# Language model training examples
The following example showcases how to train a language model from scratch
using the JAX/Flax backend.
JAX/Flax allows you to trace pure functions and compile them into efficient, fused accelerator code on both GPU and TPU.
Models written in JAX/Flax are **immutable** and updated in a purely functional
way which enables simple and efficient model parallelism.
## Masked language modeling
In the following, we demonstrate how to train a bi-directional transformer model
using masked language modeling objective as introduced in [BERT: Pre-training of Deep Bidirectional Transformers for Language Understanding](https://arxiv.org/abs/1810.04805).
More specifically, we demonstrate how JAX/Flax can be leveraged
to pre-train [**`roberta-base`**](https://huggingface.co/roberta-base)
in Norwegian on a single TPUv3-8 pod.
The example script uses the 🤗 Datasets library. You can easily customize them to your needs if you need extra processing on your datasets.
To setup all relevant files for training, let's create a directory.
```bash
mkdir ./norwegian-roberta-base
```
### Train tokenizer
In the first step, we train a tokenizer to efficiently process the text input for the model. Similar to how it is shown in [How to train a new language model from scratch using Transformers and Tokenizers](https://huggingface.co/blog/how-to-train), we use a **`ByteLevelBPETokenizer`**.
The tokenizer is trained on the complete Norwegian dataset of OSCAR
and consequently saved in the cloned model directory.
This can take up to 10 minutes depending on your hardware ☕.
```python
from datasets import load_dataset
from tokenizers import trainers, Tokenizer, normalizers, ByteLevelBPETokenizer
# load dataset
dataset = load_dataset("oscar", "unshuffled_deduplicated_no", split="train")
# Instantiate tokenizer
tokenizer = ByteLevelBPETokenizer()
def batch_iterator(batch_size=1000):
for i in range(0, len(dataset), batch_size):
yield dataset[i: i + batch_size]["text"]
# Customized training
tokenizer.train_from_iterator(batch_iterator(), vocab_size=50265, min_frequency=2, special_tokens=[
"",
"",
"",
"",
"",
])
# Save files to disk
tokenizer.save("./norwegian-roberta-base/tokenizer.json")
```
### Create configuration
Next, we create the model's configuration file. This is as simple
as loading and storing [`**roberta-base**`](https://huggingface.co/roberta-base)
in the local model folder:
```python
from transformers import RobertaConfig
config = RobertaConfig.from_pretrained("roberta-base", vocab_size=50265)
config.save_pretrained("./norwegian-roberta-base")
```
Great, we have set up our model repository. During training, we will automatically
push the training logs and model weights to the repo.
### Train model
Next we can run the example script to pretrain the model:
```bash
python run_mlm_flax.py \
--output_dir="./norwegian-roberta-base" \
--model_type="roberta" \
--config_name="./norwegian-roberta-base" \
--tokenizer_name="./norwegian-roberta-base" \
--dataset_name="oscar" \
--dataset_config_name="unshuffled_deduplicated_no" \
--max_seq_length="128" \
--weight_decay="0.01" \
--per_device_train_batch_size="128" \
--per_device_eval_batch_size="128" \
--learning_rate="3e-4" \
--warmup_steps="1000" \
--overwrite_output_dir \
--num_train_epochs="18" \
--adam_beta1="0.9" \
--adam_beta2="0.98" \
--logging_steps="500" \
--save_steps="2500" \
--eval_steps="2500" \
--push_to_hub
```
Training should converge at a loss and accuracy
of 1.78 and 0.64 respectively after 18 epochs on a single TPUv3-8.
This should take less than 18 hours.
Training statistics can be accessed on [tfhub.dev](https://tensorboard.dev/experiment/GdYmdak2TWeVz0DDRYOrrg).
For a step-by-step walkthrough of how to do masked language modeling in Flax, please have a
look at [this](https://colab.research.google.com/github/huggingface/notebooks/blob/main/examples/masked_language_modeling_flax.ipynb) google colab.
## Causal language modeling
In the following, we demonstrate how to train an auto-regressive causal transformer model
in JAX/Flax.
More specifically, we pretrain a randomly initialized [**`gpt2`**](https://huggingface.co/gpt2) model in Norwegian on a single TPUv3-8.
to pre-train 124M [**`gpt2`**](https://huggingface.co/gpt2)
in Norwegian on a single TPUv3-8 pod.
The example script uses the 🤗 Datasets library. You can easily customize them to your needs if you need extra processing on your datasets.
To setup all relevant files for training, let's create a directory.
```bash
mkdir ./norwegian-gpt2
```
### Train tokenizer
In the first step, we train a tokenizer to efficiently process the text input for the model. Similar to how it is shown in [How to train a new language model from scratch using Transformers and Tokenizers](https://huggingface.co/blog/how-to-train), we use a **`ByteLevelBPETokenizer`**.
The tokenizer is trained on the complete Norwegian dataset of OSCAR
and consequently saved in the cloned model directory.
This can take up to 10 minutes depending on your hardware ☕.
```python
from datasets import load_dataset
from tokenizers import trainers, Tokenizer, normalizers, ByteLevelBPETokenizer
# load dataset
dataset = load_dataset("oscar", "unshuffled_deduplicated_no", split="train")
# Instantiate tokenizer
tokenizer = ByteLevelBPETokenizer()
def batch_iterator(batch_size=1000):
for i in range(0, len(dataset), batch_size):
yield dataset[i: i + batch_size]["text"]
# Customized training
tokenizer.train_from_iterator(batch_iterator(), vocab_size=50257, min_frequency=2, special_tokens=[
"",
"",
"",
"",
"",
])
# Save files to disk
tokenizer.save("./norwegian-gpt2/tokenizer.json")
```
### Create configuration
Next, we create the model's configuration file. This is as simple
as loading and storing [`**gpt2**`](https://huggingface.co/gpt2)
in the local model folder:
```python
from transformers import GPT2Config
config = GPT2Config.from_pretrained("gpt2", resid_pdrop=0.0, embd_pdrop=0.0, attn_pdrop=0.0, vocab_size=50257)
config.save_pretrained("./norwegian-gpt2")
```
Great, we have set up our model repository. During training, we will now automatically
push the training logs and model weights to the repo.
### Train model
Finally, we can run the example script to pretrain the model:
```bash
python run_clm_flax.py \
--output_dir="./norwegian-gpt2" \
--model_type="gpt2" \
--config_name="./norwegian-gpt2" \
--tokenizer_name="./norwegian-gpt2" \
--dataset_name="oscar" \
--dataset_config_name="unshuffled_deduplicated_no" \
--do_train --do_eval \
--block_size="512" \
--per_device_train_batch_size="64" \
--per_device_eval_batch_size="64" \
--learning_rate="5e-3" --warmup_steps="1000" \
--adam_beta1="0.9" --adam_beta2="0.98" --weight_decay="0.01" \
--overwrite_output_dir \
--num_train_epochs="20" \
--logging_steps="500" \
--save_steps="2500" \
--eval_steps="2500" \
--push_to_hub
```
Training should converge at a loss and perplexity
of 3.24 and 25.72 respectively after 20 epochs on a single TPUv3-8.
This should take less than ~21 hours.
Training statistics can be accessed on [tfhub.de](https://tensorboard.dev/experiment/2zEhLwJ0Qp2FAkI3WVH9qA).
For a step-by-step walkthrough of how to do causal language modeling in Flax, please have a
look at [this](https://colab.research.google.com/github/huggingface/notebooks/blob/main/examples/causal_language_modeling_flax.ipynb) google colab.
## T5-like span-masked language modeling
In the following, we demonstrate how to train a T5 model using the span-masked language model
objective as proposed in the [Exploring the Limits of Transfer Learning with a Unified Text-to-Text Transformer](https://arxiv.org/abs/1910.10683).
More specifically, we demonstrate how JAX/Flax can be leveraged
to pre-train [**`google/t5-v1_1-base`**](https://huggingface.co/google/t5-v1_1-base)
in Norwegian on a single TPUv3-8 pod.
The example script uses the 🤗 Datasets library. You can easily customize them to your needs if you need extra processing on your datasets.
Let's start by creating a model repository to save the trained model and logs.
Here we call the model `"norwegian-t5-base"`, but you can change the model name as you like.
To setup all relevant files for training, let's create a directory.
```bash
cd ./norwegian-t5-base
```
### Train tokenizer
In the first step, we train a tokenizer to efficiently process the text input for the model.
We make use of the [tokenizers](https://github.com/huggingface/tokenizers) library to train
a sentencepiece unigram tokenizer as shown in [t5_tokenizer_model.py](https://github.com/huggingface/transformers/tree/main/examples/flax/language-modeling/t5_tokenizer_model.py)
which is heavily inspired from [yandex-research/DeDLOC's tokenizer model](https://github.com/yandex-research/DeDLOC/blob/5c994bc64e573702a9a79add3ecd68b38f14b548/sahajbert/tokenizer/tokenizer_model.py) .
The tokenizer is trained on the complete Norwegian dataset of OSCAR
and consequently saved in the cloned model directory.
This can take up to 120 minutes depending on your hardware ☕☕☕ .
```python
import datasets
from t5_tokenizer_model import SentencePieceUnigramTokenizer
vocab_size = 32_000
input_sentence_size = None
# Initialize a dataset
dataset = datasets.load_dataset("oscar", name="unshuffled_deduplicated_no", split="train")
tokenizer = SentencePieceUnigramTokenizer(unk_token="", eos_token="", pad_token="")
# Build an iterator over this dataset
def batch_iterator(input_sentence_size=None):
if input_sentence_size is None:
input_sentence_size = len(dataset)
batch_length = 100
for i in range(0, input_sentence_size, batch_length):
yield dataset[i: i + batch_length]["text"]
# Train tokenizer
tokenizer.train_from_iterator(
iterator=batch_iterator(input_sentence_size=input_sentence_size),
vocab_size=vocab_size,
show_progress=True,
)
# Save files to disk
tokenizer.save("./norwegian-t5-base/tokenizer.json")
```
### Create configuration
Next, we create the model's configuration file. This is as simple
as loading and storing [`**google/t5-v1_1-base**`](https://huggingface.co/google/t5-v1_1-base)
in the local model folder:
```python
from transformers import T5Config
config = T5Config.from_pretrained("google/t5-v1_1-base", vocab_size=tokenizer.get_vocab_size())
config.save_pretrained("./norwegian-t5-base")
```
Great, we have set up our model repository. During training, we will automatically
push the training logs and model weights to the repo.
### Train model
Next we can run the example script to pretrain the model:
```bash
python run_t5_mlm_flax.py \
--output_dir="./norwegian-t5-base" \
--model_type="t5" \
--config_name="./norwegian-t5-base" \
--tokenizer_name="./norwegian-t5-base" \
--dataset_name="oscar" \
--dataset_config_name="unshuffled_deduplicated_no" \
--max_seq_length="512" \
--per_device_train_batch_size="32" \
--per_device_eval_batch_size="32" \
--adafactor \
--learning_rate="0.005" \
--weight_decay="0.001" \
--warmup_steps="2000" \
--overwrite_output_dir \
--logging_steps="500" \
--save_steps="10000" \
--eval_steps="2500" \
--push_to_hub
```
Training should converge at a loss and accuracy
of 2.36 and 57.0 respectively after 3 epochs on a single TPUv3-8.
This should take around 4.5 hours.
Training statistics can be accessed on directly on the 🤗 [hub](https://huggingface.co/patrickvonplaten/t5-base-norwegian/tensorboard)
## BART: Denoising language modeling
In the following, we demonstrate how to train a BART model
using denoising language modeling objective as introduced in [BART: Denoising Sequence-to-Sequence Pre-training for Natural Language Generation, Translation, and Comprehension](https://arxiv.org/abs/1910.13461).
More specifically, we demonstrate how JAX/Flax can be leveraged
to pre-train [**`bart-base`**](https://huggingface.co/facebook/bart-base)
in Norwegian on a single TPUv3-8 pod.
The example script uses the 🤗 Datasets library. You can easily customize them to your needs if you need extra processing on your datasets.
To setup all relevant files for training, let's create a directory.
```bash
mkdir ./norwegian-bart-base
```
### Train tokenizer
In the first step, we train a tokenizer to efficiently process the text input for the model. Similar to how it is shown in [How to train a new language model from scratch using Transformers and Tokenizers](https://huggingface.co/blog/how-to-train), we use a **`ByteLevelBPETokenizer`**.
The tokenizer is trained on the complete Norwegian dataset of OSCAR
and consequently saved in the cloned model directory.
This can take up to 10 minutes depending on your hardware ☕.
```python
from datasets import load_dataset
from tokenizers import trainers, Tokenizer, normalizers, ByteLevelBPETokenizer
# load dataset
dataset = load_dataset("oscar", "unshuffled_deduplicated_no", split="train")
# Instantiate tokenizer
tokenizer = ByteLevelBPETokenizer()
def batch_iterator(batch_size=1000):
for i in range(0, len(dataset), batch_size):
yield dataset[i: i + batch_size]["text"]
# Customized training
tokenizer.train_from_iterator(batch_iterator(), vocab_size=50265, min_frequency=2, special_tokens=[
"",
"",
"",
"",
"",
])
# Save files to disk
tokenizer.save("./norwegian-bart-base/tokenizer.json")
```
### Create configuration
Next, we create the model's configuration file. This is as simple
as loading and storing [`**facebook/bart-base**`](https://huggingface.co/facebook/bart-base)
in the local model folder:
```python
from transformers import BartConfig
config = BartConfig.from_pretrained("facebook/bart-base", vocab_size=50265)
config.save_pretrained("./norwegian-bart-base")
```
Great, we have set up our model repository. During training, we will automatically
push the training logs and model weights to the repo.
### Train model
Next we can run the example script to pretrain the model:
```bash
python run_bart_dlm_flax.py \
--output_dir="./norwegian-bart-base" \
--config_name="./norwegian-bart-base" \
--tokenizer_name="./norwegian-bart-base" \
--dataset_name="oscar" \
--dataset_config_name="unshuffled_deduplicated_no" \
--max_seq_length="1024" \
--per_device_train_batch_size="32" \
--per_device_eval_batch_size="32" \
--learning_rate="1e-4" \
--warmup_steps="2000" \
--overwrite_output_dir \
--logging_steps="500" \
--save_steps="2000" \
--eval_steps="2000" \
--push_to_hub
```
Training should converge at a loss and accuracy
of 1.36 and 0.77 respectively after 3 epochs on a single TPUv3-8.
This should take less than 6 hours.
Training statistics can be accessed on [tfhub.dev](https://tensorboard.dev/experiment/Maw62QlaSXWS0MOf2V2lbg/).
## Runtime evaluation
We also ran masked language modeling using PyTorch/XLA on a TPUv3-8, and PyTorch on 8 V100 GPUs. We report the
overall training time below.
For reproducibility, we state the training commands used for PyTorch/XLA and PyTorch further below.
| Task | [TPU v3-8 (Flax)](https://tensorboard.dev/experiment/GdYmdak2TWeVz0DDRYOrrg/) | [TPU v3-8 (Pytorch/XLA)](https://tensorboard.dev/experiment/7Jq1kcQQRAmy12KOdXek7A/)| [8 GPU (PyTorch)](https://tensorboard.dev/experiment/PJneV8FQRxa2unPw1QnVHA) |
|-------|-----------|------------|------------|
| MLM | 15h32m | 23h46m | 44h14m |
*All experiments are ran on Google Cloud Platform.
GPU experiments are ran without further optimizations besides JAX
transformations. GPU experiments are ran with full precision (fp32). "TPU v3-8"
are 8 TPU cores on 4 chips (each chips has 2 cores), while "8 GPU" are 8 GPU chips.
### Script to run MLM with PyTorch/XLA on TPUv3-8
For comparison one can run the same pre-training with PyTorch/XLA on TPU. To set up PyTorch/XLA on Cloud TPU VMs, please
refer to [this](https://cloud.google.com/tpu/docs/pytorch-xla-ug-tpu-vm) guide.
Having created the tokenzier and configuration in `norwegian-roberta-base`, we create the following symbolic links:
```bash
ln -s ~/transformers/examples/pytorch/language-modeling/run_mlm.py ./
ln -s ~/transformers/examples/pytorch/xla_spawn.py ./
```
, set the following environment variables:
```bash
export XRT_TPU_CONFIG="localservice;0;localhost:51011"
unset LD_PRELOAD
export NUM_TPUS=8
export TOKENIZERS_PARALLELISM=0
export MODEL_DIR="./norwegian-roberta-base"
mkdir -p ${MODEL_DIR}
```
, and start training as follows:
```bash
python3 xla_spawn.py --num_cores ${NUM_TPUS} run_mlm.py --output_dir="./runs" \
--model_type="roberta" \
--config_name="${MODEL_DIR}" \
--tokenizer_name="${MODEL_DIR}" \
--dataset_name="oscar" \
--dataset_config_name="unshuffled_deduplicated_no" \
--max_seq_length="128" \
--weight_decay="0.01" \
--per_device_train_batch_size="128" \
--per_device_eval_batch_size="128" \
--learning_rate="3e-4" \
--warmup_steps="1000" \
--overwrite_output_dir \
--num_train_epochs="18" \
--adam_beta1="0.9" \
--adam_beta2="0.98" \
--do_train \
--do_eval \
--logging_steps="500" \
--evaluation_strategy="epoch" \
--report_to="tensorboard" \
--save_strategy="no"
```
### Script to compare pre-training with PyTorch on 8 GPU V100's
For comparison you can run the same pre-training with PyTorch on GPU. Note that we have to make use of `gradient_accumulation`
because the maximum batch size that fits on a single V100 GPU is 32 instead of 128.
Having created the tokenzier and configuration in `norwegian-roberta-base`, we create the following symbolic links:
```bash
ln -s ~/transformers/examples/pytorch/language-modeling/run_mlm.py ./
```
, set some environment variables:
```bash
export NUM_GPUS=8
export TOKENIZERS_PARALLELISM=0
export MODEL_DIR="./norwegian-roberta-base"
mkdir -p ${MODEL_DIR}
```
, and can start training as follows:
```bash
python3 -m torch.distributed.launch --nproc_per_node ${NUM_GPUS} run_mlm.py \
--output_dir="${MODEL_DIR}" \
--model_type="roberta" \
--config_name="${MODEL_DIR}" \
--tokenizer_name="${MODEL_DIR}" \
--dataset_name="oscar" \
--dataset_config_name="unshuffled_deduplicated_no" \
--max_seq_length="128" \
--weight_decay="0.01" \
--per_device_train_batch_size="32" \
--per_device_eval_batch_size="32" \
--gradient_accumulation="4" \
--learning_rate="3e-4" \
--warmup_steps="1000" \
--overwrite_output_dir \
--num_train_epochs="18" \
--adam_beta1="0.9" \
--adam_beta2="0.98" \
--do_train \
--do_eval \
--logging_steps="500" \
--evaluation_strategy="steps" \
--report_to="tensorboard" \
--save_strategy="no"
```