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"""
.. _model-rgcn:

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Relational graph convolutional network
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================================================

**Author:** Lingfan Yu, Mufei Li, Zheng Zhang

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In this tutorial, you learn how to implement a relational graph convolutional
network (R-GCN). This type of network is one effort to generalize GCN 
to handle different relationships between entities in a knowledge base. To 
learn more about the research behind R-GCN, see `Modeling Relational Data with Graph Convolutional
Networks <https://arxiv.org/pdf/1703.06103.pdf>`_ 

The straightforward graph convolutional network (GCN) and 
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`DGL tutorial <http://doc.dgl.ai/tutorials/index.html>`_) exploits
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structural information of a dataset (that is, the graph connectivity) in order to
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improve the extraction of node representations. Graph edges are left as
untyped.

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A knowledge graph is made up of a collection of triples in the form
subject, relation, object. Edges thus encode important information and
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have their own embeddings to be learned. Furthermore, there may exist
multiple edges among any given pair.

"""
###############################################################################
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# A brief introduction to R-GCN
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# ---------------------------
# In *statistical relational learning* (SRL), there are two fundamental
# tasks:
#
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# - **Entity classification** - Where you assign types and categorical
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#   properties to entities.
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# - **Link prediction** - Where you recover missing triples.
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#
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# In both cases, missing information is expected to be recovered from the 
# neighborhood structure of the graph. For example, the R-GCN
# paper cited earlier provides the following example. Knowing that Mikhail Baryshnikov was educated at the Vaganova Academy
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# implies both that Mikhail Baryshnikov should have the label person, and
# that the triple (Mikhail Baryshnikov, lived in, Russia) must belong to the
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# knowledge graph.
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#
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# R-GCN solves these two problems using a common graph convolutional network. It's 
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# extended with multi-edge encoding to compute embedding of the entities, but
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# with different downstream processing.
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#
# - Entity classification is done by attaching a softmax classifier at the
#   final embedding of an entity (node). Training is through loss of standard
#   cross-entropy.
# - Link prediction is done by reconstructing an edge with an autoencoder
#   architecture, using a parameterized score function. Training uses negative
#   sampling.
#
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# This tutorial focuses on the first task, entity classification, to show how to generate entity
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# representation. `Complete
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# code <https://github.com/dmlc/dgl/tree/rgcn/examples/pytorch/rgcn>`_
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# for both tasks is found in the DGL Github repository.
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#
# Key ideas of R-GCN
# -------------------
# Recall that in GCN, the hidden representation for each node :math:`i` at
# :math:`(l+1)^{th}` layer is computed by:
#
# .. math:: h_i^{l+1} = \sigma\left(\sum_{j\in N_i}\frac{1}{c_i} W^{(l)} h_j^{(l)}\right)~~~~~~~~~~(1)\\
#
# where :math:`c_i` is a normalization constant.
#
# The key difference between R-GCN and GCN is that in R-GCN, edges can
# represent different relations. In GCN, weight :math:`W^{(l)}` in equation
# :math:`(1)` is shared by all edges in layer :math:`l`. In contrast, in
# R-GCN, different edge types use different weights and only edges of the
# same relation type :math:`r` are associated with the same projection weight
# :math:`W_r^{(l)}`.
#
# So the hidden representation of entities in :math:`(l+1)^{th}` layer in
# R-GCN can be formulated as the following equation:
#
# .. math:: h_i^{l+1} = \sigma\left(W_0^{(l)}h_i^{(l)}+\sum_{r\in R}\sum_{j\in N_i^r}\frac{1}{c_{i,r}}W_r^{(l)}h_j^{(l)}\right)~~~~~~~~~~(2)\\
#
# where :math:`N_i^r` denotes the set of neighbor indices of node :math:`i`
# under relation :math:`r\in R` and :math:`c_{i,r}` is a normalization
# constant. In entity classification, the R-GCN paper uses
# :math:`c_{i,r}=|N_i^r|`.
#
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# The problem of applying the above equation directly is the rapid growth of
# the number of parameters, especially with highly multi-relational data. In
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# order to reduce model parameter size and prevent overfitting, the original
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# paper proposes to use basis decomposition.
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#
# .. math:: W_r^{(l)}=\sum\limits_{b=1}^B a_{rb}^{(l)}V_b^{(l)}~~~~~~~~~~(3)\\
#
# Therefore, the weight :math:`W_r^{(l)}` is a linear combination of basis
# transformation :math:`V_b^{(l)}` with coefficients :math:`a_{rb}^{(l)}`.
# The number of bases :math:`B` is much smaller than the number of relations
# in the knowledge base.
#
# .. note::
#    Another weight regularization, block-decomposition, is implemented in
#    the `link prediction <link-prediction_>`_.
#
# Implement R-GCN in DGL
# ----------------------
#
# An R-GCN model is composed of several R-GCN layers. The first R-GCN layer
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# also serves as input layer and takes in features (for example, description texts)
# that are associated with node entity and project to hidden space. In this tutorial,
# we only use the entity ID as an entity feature.
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#
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# R-GCN layers
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# ~~~~~~~~~~~~
#
# For each node, an R-GCN layer performs the following steps:
#
# - Compute outgoing message using node representation and weight matrix
#   associated with the edge type (message function)
# - Aggregate incoming messages and generate new node representations (reduce
#   and apply function)
#
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# The following code is the definition of an R-GCN hidden layer.
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#
# .. note::
#    Each relation type is associated with a different weight. Therefore,
#    the full weight matrix has three dimensions: relation, input_feature,
#    output_feature.
#

import torch
import torch.nn as nn
import torch.nn.functional as F
from dgl import DGLGraph
import dgl.function as fn
from functools import partial

class RGCNLayer(nn.Module):
    def __init__(self, in_feat, out_feat, num_rels, num_bases=-1, bias=None,
                 activation=None, is_input_layer=False):
        super(RGCNLayer, self).__init__()
        self.in_feat = in_feat
        self.out_feat = out_feat
        self.num_rels = num_rels
        self.num_bases = num_bases
        self.bias = bias
        self.activation = activation
        self.is_input_layer = is_input_layer

        # sanity check
        if self.num_bases <= 0 or self.num_bases > self.num_rels:
            self.num_bases = self.num_rels

        # weight bases in equation (3)
        self.weight = nn.Parameter(torch.Tensor(self.num_bases, self.in_feat,
                                                self.out_feat))
        if self.num_bases < self.num_rels:
            # linear combination coefficients in equation (3)
            self.w_comp = nn.Parameter(torch.Tensor(self.num_rels, self.num_bases))

        # add bias
        if self.bias:
            self.bias = nn.Parameter(torch.Tensor(out_feat))

        # init trainable parameters
        nn.init.xavier_uniform_(self.weight,
                                gain=nn.init.calculate_gain('relu'))
        if self.num_bases < self.num_rels:
            nn.init.xavier_uniform_(self.w_comp,
                                    gain=nn.init.calculate_gain('relu'))
        if self.bias:
            nn.init.xavier_uniform_(self.bias,
                                    gain=nn.init.calculate_gain('relu'))

    def forward(self, g):
        if self.num_bases < self.num_rels:
            # generate all weights from bases (equation (3))
            weight = self.weight.view(self.in_feat, self.num_bases, self.out_feat)
            weight = torch.matmul(self.w_comp, weight).view(self.num_rels,
                                                        self.in_feat, self.out_feat)
        else:
            weight = self.weight

        if self.is_input_layer:
            def message_func(edges):
                # for input layer, matrix multiply can be converted to be
                # an embedding lookup using source node id
                embed = weight.view(-1, self.out_feat)
                index = edges.data['rel_type'] * self.in_feat + edges.src['id']
                return {'msg': embed[index] * edges.data['norm']}
        else:
            def message_func(edges):
                w = weight[edges.data['rel_type']]
                msg = torch.bmm(edges.src['h'].unsqueeze(1), w).squeeze()
                msg = msg * edges.data['norm']
                return {'msg': msg}

        def apply_func(nodes):
            h = nodes.data['h']
            if self.bias:
                h = h + self.bias
            if self.activation:
                h = self.activation(h)
            return {'h': h}

        g.update_all(message_func, fn.sum(msg='msg', out='h'), apply_func)


###############################################################################
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# Full R-GCN model defined
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# ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

class Model(nn.Module):
    def __init__(self, num_nodes, h_dim, out_dim, num_rels,
                 num_bases=-1, num_hidden_layers=1):
        super(Model, self).__init__()
        self.num_nodes = num_nodes
        self.h_dim = h_dim
        self.out_dim = out_dim
        self.num_rels = num_rels
        self.num_bases = num_bases
        self.num_hidden_layers = num_hidden_layers

        # create rgcn layers
        self.build_model()

        # create initial features
        self.features = self.create_features()

    def build_model(self):
        self.layers = nn.ModuleList()
        # input to hidden
        i2h = self.build_input_layer()
        self.layers.append(i2h)
        # hidden to hidden
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        for _ in range(self.num_hidden_layers):
            h2h = self.build_hidden_layer()
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            self.layers.append(h2h)
        # hidden to output
        h2o = self.build_output_layer()
        self.layers.append(h2o)

    # initialize feature for each node
    def create_features(self):
        features = torch.arange(self.num_nodes)
        return features

    def build_input_layer(self):
        return RGCNLayer(self.num_nodes, self.h_dim, self.num_rels, self.num_bases,
                         activation=F.relu, is_input_layer=True)

    def build_hidden_layer(self):
        return RGCNLayer(self.h_dim, self.h_dim, self.num_rels, self.num_bases,
                         activation=F.relu)

    def build_output_layer(self):
        return RGCNLayer(self.h_dim, self.out_dim, self.num_rels, self.num_bases,
                         activation=partial(F.softmax, dim=1))

    def forward(self, g):
        if self.features is not None:
            g.ndata['id'] = self.features
        for layer in self.layers:
            layer(g)
        return g.ndata.pop('h')

###############################################################################
# Handle dataset
# ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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# This tutorial uses Institute for Applied Informatics and Formal Description Methods (AIFB) dataset from R-GCN paper.
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# load graph data
from dgl.contrib.data import load_data
import numpy as np
data = load_data(dataset='aifb')
num_nodes = data.num_nodes
num_rels = data.num_rels
num_classes = data.num_classes
labels = data.labels
train_idx = data.train_idx
# split training and validation set
val_idx = train_idx[:len(train_idx) // 5]
train_idx = train_idx[len(train_idx) // 5:]

# edge type and normalization factor
edge_type = torch.from_numpy(data.edge_type)
edge_norm = torch.from_numpy(data.edge_norm).unsqueeze(1)

labels = torch.from_numpy(labels).view(-1)

###############################################################################
# Create graph and model
# ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

# configurations
n_hidden = 16 # number of hidden units
n_bases = -1 # use number of relations as number of bases
n_hidden_layers = 0 # use 1 input layer, 1 output layer, no hidden layer
n_epochs = 25 # epochs to train
lr = 0.01 # learning rate
l2norm = 0 # L2 norm coefficient

# create graph
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g = DGLGraph((data.edge_src, data.edge_dst))
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g.edata.update({'rel_type': edge_type, 'norm': edge_norm})

# create model
model = Model(len(g),
              n_hidden,
              num_classes,
              num_rels,
              num_bases=n_bases,
              num_hidden_layers=n_hidden_layers)

###############################################################################
# Training loop
# ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

# optimizer
optimizer = torch.optim.Adam(model.parameters(), lr=lr, weight_decay=l2norm)

print("start training...")
model.train()
for epoch in range(n_epochs):
    optimizer.zero_grad()
    logits = model.forward(g)
    loss = F.cross_entropy(logits[train_idx], labels[train_idx])
    loss.backward()

    optimizer.step()

    train_acc = torch.sum(logits[train_idx].argmax(dim=1) == labels[train_idx])
    train_acc = train_acc.item() / len(train_idx)
    val_loss = F.cross_entropy(logits[val_idx], labels[val_idx])
    val_acc = torch.sum(logits[val_idx].argmax(dim=1) == labels[val_idx])
    val_acc = val_acc.item() / len(val_idx)
    print("Epoch {:05d} | ".format(epoch) +
          "Train Accuracy: {:.4f} | Train Loss: {:.4f} | ".format(
              train_acc, loss.item()) +
          "Validation Accuracy: {:.4f} | Validation loss: {:.4f}".format(
              val_acc, val_loss.item()))

###############################################################################
# .. _link-prediction:
#
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# The second task, link prediction
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# --------------------------------
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# So far, you have seen how to use DGL to implement entity classification with an 
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# R-GCN model. In the knowledge base setting, representation generated by
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# R-GCN can be used to uncover potential relationships between nodes. In the 
# R-GCN paper, the authors feed the entity representations generated by R-GCN
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# into the `DistMult <https://arxiv.org/pdf/1412.6575.pdf>`_ prediction model
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# to predict possible relationships.
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#
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# The implementation is similar to that presented here, but with an extra DistMult layer
# stacked on top of the R-GCN layers. You can find the complete
# implementation of link prediction with R-GCN in our `Github Python code example
#  <https://github.com/dmlc/dgl/blob/master/examples/pytorch/rgcn/link_predict.py>`_.