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# Distil*
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This folder contains the original code used to train Distil* as well as examples showcasing how to use DistilBERT, DistilRoBERTa and DistilGPT2.
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**November 19th, 2019 - Update** We release German **DistilBERT**: 98.8% of `bert-base-german-dbmdz-cased` on NER tasks.

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**October 23rd, 2019 - Update** We release **DistilRoBERTa**: 95% of `RoBERTa-base`'s performance on GLUE, twice as fast as RoBERTa while being 35% smaller.

**October 3rd, 2019 - Update** We release our [NeurIPS workshop paper](https://arxiv.org/abs/1910.01108) explaining our approach on **DistilBERT**. It includes updated results and further experiments. We applied the same method to GPT2 and release the weights of **DistilGPT2**. DistilGPT2 is two times faster and 33% smaller than GPT2. **The paper superseeds our [previous blogpost](https://medium.com/huggingface/distilbert-8cf3380435b5) with a different distillation loss and better performances. Please use the paper as a reference when comparing/reporting results on DistilBERT.**

**September 19th, 2019 - Update:** We fixed bugs in the code and released an upadted version of the weights trained with a modification of the distillation loss. DistilBERT now reaches 97% of `BERT-base`'s performance on GLUE, and 86.9 F1 score on SQuAD v1.1 dev set (compared to 88.5 for `BERT-base`). We will publish a formal write-up of our approach in the near future!
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## What is Distil*

Distil* is a class of compressed models that started with DistilBERT. DistilBERT stands for Distillated-BERT. DistilBERT is a small, fast, cheap and light Transformer model based on Bert architecture. It has 40% less parameters than `bert-base-uncased`, runs 60% faster while preserving 97% of BERT's performances as measured on the GLUE language understanding benchmark. DistilBERT is trained using knowledge distillation, a technique to compress a large model called the teacher into a smaller model called the student. By distillating Bert, we obtain a smaller Transformer model that bears a lot of similarities with the original BERT model while being lighter, smaller and faster to run. DistilBERT is thus an interesting option to put large-scaled trained Transformer model into production.
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We have applied the same method to other Transformer architectures and released the weights:
- GPT2: on the [WikiText-103](https://blog.einstein.ai/the-wikitext-long-term-dependency-language-modeling-dataset/) benchmark, GPT2 reaches a perplexity on the test set of 15.0 compared to 18.5 for **DistilGPT2** (after fine-tuning on the train set).
- RoBERTa: **DistilRoBERTa** reaches 95% of `RoBERTa-base` performance on GLUE while being twice faster and 35% smaller.
- and more to come! 馃馃馃
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For more information on DistilBERT, please refer to our [NeurIPS workshop paper](https://arxiv.org/abs/1910.01108).
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Here are the results on the dev sets of GLUE:
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| Model                     | Macro-score                    | CoLA | MNLI | MRPC | QNLI | QQP  | RTE  | SST-2| STS-B| WNLI              |
| :---:                     |    :---:                       | :---:| :---:| :---:| :---:| :---:| :---:| :---:| :---:| :---:             |
| BERT-base                 |  **77.6**                      | 48.9 | 84.3 | 88.6 | 89.3 | 89.5 | 71.3 | 91.7 | 91.2 | 43.7              |
| DistilBERT                |  **76.8**                      | 49.1 | 81.8 | 90.2 | 90.2 | 89.2 | 62.9 | 92.7 | 90.7 | 44.4              |
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| ---                       |    ---                         |  --- |  --- |  --- |  --- |  --- |  --- |  --- |  --- |  ---              |
| RoBERTa-base (reported)   |  **83.2**/**86.4**<sup>2</sup> | 63.6 | 87.6 | 90.2 | 92.8 | 91.9 | 78.7 | 94.8 | 91.2 | 57.7<sup>3</sup> |
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| DistilRoBERTa<sup>1</sup> |  **79.0**/**82.3**<sup>2</sup> | 59.4 | 83.9 | 86.6 | 90.8 | 89.4 | 67.9 | 92.5 | 88.3 | 52.1              |

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<sup>1</sup> We did not use the MNLI checkpoint for fine-tuning but directy perform transfer learning on the pre-trained DistilRoBERTa.

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<sup>2</sup> Macro-score computed without WNLI.
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<sup>3</sup> We compute this score ourselves for completeness.
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## Setup

This part of the library has only be tested with Python3.6+. There are few specific dependencies to install before launching a distillation, you can install them with the command `pip install -r requirements.txt`. 

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**Important note:** The training scripts have been updated to support PyTorch v1.2.0 (there are breakings changes compared to v1.1.0).
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## How to use DistilBERT
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Transformers includes five pre-trained Distil* models, currently only provided for English and German (we are investigating the possibility to train and release a multilingual version of DistilBERT):
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- `distilbert-base-uncased`: DistilBERT English language model pretrained on the same data used to pretrain Bert (concatenation of the Toronto Book Corpus and full English Wikipedia) using distillation with the supervision of the `bert-base-uncased` version of Bert. The model has 6 layers, 768 dimension and 12 heads, totalizing 66M parameters.
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- `distilbert-base-uncased-distilled-squad`: A finetuned version of `distilbert-base-uncased` finetuned using (a second step of) knwoledge distillation on SQuAD 1.0. This model reaches a F1 score of 86.9 on the dev set (for comparison, Bert `bert-base-uncased` version reaches a 88.5 F1 score).
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- `distilbert-base-german-cased`: DistilBERT German language model pretrained on 1/2 of the data used to pretrain Bert using distillation with the supervision of the `bert-base-german-dbmdz-cased` version of German DBMDZ Bert. For NER tasks the model reaches a F1 score of 83.49 on the CoNLL-2003 test set (for comparison, `bert-base-german-dbmdz-cased` reaches a 84.52 F1 score), and a F1 score of 85.23 on the GermEval 2014 test set (`bert-base-german-dbmdz-cased` reaches a 86.89 F1 score).
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- `distilgpt2`: DistilGPT2 English language model pretrained with the supervision of `gpt2` (the smallest version of GPT2) on [OpenWebTextCorpus](https://skylion007.github.io/OpenWebTextCorpus/), a reproduction of OpenAI's WebText dataset. The model has 6 layers, 768 dimension and 12 heads, totalizing 82M parameters (compared to 124M parameters for GPT2). On average, DistilGPT2 is two times faster than GPT2.
- `distilroberta-base`: DistilRoBERTa English language model pretrained with the supervision of `roberta-base` solely on [OpenWebTextCorpus](https://skylion007.github.io/OpenWebTextCorpus/), a reproduction of OpenAI's WebText dataset (it is ~4 times less training data than the teacher RoBERTa). The model has 6 layers, 768 dimension and 12 heads, totalizing 82M parameters (compared to 125M parameters for RoBERTa-base). On average DistilRoBERTa is twice as fast as Roberta-base.
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- and more to come! 馃馃馃
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Using DistilBERT is very similar to using BERT. DistilBERT share the same tokenizer as BERT's `bert-base-uncased` even though we provide a link to this tokenizer under the `DistilBertTokenizer` name to have a consistent naming between the library models.
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```python
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tokenizer = DistilBertTokenizer.from_pretrained('distilbert-base-uncased')
model = DistilBertModel.from_pretrained('distilbert-base-uncased')
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input_ids = torch.tensor(tokenizer.encode("Hello, my dog is cute")).unsqueeze(0)
outputs = model(input_ids)
last_hidden_states = outputs[0]  # The last hidden-state is the first element of the output tuple
```

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Similarly, using the other Distil* models simply consists in calling the base classes with a different pretrained checkpoint:
- DistilGPT2: `model = GPT2Model.from_pretrained('distilgpt2')`
- DistilRoBERTa: `model = RobertaModel.from_pretrained('distilroberta-base')`

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## How to train Distil*
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In the following, we will explain how you can train DistilBERT.
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### A. Preparing the data

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The weights we release are trained using a concatenation of Toronto Book Corpus and English Wikipedia (same training data as the English version of BERT).
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To avoid processing the data several time, we do it once and for all before the training. From now on, will suppose that you have a text file `dump.txt` which contains one sequence per line (a sequence being composed of one of several coherent sentences).

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First, we will binarize the data, i.e. tokenize the data and convert each token in an index in our model's vocabulary.
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```bash
python scripts/binarized_data.py \
    --file_path data/dump.txt \
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    --tokenizer_type bert \
    --tokenizer_name bert-base-uncased \
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    --dump_file data/binarized_text
```

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Our implementation of masked language modeling loss follows [XLM](https://github.com/facebookresearch/XLM)'s one and smoothes the probability of masking with a factor that put more emphasis on rare words. Thus we count the occurences of each tokens in the data:
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```bash
python scripts/token_counts.py \
    --data_file data/binarized_text.bert-base-uncased.pickle \
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    --token_counts_dump data/token_counts.bert-base-uncased.pickle \
    --vocab_size 30522
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```

### B. Training

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Training with distillation is really simple once you have pre-processed the data:
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```bash
python train.py \
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    --student_type distilbert \
    --student_config training_configs/distilbert-base-uncased.json \
    --teacher_type bert \
    --teacher_name bert-base-uncased \
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    --alpha_ce 5.0 --alpha_mlm 2.0 --alpha_cos 1.0 --alpha_clm 0.0 --mlm \
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    --freeze_pos_embs \
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    --dump_path serialization_dir/my_first_training \
    --data_file data/binarized_text.bert-base-uncased.pickle \
    --token_counts data/token_counts.bert-base-uncased.pickle \
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    --force # overwrites the `dump_path` if it already exists.
```

By default, this will launch a training on a single GPU (even if more are available on the cluster). Other parameters are available in the command line, please look in `train.py` or run `python train.py --help` to list them.
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We highly encourage you to use distributed training for training DistilBERT as the training corpus is quite large. Here's an example that runs a distributed training on a single node having 4 GPUs:
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```bash
export NODE_RANK=0
export N_NODES=1

export N_GPU_NODE=4
export WORLD_SIZE=4
export MASTER_PORT=<AN_OPEN_PORT>
export MASTER_ADDR=<I.P.>

pkill -f 'python -u train.py'

python -m torch.distributed.launch \
    --nproc_per_node=$N_GPU_NODE \
    --nnodes=$N_NODES \
    --node_rank $NODE_RANK \
    --master_addr $MASTER_ADDR \
    --master_port $MASTER_PORT \
    train.py \
        --force \
        --n_gpu $WORLD_SIZE \
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        --student_type distilbert \
        --student_config training_configs/distilbert-base-uncased.json \
        --teacher_type bert \
        --teacher_name bert-base-uncased \
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        --alpha_ce 0.33 --alpha_mlm 0.33 --alpha_cos 0.33 --alpha_clm 0.0 --mlm \
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        --freeze_pos_embs \
        --dump_path serialization_dir/my_first_training \
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        --data_file data/binarized_text.bert-base-uncased.pickle \
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        --token_counts data/token_counts.bert-base-uncased.pickle
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```

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**Tips:** Starting distillated training with good initialization of the model weights is crucial to reach decent performance. In our experiments, we initialized our model from a few layers of the teacher (Bert) itself! Please refer to `scripts/extract.py` and `scripts/extract_distilbert.py` to create a valid initialization checkpoint and use `--student_pretrained_weights` argument to use this initialization for the distilled training!
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Happy distillation!
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## Citation

If you find the ressource useful, you should cite the following paper:

```
@inproceedings{sanh2019distilbert,
  title={DistilBERT, a distilled version of BERT: smaller, faster, cheaper and lighter},
  author={Sanh, Victor and Debut, Lysandre and Chaumond, Julien and Wolf, Thomas},
  booktitle={NeurIPS EMC^2 Workshop},
  year={2019}
}
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```