| [Quick tour: Fine-tuning/usage scripts](#quick-tour-of-the-fine-tuningusage-scripts) | Using provided scripts: GLUE, SQuAD and Text generation |
| [Migrating from pytorch-pretrained-bert to pytorch-transformers](#Migrating-from-pytorch-pretrained-bert-to-pytorch-transformers) | Migrating your code from pytorch-pretrained-bert to pytorch-transformers |
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@@ -68,6 +69,14 @@ It contains an example of a conversion script from a Pytorch trained Transformer
At some point in the future, you'll be able to seamlessly move from pre-training or fine-tuning models in PyTorch to productizing them in CoreML,
or prototype a model or an app in CoreML then research its hyperparameters or architecture from PyTorch. Super exciting!
## Online demo
**[Write With Transformer](https://transformer.huggingface.co)**, built by the Hugging Face team at transformer.huggingface.co, is the official demo of this repo’s text generation capabilities.
You can use it to experiment with completions generated by `GPT2Model`, `TransfoXLModel`, and `XLNetModel`.
> “🦄 Write with transformer is to writing what calculators are to calculus.”
| [Language Model fine-tuning](#language-model-fine-tuning) | Fine-tuning the library models for language modeling on a text dataset. Causal language modeling for GPT/GPT-2, masked language modeling for BERT/RoBERTa. |
| [Language Generation](#language-generation) | Conditional text generation using the auto-regressive models of the library: GPT, GPT-2, Transformer-XL and XLNet. |
| [GLUE](#glue) | Examples running BERT/XLM/XLNet/RoBERTa on the 9 GLUE tasks. Examples feature distributed training as well as half-precision. |
| [SQuAD](#squad) | Using BERT for question answering, examples with distributed training. |
## Language model fine-tuning
Based on the script [`run_lm_finetuning.py`](https://github.com/huggingface/pytorch-transformers/blob/master/examples/run_lm_finetuning.py).
Fine-tuning the library models for language modeling on a text dataset for GPT, GPT-2, BERT and RoBERTa (DistilBERT
to be added soon). GPT and GPT-2 are fine-tuned using a causal language modeling (CLM) loss while BERT and RoBERTa
are fine-tuned using a masked language modeling (MLM) loss.
Before running the following example, you should get a file that contains text on which the language model will be
fine-tuned. A good example of such text is the [WikiText-2 dataset](https://blog.einstein.ai/the-wikitext-long-term-dependency-language-modeling-dataset/).
We will refer to two different files: `$TRAIN_FILE`, which contains text for training, and `$TEST_FILE`, which contains
text that will be used for evaluation.
### GPT-2/GPT and causal language modeling
The following example fine-tunes GPT-2 on WikiText-2. We're using the raw WikiText-2 (no tokens were replaced before
the tokenization). The loss here is that of causal language modeling.
```bash
export TRAIN_FILE=/path/to/dataset/wiki.train.raw
export TEST_FILE=/path/to/dataset/wiki.test.raw
python run_lm_finetuning.py \
--output_dir=output \
--model_type=gpt2 \
--model_name_or_path=gpt2 \
--do_train\
--train_data_file=$TRAIN_FILE\
--do_eval\
--eval_data_file=$TEST_FILE
```
This takes about half an hour to train on a single K80 GPU and about one minute for the evaluation to run. It reaches
a score of ~20 perplexity once fine-tuned on the dataset.
### RoBERTa/BERT and masked language modeling
The following example fine-tunes RoBERTa on WikiText-2. Here too, we're using the raw WikiText-2. The loss is different
as BERT/RoBERTa have a bidirectional mechanism; we're therefore using the same loss that was used during their
pre-training: masked language modeling.
In accordance to the RoBERTa paper, we use dynamic masking rather than static masking. The model may, therefore, converge
slightly slower (over-fitting takes more epochs).
We use the `--mlm` flag so that the script may change its loss function.
```bash
export TRAIN_FILE=/path/to/dataset/wiki.train.raw
export TEST_FILE=/path/to/dataset/wiki.test.raw
python run_lm_finetuning.py \
--output_dir=output \
--model_type=roberta \
--model_name_or_path=roberta-base \
--do_train\
--train_data_file=$TRAIN_FILE\
--do_eval\
--eval_data_file=$TEST_FILE\
--mlm
```
## Language generation
Based on the script [`run_generation.py`](https://github.com/huggingface/pytorch-transformers/blob/master/examples/run_generation.py).
Conditional text generation using the auto-regressive models of the library: GPT, GPT-2, Transformer-XL and XLNet.
A similar script is used for our official demo [Write With Transfomer](https://transformer.huggingface.co), where you
can try out the different models available in the library.
Example usage:
```bash
python run_generation.py \
--model_type=gpt2 \
--model_name_or_path=gpt2
```
## GLUE
Based on the script [`run_glue.py`](https://github.com/huggingface/pytorch-transformers/blob/master/examples/run_glue.py).
Fine-tuning the library models for sequence classification on the GLUE benchmark: [General Language Understanding
Evaluation](https://gluebenchmark.com/). This script can fine-tune the following models: BERT, XLM, XLNet and RoBERTa.
GLUE is made up of a total of 9 different tasks. We get the following results on the dev set of the benchmark with an
uncased BERT base model (the checkpoint `bert-base-uncased`). All experiments ran on 8 V100 GPUs with a total train
batch size of 24. Some of these tasks have a small dataset and training can lead to high variance in the results
between different runs. We report the median on 5 runs (with different seeds) for each of the metrics.
@@ -9,6 +9,12 @@ DistilBERT stands for Distillated-BERT. DistilBERT is a small, fast, cheap and l
For more information on DistilBERT, please refer to our [detailed blog post](https://medium.com/huggingface/smaller-faster-cheaper-lighter-introducing-distilbert-a-distilled-version-of-bert-8cf3380435b5
).
## 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`.
**Important note:** The training scripts have been updated to support PyTorch v1.2.0 (there are breakings changes compared to v1.1.0). It is important to note that there is a small internal bug in the current version of PyTorch available on pip that causes a memory leak in our training/distillation. It has been recently fixed and will likely be integrated into the next release. For the moment, we recommend to [compile PyTorch from source](https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch#from-source). Please refer to [issue 1179](https://github.com/huggingface/pytorch-transformers/issues/1179) for more details.
## How to use DistilBERT
PyTorch-Transformers includes two pre-trained DistilBERT models, currently only provided for English (we are investigating the possibility to train and release a multilingual version of DistilBERT):
- a string with the `shortcut name` of a pre-trained model configuration to load from cache or download, e.g.: ``bert-base-uncased``.
- a path to a `directory` containing a configuration file saved using the :func:`~pytorch_transformers.PretrainedConfig.save_pretrained` method, e.g.: ``./my_model_directory/``.
- a path or url to a saved configuration JSON `file`, e.g.: ``./my_model_directory/configuration.json``.
cache_dir: (`optional`) string:
Path to a directory in which a downloaded pre-trained model
configuration should be cached if the standard cache should not be used.
kwargs: (`optional`) dict: key/value pairs with which to update the configuration object after loading.
- The values in kwargs of any keys which are configuration attributes will be used to override the loaded values.
- Behavior concerning key/value pairs whose keys are *not* configuration attributes is controlled by the `return_unused_kwargs` keyword parameter.
Force to (re-)download the model weights and configuration files and override the cached versions if they exists.
proxies: (`optional`) dict, default None:
A dictionary of proxy servers to use by protocol or endpoint, e.g.: {'http': 'foo.bar:3128', 'http://hostname': 'foo.bar:4012'}.
The proxies are used on each request.
return_unused_kwargs: (`optional`) bool:
- If False, then this function returns just the final configuration object.
- If True, then this functions returns a tuple `(config, unused_kwargs)` where `unused_kwargs` is a dictionary consisting of the key/value pairs whose keys are not configuration attributes: ie the part of kwargs which has not been used to update `config` and is otherwise ignored.
Examples::
config = AutoConfig.from_pretrained('bert-base-uncased') # Download configuration from S3 and cache.
config = AutoConfig.from_pretrained('./test/bert_saved_model/') # E.g. config (or model) was saved using `save_pretrained('./test/saved_model/')`