Hub Python Library documentation

Searching the Hub Efficiently with Python

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Searching the Hub Efficiently with Python

In this tutorial, we will explore how to interact and explore the Hugging Face Hub with the huggingface_hub library to help find available models and datasets quickly.

The Basics

huggingface_hub is a Python library that allows anyone to freely extract useful information from the Hub, as well as downloading and publishing models. You can install it with:

pip install huggingface_hub

It comes packaged with an interface that can interact with the Hub in the HfApi class:

>>> from huggingface_hub import HfApi
>>> api = HfApi()

This class lets you perform a variety of operations that interact with the raw Hub API. We’ll be focusing on two specific functions:

  • list_models
  • list_datasets

If you look at what can be passed into each function, you will find the parameter list looks something like:

  • filter
  • author
  • search

Two of these parameters are intuitive (author and search), but what about that filter? 🤔 Let’s dive into a few helpers quickly and revisit that question.

Search Parameters

The huggingface_hub provides a user-friendly interface to know what exactly can be passed into this filter parameter through the ModelSearchArguments and DatasetSearchArguments classes:

>>> from huggingface_hub import ModelSearchArguments, DatasetSearchArguments

>>> model_args = ModelSearchArguments()
>>> dataset_args = DatasetSearchArguments()

These are nested namespace objects that have every single option available on the Hub and that will return what should be passed to filter. The best of all is: it has tab completion 🎊 .

Searching for a Model

Let’s pose a problem that would be complicated to solve without access to this information:

I want to search the Hub for all PyTorch models trained on the glue dataset that can do Text Classification.

If you check what is available in model_args by checking it’s output, you will find:

>>> model_args

Available Attributes or Keys:

  • author
  • dataset
  • language
  • library
  • license
  • model_name
  • pipeline_tag

It has a variety of attributes or keys available to you. This is because it is both an object and a dictionary, so you can either do model_args["author"] or model_args.author. For this tutorial, let’s follow the latter format.

The first criteria is getting all PyTorch models. This would be found under the library attribute, so let’s see if it is there:

>>> model_args.library

Available Attributes or Keys:

  • AdapterTransformers
  • Asteroid
  • ESPnet
  • Flair
  • JAX
  • Joblib
  • Keras
  • ONNX
  • PyTorch
  • Pyannote
  • Rust
  • Scikit_learn
  • SentenceTransformers
  • Stanza
  • TFLite
  • TensorBoard
  • TensorFlow
  • TensorFlowTTS
  • Timm
  • Transformers
  • allennlp
  • fastText
  • fastai
  • spaCy
  • speechbrain

It is! The PyTorch name is there, so you’ll need to use model_args.library.PyTorch:

>>> model_args.library.PyTorch

‘pytorch’

Below is an animation repeating the process for finding both the Text Classification and glue requirements:

Animation exploring `model_args.pipeline_tag`

Animation exploring `model_args.dataset`

Now that all the pieces are there, the last step is to combine them all for something the API can use through the ModelFilter and DatasetFilter classes. The classes transform the outputs of the previous step into something the API can use conveniently:

>>> from huggingface_hub import ModelFilter, DatasetFilter

>>> filt = ModelFilter(
>>>     task=args.pipeline_tag.TextClassification, 
>>>     trained_dataset=args.dataset.glue, 
>>>     library=args.library.PyTorch
>>> )
>>> api.list_models(filter=filt)[0]

ModelInfo: { modelId: 09panesara/distilbert-base-uncased-finetuned-cola sha: f89a85cb8703676115912fffa55842f23eb981ab lastModified: 2021-12-21T14:03:01.000Z tags: [‘pytorch’, ‘tensorboard’, ‘distilbert’, ‘text-classification’, ‘dataset:glue’, ‘transformers’, ‘license:apache-2.0’, ‘generated_from_trainer’, ‘model-index’, ‘infinity_compatible’] pipeline_tag: text-classification siblings: [ModelFile(rfilename=’.gitattributes’), ModelFile(rfilename=’.gitignore’), ModelFile(rfilename=‘README.md’), ModelFile(rfilename=‘config.json’), ModelFile(rfilename=‘pytorch_model.bin’), ModelFile(rfilename=‘special_tokens_map.json’), ModelFile(rfilename=‘tokenizer.json’), ModelFile(rfilename=‘tokenizer_config.json’), ModelFile(rfilename=‘training_args.bin’), ModelFile(rfilename=‘vocab.txt’), ModelFile(rfilename=‘runs/Dec21_13-51-40_bc62d5d57d92/events.out.tfevents.1640094759.bc62d5d57d92.77.0’), ModelFile(rfilename=‘runs/Dec21_13-51-40_bc62d5d57d92/events.out.tfevents.1640095117.bc62d5d57d92.77.2’), ModelFile(rfilename=‘runs/Dec21_13-51-40_bc62d5d57d92/1640094759.4067502/events.out.tfevents.1640094759.bc62d5d57d92.77.1’)] config: None private: False downloads: 6 library_name: transformers likes: 0 }

As you can see, it found the models that fit all the criteria. You can even take it further by passing in an array for each of the parameters from before. For example, let’s take a look for the same configuration, but also include TensorFlow in the filter:

>>> filt = ModelFilter(
>>>     task=args.pipeline_tag.TextClassification, 
>>>     library=[args.library.PyTorch, args.library.TensorFlow]
>>> )
>>> api.list_models(filter=filt)[0]

ModelInfo: { modelId: CAMeL-Lab/bert-base-arabic-camelbert-ca-poetry sha: bc50b6dc1c97dc66998287efb6d044bdaa8f7057 lastModified: 2021-10-17T12:09:38.000Z tags: [‘pytorch’, ‘tf’, ‘bert’, ‘text-classification’, ‘ar’, ‘arxiv:1905.05700’, ‘arxiv:2103.06678’, ‘transformers’, ‘license:apache-2.0’, ‘infinity_compatible’] pipeline_tag: text-classification siblings: [ModelFile(rfilename=’.gitattributes’), ModelFile(rfilename=‘README.md’), ModelFile(rfilename=‘config.json’), ModelFile(rfilename=‘pytorch_model.bin’), ModelFile(rfilename=‘special_tokens_map.json’), ModelFile(rfilename=‘tf_model.h5’), ModelFile(rfilename=‘tokenizer_config.json’), ModelFile(rfilename=‘training_args.bin’), ModelFile(rfilename=‘vocab.txt’)] config: None private: False downloads: 21 library_name: transformers likes: 0 }

Searching for a Dataset

Similarly to finding a model, you can find a dataset easily by following the same steps.

The new scenario will be:

I want to search the Hub for all datasets that can be used for text_classification and are in English.

First, you should look at what is available in the DatasetSearchArguments, similar to the ModelSearchArguments:

>>> dataset_args = DatasetSearchArguments()
>>> dataset_args

Available Attributes or Keys:

  • author
  • benchmark
  • dataset_name
  • language_creators
  • languages
  • licenses
  • multilinguality
  • size_categories
  • task_categories
  • task_ids

text_classification is a task, so first you should check task_categories:

dataset_args.task_categories

Available Attributes or Keys:

  • Summarization
  • audio_classification
  • automatic_speech_recognition
  • code_generation
  • conditional_text_generation
  • cross_language_transcription
  • dialogue_system
  • grammaticalerrorcorrection
  • machine_translation
  • named_entity_disambiguation
  • named_entity_recognition
  • natural_language_inference
  • news_classification
  • other
  • other_test
  • other_text_search
  • paraphrase
  • paraphrasedetection
  • query_paraphrasing
  • question_answering
  • question_generation
  • sentiment_analysis
  • sequence_modeling
  • speech_processing
  • structure_prediction
  • summarization
  • text_classification
  • text_generation
  • text_retrieval
  • text_scoring
  • textual_entailment
  • translation

There you will find text_classification, so you should use dataset_args.task_categories.text_classification.

Next we need to find the proper language. There is a languages property we can check. These are two-letter language codes, so you should check if it has en:

>>> "en" in dataset_args.languages

True

Now that the pieces are found, you can write a filter:

>>> filt = DatasetFilter(
>>>    languages=dataset_args.languages.en,
>>>    task_categories=dataset_args.task_categories.text_classification
>>> )

And search the API!

>>> api.list_datasets(filter=filt)[0]

DatasetInfo: { id: Abirate/english_quotes lastModified: None tags: [‘annotations_creators:expert-generated’, ‘language_creators:expert-generated’, ‘language_creators:crowdsourced’, ‘languages:en’, ‘multilinguality:monolingual’, ‘source_datasets:original’, ‘task_categories:text-classification’, ‘task_ids:multi-label-classification’] private: False author: Abirate description: None citation: None cardData: None siblings: None gated: False }

With these two functionalities combined, you can search for all available parameters and tags within the Hub to search for with ease for both Datasets and Models!