Hub Python Library documentation

Quickstart

You are viewing v0.24.5 version. A newer version v0.27.0 is available.
Hugging Face's logo
Join the Hugging Face community

and get access to the augmented documentation experience

to get started

Quickstart

The Hugging Face Hub is the go-to place for sharing machine learning models, demos, datasets, and metrics. huggingface_hub library helps you interact with the Hub without leaving your development environment. You can create and manage repositories easily, download and upload files, and get useful model and dataset metadata from the Hub.

Installation

To get started, install the huggingface_hub library:

pip install --upgrade huggingface_hub

For more details, check out the installation guide.

Download files

Repositories on the Hub are git version controlled, and users can download a single file or the whole repository. You can use the hf_hub_download() function to download files. This function will download and cache a file on your local disk. The next time you need that file, it will load from your cache, so you don’t need to re-download it.

You will need the repository id and the filename of the file you want to download. For example, to download the Pegasus model configuration file:

>>> from huggingface_hub import hf_hub_download
>>> hf_hub_download(repo_id="google/pegasus-xsum", filename="config.json")

To download a specific version of the file, use the revision parameter to specify the branch name, tag, or commit hash. If you choose to use the commit hash, it must be the full-length hash instead of the shorter 7-character commit hash:

>>> from huggingface_hub import hf_hub_download
>>> hf_hub_download(
...     repo_id="google/pegasus-xsum",
...     filename="config.json",
...     revision="4d33b01d79672f27f001f6abade33f22d993b151"
... )

For more details and options, see the API reference for hf_hub_download().

Authentication

In a lot of cases, you must be authenticated with a Hugging Face account to interact with the Hub: download private repos, upload files, create PRs,… Create an account if you don’t already have one, and then sign in to get your User Access Token from your Settings page. The User Access Token is used to authenticate your identity to the Hub.

Tokens can have read or write permissions. Make sure to have a write access token if you want to create or edit a repository. Otherwise, it’s best to generate a read token to reduce risk in case your token is inadvertently leaked.

Login command

The easiest way to authenticate is to save the token on your machine. You can do that from the terminal using the login() command:

huggingface-cli login

The command will tell you if you are already logged in and prompt you for your token. The token is then validated and saved in your HF_HOME directory (defaults to ~/.cache/huggingface/token). Any script or library interacting with the Hub will use this token when sending requests.

Alternatively, you can programmatically login using login() in a notebook or a script:

>>> from huggingface_hub import login
>>> login()

You can only be logged in to one account at a time. Logging in to a new account will automatically log you out of the previous one. To determine your currently active account, simply run the huggingface-cli whoami command.

Once logged in, all requests to the Hub - even methods that don’t necessarily require authentication - will use your access token by default. If you want to disable the implicit use of your token, you should set HF_HUB_DISABLE_IMPLICIT_TOKEN=1 as an environment variable (see reference).

Environment variable

The environment variable HF_TOKEN can also be used to authenticate yourself. This is especially useful in a Space where you can set HF_TOKEN as a Space secret.

NEW: Google Colaboratory lets you define private keys for your notebooks. Define a HF_TOKEN secret to be automatically authenticated!

Authentication via an environment variable or a secret has priority over the token stored on your machine.

Method parameters

Finally, it is also possible to authenticate by passing your token to any method that accepts token as a parameter.

from transformers import whoami

user = whoami(token=...)

This is usually discouraged except in an environment where you don’t want to store your token permanently or if you need to handle several tokens at once.

Please be careful when passing tokens as a parameter. It is always best practice to load the token from a secure vault instead of hardcoding it in your codebase or notebook. Hardcoded tokens present a major leak risk if you share your code inadvertently.

Create a repository

Once you’ve registered and logged in, create a repository with the create_repo() function:

>>> from huggingface_hub import HfApi
>>> api = HfApi()
>>> api.create_repo(repo_id="super-cool-model")

If you want your repository to be private, then:

>>> from huggingface_hub import HfApi
>>> api = HfApi()
>>> api.create_repo(repo_id="super-cool-model", private=True)

Private repositories will not be visible to anyone except yourself.

To create a repository or to push content to the Hub, you must provide a User Access Token that has the write permission. You can choose the permission when creating the token in your Settings page.

Upload files

Use the upload_file() function to add a file to your newly created repository. You need to specify:

  1. The path of the file to upload.
  2. The path of the file in the repository.
  3. The repository id of where you want to add the file.
>>> from huggingface_hub import HfApi
>>> api = HfApi()
>>> api.upload_file(
...     path_or_fileobj="/home/lysandre/dummy-test/README.md",
...     path_in_repo="README.md",
...     repo_id="lysandre/test-model",
... )

To upload more than one file at a time, take a look at the Upload guide which will introduce you to several methods for uploading files (with or without git).

Next steps

The huggingface_hub library provides an easy way for users to interact with the Hub with Python. To learn more about how you can manage your files and repositories on the Hub, we recommend reading our how-to guides to:

< > Update on GitHub