Skip to main content

Multi-backend Keras.

Project description

Keras 3: Deep Learning for Humans

Keras 3 is a multi-backend deep learning framework, with support for JAX, TensorFlow, and PyTorch. Effortlessly build and train models for computer vision, natural language processing, audio processing, timeseries forecasting, recommender systems, etc.

  • Accelerated model development: Ship deep learning solutions faster thanks to the high-level UX of Keras and the availability of easy-to-debug runtimes like PyTorch or JAX eager execution.
  • State-of-the-art performance: By picking the backend that is the fastest for your model architecture (often JAX!), leverage speedups ranging from 20% to 350% compared to other frameworks. Benchmark here.
  • Datacenter-scale training: Scale confidently from your laptop to large clusters of GPUs or TPUs.

Join nearly three million developers, from burgeoning startups to global enterprises, in harnessing the power of Keras 3.

Installation

Install with pip

Keras 3 is available on PyPI as keras. Note that Keras 2 remains available as the tf-keras package.

  1. Install keras:
pip install keras --upgrade
  1. Install backend package(s).

To use keras, you should also install the backend of choice: tensorflow, jax, or torch. Note that tensorflow is required for using certain Keras 3 features: certain preprocessing layers as well as tf.data pipelines.

Local installation

Minimal installation

Keras 3 is compatible with Linux and MacOS systems. For Windows users, we recommend using WSL2 to run Keras. To install a local development version:

  1. Install dependencies:
pip install -r requirements.txt
  1. Run installation command from the root directory.
python pip_build.py --install
  1. Run API generation script when creating PRs that update keras_export public APIs:
./shell/api_gen.sh

Adding GPU support

The requirements.txt file will install a CPU-only version of TensorFlow, JAX, and PyTorch. For GPU support, we also provide a separate requirements-{backend}-cuda.txt for TensorFlow, JAX, and PyTorch. These install all CUDA dependencies via pip and expect a NVIDIA driver to be pre-installed. We recommend a clean python environment for each backend to avoid CUDA version mismatches. As an example, here is how to create a Jax GPU environment with conda:

conda create -y -n keras-jax python=3.10
conda activate keras-jax
pip install -r requirements-jax-cuda.txt
python pip_build.py --install

Configuring your backend

You can export the environment variable KERAS_BACKEND or you can edit your local config file at ~/.keras/keras.json to configure your backend. Available backend options are: "tensorflow", "jax", "torch". Example:

export KERAS_BACKEND="jax"

In Colab, you can do:

import os
os.environ["KERAS_BACKEND"] = "jax"

import keras

Note: The backend must be configured before importing keras, and the backend cannot be changed after the package has been imported.

Backwards compatibility

Keras 3 is intended to work as a drop-in replacement for tf.keras (when using the TensorFlow backend). Just take your existing tf.keras code, make sure that your calls to model.save() are using the up-to-date .keras format, and you're done.

If your tf.keras model does not include custom components, you can start running it on top of JAX or PyTorch immediately.

If it does include custom components (e.g. custom layers or a custom train_step()), it is usually possible to convert it to a backend-agnostic implementation in just a few minutes.

In addition, Keras models can consume datasets in any format, regardless of the backend you're using: you can train your models with your existing tf.data.Dataset pipelines or PyTorch DataLoaders.

Why use Keras 3?

  • Run your high-level Keras workflows on top of any framework -- benefiting at will from the advantages of each framework, e.g. the scalability and performance of JAX or the production ecosystem options of TensorFlow.
  • Write custom components (e.g. layers, models, metrics) that you can use in low-level workflows in any framework.
    • You can take a Keras model and train it in a training loop written from scratch in native TF, JAX, or PyTorch.
    • You can take a Keras model and use it as part of a PyTorch-native Module or as part of a JAX-native model function.
  • Make your ML code future-proof by avoiding framework lock-in.
  • As a PyTorch user: get access to power and usability of Keras, at last!
  • As a JAX user: get access to a fully-featured, battle-tested, well-documented modeling and training library.

Read more in the Keras 3 release announcement.

Project details


Release history Release notifications | RSS feed

Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

keras_nightly-3.3.3.dev2024060903.tar.gz (831.6 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

If you're not sure about the file name format, learn more about wheel file names.

keras_nightly-3.3.3.dev2024060903-py3-none-any.whl (1.1 MB view details)

Uploaded Python 3

File details

Details for the file keras_nightly-3.3.3.dev2024060903.tar.gz.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for keras_nightly-3.3.3.dev2024060903.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 0269a56605ed59e0dcfe972b8fa2b922c8b548f8f8985e7d2157baa2191e3b7d
MD5 7f5196ba7cb58bfb137da4e6d6947259
BLAKE2b-256 6bcae6030e9899c66f1679c54bea7213fb4908872e22fec6ca4a1ab737c5adc7

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file keras_nightly-3.3.3.dev2024060903-py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for keras_nightly-3.3.3.dev2024060903-py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 50b36d69d831ec0caacac0e9218c98d8f74d998db8fa2d3de517f7c2a160c93b
MD5 0562d15f20090a1c84b693ca94a793c9
BLAKE2b-256 acf1b3046c834166b73ecd97f47aebc7d6128654a3710140e8e2c1b95dfb6f15

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Monitoring Depot Continuous Integration Fastly CDN Google Download Analytics Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Error logging StatusPage Status page