forward method always outputs a `tuple` with various elements depending on the model and the configuration parameters. | |
The exact content of the tuples for each model are detailed in the models' docstrings and the [documentation](https://huggingface.co/transformers/). | |
In pretty much every case, you will be fine by taking the first element of the output as the output you previously used in `pytorch-pretrained-bert`. | |
Here is a `pytorch-pretrained-bert` to π€ Transformers conversion example for a `BertForSequenceClassification` classification model: | |
```python | |
# Let's load our model | |
model = BertForSequenceClassification.from_pretrained("bert-base-uncased") | |
# If you used to have this line in pytorch-pretrained-bert: | |
loss = model(input_ids, labels=labels) | |
# Now just use this line in π€ Transformers to extract the loss from the output tuple: | |
outputs = model(input_ids, labels=labels) | |
loss = outputs[0] | |
# In π€ Transformers you can also have access to the logits: | |
loss, logits = outputs[:2] | |
# And even the attention weights if you configure the model to output them (and other outputs too, see the docstrings and documentation) | |
model = BertForSequenceClassification.from_pretrained("bert-base-uncased", output_attentions=True) | |
outputs = model(input_ids, labels=labels) | |
loss, logits, attentions = outputs | |
``` | |
### Serialization | |
Breaking change in the `from_pretrained()`method: | |
1. Models are now set in evaluation mode by default when instantiated with the `from_pretrained()` method. To train them don't forget to set them back in training mode (`model.train()`) to activate the dropout modules. | |
2. The additional `*inputs` and `**kwargs` arguments supplied to the `from_pretrained()` method used to be directly passed to the underlying model's class `__init__()` method. They are now used to update the model configuration attribute first which can break derived model classes build based on the previous `BertForSequenceClassification` examples. More precisely, the positional arguments `*inputs` provided to `from_pretrained()` are directly forwarded the model `__init__()` method while the keyword arguments `**kwargs` (i) which match configuration class attributes are used to update said attributes (ii) which don't match any configuration class attributes are forwarded to the model `__init__()` method. | |
Also, while not a breaking change, the serialization methods have been standardized and you probably should switch to the new method `save_pretrained(save_directory)` if you were using any other serialization method before. | |
Here is an example: | |
```python | |
### Let's load a model and tokenizer | |
model = BertForSequenceClassification.from_pretrained("bert-base-uncased") | |
tokenizer = BertTokenizer.from_pretrained("bert-base-uncased") | |
### Do some stuff to our model and tokenizer | |
# Ex: add new tokens to the vocabulary and embeddings of our model | |
tokenizer.add_tokens(["[SPECIAL_TOKEN_1]", "[SPECIAL_TOKEN_2]"]) | |
model.resize_token_embeddings(len(tokenizer)) | |
# Train our model | |
train(model) | |
### Now let's save our model and tokenizer to a directory | |
model.save_pretrained("./my_saved_model_directory/") | |
tokenizer.save_pretrained("./my_saved_model_directory/") | |
### Reload the model and the tokenizer | |
model = BertForSequenceClassification.from_pretrained("./my_saved_model_directory/") | |
tokenizer = BertTokenizer.from_pretrained("./my_saved_model_directory/") | |
``` | |
### Optimizers: BertAdam & OpenAIAdam are now AdamW, schedules are standard PyTorch schedules | |
The two optimizers previously included, `BertAdam` and `OpenAIAdam`, have been replaced by a single `AdamW` optimizer which has a few differences: | |
- it only implements weights decay correction, | |
- schedules are now externals (see below), | |
- gradient clipping is now also external (see below). | |
The new optimizer `AdamW` matches PyTorch `Adam` optimizer API and let you use standard PyTorch or apex methods for the schedule and clipping. | |
The schedules are now standard [PyTorch learning rate schedulers](https://pytorch.org/docs/stable/optim.html#how-to-adjust-learning-rate) and not part of the optimizer anymore. | |
Here is a conversion examples from `BertAdam` with a linear warmup and decay schedule to `AdamW` and the same schedule: | |
```python | |
# Parameters: | |
lr = 1e-3 | |
max_grad_norm = 1.0 | |
num_training_steps = 1000 | |
num_warmup_steps = 100 | |
warmup_proportion = float(num_warmup_steps) / float(num_training_steps) # 0.1 | |
### Previously BertAdam optimizer was instantiated like this: | |
optimizer = BertAdam( | |
model.parameters(), | |
lr=lr, | |
schedule="warmup_linear", | |
warmup=warmup_proportion, | |
num_training_steps=num_training_steps, | |
) | |
### and used like this: | |
for batch in train_data: | |
loss = model(batch) | |
loss.backward() | |
optimizer.step() | |
### In π€ Transformers, optimizer and schedules are split and instantiated like this: | |
optimizer = AdamW( | |
model.parameters(), lr=lr, correct_bias=False | |
) # To reproduce BertAdam specific behavior set correct_bias=False | |
scheduler = get_linear_schedule_with_warmup( | |
optimizer, num_warmup_steps=num_warmup_steps, num_training_steps=num_training_steps | |
) # PyTorch scheduler | |
### and used like this: | |
for batch in train_data: | |
loss = model(batch) | |
loss.backward() | |
torch.nn.utils.clip_grad_norm_( | |
model.parameters(), max_grad_norm | |
) # Gradient clipping is not in AdamW anymore (so you can use amp without issue) | |
optimizer.step() | |
scheduler.step() | |
``` | |