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| # How to create a custom pipeline? | |
| In this guide, we will see how to create a custom pipeline and share it on the [Hub](hf.co/models) or add it to the | |
| π€ Transformers library. | |
| First and foremost, you need to decide the raw entries the pipeline will be able to take. It can be strings, raw bytes, | |
| dictionaries or whatever seems to be the most likely desired input. Try to keep these inputs as pure Python as possible | |
| as it makes compatibility easier (even through other languages via JSON). Those will be the `inputs` of the | |
| pipeline (`preprocess`). | |
| Then define the `outputs`. Same policy as the `inputs`. The simpler, the better. Those will be the outputs of | |
| `postprocess` method. | |
| Start by inheriting the base class `Pipeline` with the 4 methods needed to implement `preprocess`, | |
| `_forward`, `postprocess`, and `_sanitize_parameters`. | |
| ```python | |
| from transformers import Pipeline | |
| class MyPipeline(Pipeline): | |
| def _sanitize_parameters(self, **kwargs): | |
| preprocess_kwargs = {} | |
| if "maybe_arg" in kwargs: | |
| preprocess_kwargs["maybe_arg"] = kwargs["maybe_arg"] | |
| return preprocess_kwargs, {}, {} | |
| def preprocess(self, inputs, maybe_arg=2): | |
| model_input = Tensor(inputs["input_ids"]) | |
| return {"model_input": model_input} | |
| def _forward(self, model_inputs): | |
| # model_inputs == {"model_input": model_input} | |
| outputs = self.model(**model_inputs) | |
| # Maybe {"logits": Tensor(...)} | |
| return outputs | |
| def postprocess(self, model_outputs): | |
| best_class = model_outputs["logits"].softmax(-1) | |
| return best_class | |
| ``` | |
| The structure of this breakdown is to support relatively seamless support for CPU/GPU, while supporting doing | |
| pre/postprocessing on the CPU on different threads | |
| `preprocess` will take the originally defined inputs, and turn them into something feedable to the model. It might | |
| contain more information and is usually a `Dict`. | |
| `_forward` is the implementation detail and is not meant to be called directly. `forward` is the preferred | |
| called method as it contains safeguards to make sure everything is working on the expected device. If anything is | |
| linked to a real model it belongs in the `_forward` method, anything else is in the preprocess/postprocess. | |
| `postprocess` methods will take the output of `_forward` and turn it into the final output that was decided | |
| earlier. | |
| `_sanitize_parameters` exists to allow users to pass any parameters whenever they wish, be it at initialization | |
| time `pipeline(...., maybe_arg=4)` or at call time `pipe = pipeline(...); output = pipe(...., maybe_arg=4)`. | |
| The returns of `_sanitize_parameters` are the 3 dicts of kwargs that will be passed directly to `preprocess`, | |
| `_forward`, and `postprocess`. Don't fill anything if the caller didn't call with any extra parameter. That | |
| allows to keep the default arguments in the function definition which is always more "natural". | |
| A classic example would be a `top_k` argument in the post processing in classification tasks. | |
| ```python | |
| >>> pipe = pipeline("my-new-task") | |
| >>> pipe("This is a test") | |
| [{"label": "1-star", "score": 0.8}, {"label": "2-star", "score": 0.1}, {"label": "3-star", "score": 0.05} | |
| {"label": "4-star", "score": 0.025}, {"label": "5-star", "score": 0.025}] | |
| >>> pipe("This is a test", top_k=2) | |
| [{"label": "1-star", "score": 0.8}, {"label": "2-star", "score": 0.1}] | |
| ``` | |
| In order to achieve that, we'll update our `postprocess` method with a default parameter to `5`. and edit | |
| `_sanitize_parameters` to allow this new parameter. | |
| ```python | |
| def postprocess(self, model_outputs, top_k=5): | |
| best_class = model_outputs["logits"].softmax(-1) | |
| # Add logic to handle top_k | |
| return best_class | |
| def _sanitize_parameters(self, **kwargs): | |
| preprocess_kwargs = {} | |
| if "maybe_arg" in kwargs: | |
| preprocess_kwargs["maybe_arg"] = kwargs["maybe_arg"] | |
| postprocess_kwargs = {} | |
| if "top_k" in kwargs: | |
| postprocess_kwargs["top_k"] = kwargs["top_k"] | |
| return preprocess_kwargs, {}, postprocess_kwargs | |
| ``` | |
| Try to keep the inputs/outputs very simple and ideally JSON-serializable as it makes the pipeline usage very easy | |
| without requiring users to understand new kind of objects. It's also relatively common to support many different types | |
| of arguments for ease of use (audio files, can be filenames, URLs or pure bytes) | |
| ## Adding it to the list of supported tasks | |
| To register your `new-task` to the list of supported tasks, you have to add it to the `PIPELINE_REGISTRY`: | |
| ```python | |
| from transformers.pipelines import PIPELINE_REGISTRY | |
| PIPELINE_REGISTRY.register_pipeline( | |
| "new-task", | |
| pipeline_class=MyPipeline, | |
| pt_model=AutoModelForSequenceClassification, | |
| ) | |
| ``` | |
| You can specify a default model if you want, in which case it should come with a specific revision (which can be the name of a branch or a commit hash, here we took `"abcdef"`) as well as the type: | |
| ```python | |
| PIPELINE_REGISTRY.register_pipeline( | |
| "new-task", | |
| pipeline_class=MyPipeline, | |
| pt_model=AutoModelForSequenceClassification, | |
| default={"pt": ("user/awesome_model", "abcdef")}, | |
| type="text", # current support type: text, audio, image, multimodal | |
| ) | |
| ``` | |
| ## Share your pipeline on the Hub | |
| To share your custom pipeline on the Hub, you just have to save the custom code of your `Pipeline` subclass in a | |
| python file. For instance, let's say we want to use a custom pipeline for sentence pair classification like this: | |
| ```py | |
| import numpy as np | |
| from transformers import Pipeline | |
| def softmax(outputs): | |
| maxes = np.max(outputs, axis=-1, keepdims=True) | |
| shifted_exp = np.exp(outputs - maxes) | |
| return shifted_exp / shifted_exp.sum(axis=-1, keepdims=True) | |
| class PairClassificationPipeline(Pipeline): | |
| def _sanitize_parameters(self, **kwargs): | |
| preprocess_kwargs = {} | |
| if "second_text" in kwargs: | |
| preprocess_kwargs["second_text"] = kwargs["second_text"] | |
| return preprocess_kwargs, {}, {} | |
| def preprocess(self, text, second_text=None): | |
| return self.tokenizer(text, text_pair=second_text, return_tensors=self.framework) | |
| def _forward(self, model_inputs): | |
| return self.model(**model_inputs) | |
| def postprocess(self, model_outputs): | |
| logits = model_outputs.logits[0].numpy() | |
| probabilities = softmax(logits) | |
| best_class = np.argmax(probabilities) | |
| label = self.model.config.id2label[best_class] | |
| score = probabilities[best_class].item() | |
| logits = logits.tolist() | |
| return {"label": label, "score": score, "logits": logits} | |
| ``` | |
| The implementation is framework agnostic, and will work for PyTorch and TensorFlow models. If we have saved this in | |
| a file named `pair_classification.py`, we can then import it and register it like this: | |
| ```py | |
| from pair_classification import PairClassificationPipeline | |
| from transformers.pipelines import PIPELINE_REGISTRY | |
| from transformers import AutoModelForSequenceClassification, TFAutoModelForSequenceClassification | |
| PIPELINE_REGISTRY.register_pipeline( | |
| "pair-classification", | |
| pipeline_class=PairClassificationPipeline, | |
| pt_model=AutoModelForSequenceClassification, | |
| tf_model=TFAutoModelForSequenceClassification, | |
| ) | |
| ``` | |
| Once this is done, we can use it with a pretrained model. For instance `sgugger/finetuned-bert-mrpc` has been | |
| fine-tuned on the MRPC dataset, which classifies pairs of sentences as paraphrases or not. | |
| ```py | |
| from transformers import pipeline | |
| classifier = pipeline("pair-classification", model="sgugger/finetuned-bert-mrpc") | |
| ``` | |
| Then we can share it on the Hub by using the `save_pretrained` method in a `Repository`: | |
| ```py | |
| from huggingface_hub import Repository | |
| repo = Repository("test-dynamic-pipeline", clone_from="{your_username}/test-dynamic-pipeline") | |
| classifier.save_pretrained("test-dynamic-pipeline") | |
| repo.push_to_hub() | |
| ``` | |
| This will copy the file where you defined `PairClassificationPipeline` inside the folder `"test-dynamic-pipeline"`, | |
| along with saving the model and tokenizer of the pipeline, before pushing everything in the repository | |
| `{your_username}/test-dynamic-pipeline`. After that anyone can use it as long as they provide the option | |
| `trust_remote_code=True`: | |
| ```py | |
| from transformers import pipeline | |
| classifier = pipeline(model="{your_username}/test-dynamic-pipeline", trust_remote_code=True) | |
| ``` | |
| ## Add the pipeline to π€ Transformers | |
| If you want to contribute your pipeline to π€ Transformers, you will need to add a new module in the `pipelines` submodule | |
| with the code of your pipeline, then add it in the list of tasks defined in `pipelines/__init__.py`. | |
| Then you will need to add tests. Create a new file `tests/test_pipelines_MY_PIPELINE.py` with example with the other tests. | |
| The `run_pipeline_test` function will be very generic and run on small random models on every possible | |
| architecture as defined by `model_mapping` and `tf_model_mapping`. | |
| This is very important to test future compatibility, meaning if someone adds a new model for | |
| `XXXForQuestionAnswering` then the pipeline test will attempt to run on it. Because the models are random it's | |
| impossible to check for actual values, that's why there is a helper `ANY` that will simply attempt to match the | |
| output of the pipeline TYPE. | |
| You also *need* to implement 2 (ideally 4) tests. | |
| - `test_small_model_pt` : Define 1 small model for this pipeline (doesn't matter if the results don't make sense) | |
| and test the pipeline outputs. The results should be the same as `test_small_model_tf`. | |
| - `test_small_model_tf` : Define 1 small model for this pipeline (doesn't matter if the results don't make sense) | |
| and test the pipeline outputs. The results should be the same as `test_small_model_pt`. | |
| - `test_large_model_pt` (`optional`): Tests the pipeline on a real pipeline where the results are supposed to | |
| make sense. These tests are slow and should be marked as such. Here the goal is to showcase the pipeline and to make | |
| sure there is no drift in future releases. | |
| - `test_large_model_tf` (`optional`): Tests the pipeline on a real pipeline where the results are supposed to | |
| make sense. These tests are slow and should be marked as such. Here the goal is to showcase the pipeline and to make | |
| sure there is no drift in future releases. | |