Optimum documentation

Optimization

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Optimization

🤗 Optimum provides an optimum.onnxruntime package that enables you to apply graph optimization on many model hosted on the 🤗 hub using the ONNX Runtime model optimization tool.

Optimizing a model during the ONNX export

The ONNX model can be directly optimized during the ONNX export using Optimum CLI, by passing the argument --optimize {O1,O2,O3,O4} in the CLI, for example:

optimum-cli export onnx --model gpt2 --optimize O3 gpt2_onnx/

The optimization levels are:

  • O1: basic general optimizations.
  • O2: basic and extended general optimizations, transformers-specific fusions.
  • O3: same as O2 with GELU approximation.
  • O4: same as O3 with mixed precision (fp16, GPU-only, requires --device cuda).

Optimizing a model programmatically with ORTOptimizer

ONNX models can be optimized with the ORTOptimizer. The class can be initialized using the from_pretrained() method, which supports different checkpoint formats.

  1. Using an already initialized ORTModel class.
>>> from optimum.onnxruntime import ORTOptimizer, ORTModelForSequenceClassification

# Loading ONNX Model from the Hub
>>> model = ORTModelForSequenceClassification.from_pretrained(
...     "optimum/distilbert-base-uncased-finetuned-sst-2-english"
... )

# Create an optimizer from an ORTModelForXXX
>>> optimizer = ORTOptimizer.from_pretrained(model)
  1. Using a local ONNX model from a directory.
>>> from optimum.onnxruntime import ORTOptimizer

# This assumes a model.onnx exists in path/to/model
>>> optimizer = ORTOptimizer.from_pretrained("path/to/model")

Optimization Configuration

The OptimizationConfig class allows to specify how the optimization should be performed by the ORTOptimizer.

In the optimization configuration, there are 4 possible optimization levels:

  • optimization_level=0: to disable all optimizations
  • optimization_level=1: to enable basic optimizations such as constant folding or redundant node eliminations
  • optimization_level=2: to enable extended graph optimizations such as node fusions
  • optimization_level=99: to enable data layout optimizations

Choosing a level enables the optimizations of that level, as well as the optimizations of all preceding levels. More information here.

enable_transformers_specific_optimizations=True means that transformers-specific graph fusion and approximation are performed in addition to the ONNX Runtime optimizations described above. Here is a list of the possible optimizations you can enable:

  • Gelu fusion with disable_gelu_fusion=False,
  • Layer Normalization fusion with disable_layer_norm_fusion=False,
  • Attention fusion with disable_attention_fusion=False,
  • SkipLayerNormalization fusion with disable_skip_layer_norm_fusion=False,
  • Add Bias and SkipLayerNormalization fusion with disable_bias_skip_layer_norm_fusion=False,
  • Add Bias and Gelu / FastGelu fusion with disable_bias_gelu_fusion=False,
  • Gelu approximation with enable_gelu_approximation=True.

Attention fusion is designed for right-side padding for BERT-like architectures (eg. BERT, RoBERTa, VIT, etc.) and for left-side padding for generative models (GPT-like). If you are not following the convention, please set use_raw_attention_mask=True to avoid potential accuracy issues but sacrifice the performance.

While OptimizationConfig gives you full control on how to do optimization, it can be hard to know what to enable / disable. Instead, you can use AutoOptimizationConfig which provides four common optimization levels:

  • O1: basic general optimizations.
  • O2: basic and extended general optimizations, transformers-specific fusions.
  • O3: same as O2 with GELU approximation.
  • O4: same as O3 with mixed precision (fp16, GPU-only).

Example: Loading a O2 OptimizationConfig

>>> from optimum.onnxruntime import AutoOptimizationConfig
>>> optimization_config = AutoOptimizationConfig.O2()

You can also specify custom argument that were not defined in the O2 configuration, for instance:

>>> from optimum.onnxruntime import AutoOptimizationConfig
>>> optimization_config = AutoOptimizationConfig.O2(disable_embed_layer_norm_fusion=False)

Optimization examples

Below you will find an easy end-to-end example on how to optimize distilbert-base-uncased-finetuned-sst-2-english.

>>> from optimum.onnxruntime import (
...     AutoOptimizationConfig, ORTOptimizer, ORTModelForSequenceClassification
... )

>>> model_id = "distilbert-base-uncased-finetuned-sst-2-english"
>>> save_dir = "distilbert_optimized"

>>> # Load a PyTorch model and export it to the ONNX format
>>> model = ORTModelForSequenceClassification.from_pretrained(model_id, export=True)

>>> # Create the optimizer
>>> optimizer = ORTOptimizer.from_pretrained(model)

>>> # Define the optimization strategy by creating the appropriate configuration
>>> optimization_config = AutoOptimizationConfig.O2()

>>> # Optimize the model
>>> optimizer.optimize(save_dir=save_dir, optimization_config=optimization_config)

Below you will find an easy end-to-end example on how to optimize a Seq2Seq model sshleifer/distilbart-cnn-12-6”.

>>> from transformers import AutoTokenizer
>>> from optimum.onnxruntime import  OptimizationConfig, ORTOptimizer, ORTModelForSeq2SeqLM

>>> model_id = "sshleifer/distilbart-cnn-12-6"
>>> save_dir = "distilbart_optimized"

>>> # Load a PyTorch model and export it to the ONNX format
>>> model = ORTModelForSeq2SeqLM.from_pretrained(model_id, export=True)

>>> # Create the optimizer
>>> optimizer = ORTOptimizer.from_pretrained(model)

>>> # Define the optimization strategy by creating the appropriate configuration
>>> optimization_config = OptimizationConfig(
...     optimization_level=2,
...     enable_transformers_specific_optimizations=True,
...     optimize_for_gpu=False,
... )

>>> # Optimize the model
>>> optimizer.optimize(save_dir=save_dir, optimization_config=optimization_config)
>>> tokenizer = AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained(model_id)
>>> optimized_model = ORTModelForSeq2SeqLM.from_pretrained(save_dir)
>>> tokens = tokenizer("This is a sample input", return_tensors="pt")
>>> outputs = optimized_model.generate(**tokens)

Optimizing a model with Optimum CLI

The Optimum ONNX Runtime optimization tools can be used directly through Optimum command-line interface:

optimum-cli onnxruntime optimize --help
usage: optimum-cli <command> [<args>] onnxruntime optimize [-h] --onnx_model ONNX_MODEL -o OUTPUT (-O1 | -O2 | -O3 | -O4 | -c CONFIG)

options:
  -h, --help            show this help message and exit
  -O1                   Basic general optimizations (see: https://huggingface.co/docs/optimum/onnxruntime/usage_guides/optimization for more details).
  -O2                   Basic and extended general optimizations, transformers-specific fusions (see: https://huggingface.co/docs/optimum/onnxruntime/usage_guides/optimization for more
                        details).
  -O3                   Same as O2 with Gelu approximation (see: https://huggingface.co/docs/optimum/onnxruntime/usage_guides/optimization for more details).
  -O4                   Same as O3 with mixed precision (see: https://huggingface.co/docs/optimum/onnxruntime/usage_guides/optimization for more details).
  -c CONFIG, --config CONFIG
                        `ORTConfig` file to use to optimize the model.

Required arguments:
  --onnx_model ONNX_MODEL
                        Path to the repository where the ONNX models to optimize are located.
  -o OUTPUT, --output OUTPUT
                        Path to the directory where to store generated ONNX model.

Optimizing an ONNX model can be done as follows:

 optimum-cli onnxruntime optimize --onnx_model onnx_model_location/ -O1 -o optimized_model/

This optimizes all the ONNX files in onnx_model_location with the basic general optimizations.