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nmtpytorch

License: MIT

This is the PyTorch fork of nmtpy, a sequence-to-sequence framework which was originally a fork of dl4mt-tutorial.

The core parts of nmtpytorch depends on numpy, torch and tqdm.

nmtpytorch is developed and tested on Python 3.6 and will not support Python 2.x whatsoever.

Installation

We ship subword-nmt and METEOR paraphrase files as submodules in order to track their updates when necessary. Besides these METEOR v1.5 JAR, multi-bleu.perl and COCO evaluation tools cocoeval are directly included within the source tree.

Run the following command to recursively fetch the repository including those submodules:

git clone --recursive https://github.com/lium-lst/nmtpytorch.git

Install using develop mode:

python setup.py develop

Usage Example

A sample NMT configuration for English-to-German Multi30k is provided which covers nearly all of the [train] and [model] specific options to NMT.

After creating a configuration file for your own dataset that suits your need, you can run the following command to start training:

nmtpy train -C <config file>

It is possible to override any configuration option through the command-line:

nmtpy train -C <config file> train.<opt>:<val> model.<opt>:<val> ...

Release Notes

Initial Release v1.0 (18/12/2017)

The initial release aims to be (as much as) feature compatible with respect to the latest nmtpy with some important changes as well.

New TensorBoard Support

If you would like to monitor training progress, you may want to install tensorboard-pytorch. Note that you will also need to install the actual TensorBoard server which is shipped within Tensorflow in order to launch the visualization server.

Once the dependencies are installed, you need to define a log directory for TensorBoard in the configuration file of your experiment to enable TensorBoard logging. The logging frequency is the same as terminal logging frequency, defined by train.disp_freq option (default: 30 batches).

[train]
..
tensorboard_dir: ~/tb_dir

tensorboard

A Single Command-Line Interface

Instead of shipping several tools for training, rescoring, translating, etc. here we provide a single command-line interface nmtpy which implements three subcommands train, translate and resume.

nmtpy train

usage: nmtpy train [-h] -C CONFIG [-s SUFFIX] [overrides [overrides ...]]

positional arguments:
  overrides             (section).key:value overrides for config

optional arguments:
  -h, --help            show this help message and exit
  -C CONFIG, --config CONFIG
                        Experiment configuration file
  -s SUFFIX, --suffix SUFFIX
                        Optional experiment suffix.

nmtpy translate

usage: nmtpy translate [-h] [-n] -s SPLITS [-b BATCH_SIZE] [-k BEAM_SIZE]
                       [-m MAX_LEN] [-p] [-u] [-d DEVICE] [-e]
                       models [models ...]

positional arguments:
  models                Saved model/checkpoint file(s)

optional arguments:
  -h, --help            show this help message and exit
  -n, --disable-filters
                        Disable text filters given in config.
  -s SPLITS, --splits SPLITS
                        Comma separated splits to translate
  -b BATCH_SIZE, --batch-size BATCH_SIZE
                        Batch size for beam-search
  -k BEAM_SIZE, --beam-size BEAM_SIZE
                        Beam size for beam-search
  -m MAX_LEN, --max-len MAX_LEN
                        Maximum sequence length
  -p, --avoid-double    Suppress previous token probs
  -u, --avoid-unk       Suppress <unk> generation
  -d DEVICE, --device DEVICE
                        Select GPU device(s)
  -e, --ensemble        Enable ensembling for multiple models.

Experiment Configuration

The INI-style experiment configuration file format is slightly updated to allow for future multi-task, multi-lingual setups in terms of data description.

Model-agnostic options are defined in [train] section while the options that will be consumed by the model itself are defined in [model].

An arbitrary number of parallel corpora with multiple languages can be defined in [data] section. Note that you need to define at least train_set and val_set datasets in this section for the training and early-stopping to work correctly.

We recommend you to take a look at the provided sample configuration to have an idea about the file format.

Training a Model

We still provide a single, model-agnostic mainloop that handles everything necessary to train, validate and early-stop a model.

Defining a Model

You just need to create a new file under nmtpytorch/models and define a class by deriving it from nn.Module. The name of this new class will be the model_type that needs to be written inside your configuration file. The next steps are to:

  • Parse model options passed from the configuration file in __init__()
  • Define layers inside setup(): Each nn.Module object should be assigned as an attribute of the model (i.e. self.encoder = ...) in order for PyTorch to work correctly.
  • Create and store relevant dataset objects in load_data()
  • Define a get_iterator() method to obtain a dataset-specific iterator depending on train/dev and loss/beam-search variants.
  • Define compute_loss() which takes a data iterator and computes the loss over it. This method is used for dev set perplexities.
  • Define aux_loss() where you may want to define an additional loss term. Return just 0 if you do not want to use it.
  • Define forward() which takes a dictionary with keys as data sources and returns the batch training loss. This is the method called from the mainloop during training.
  • Define beam_search() which takes a data iterator and generates hypotheses using beam search. The default implementation in NMT is a batched GPU version.

Feel free to copy the methods from NMT if you do not need to modify some of them.

Provided Models

Currently we only provide a Conditional GRU NMT implementation with Bahdanau-style attention in decoder.

NOTE: We recommend limiting the number of tokens in the target vocabulary by defining max_trg_len in the [model] section of your configuration file to avoid GPU out of memory errors for very large vocabularies. This is caused by the fact that the gradient computation for a batch with very long sequences occupies a large amount of memory unless the loss layer is implemented differently.

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Neural Machine Translation Framework in PyTorch

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