Skip to main content

REST API for sentence tokenization and embedding using Multilingual Universal Sentence Encoder

Project description

tests linter codecov

python 3.7 release (latest by date) license

pre-commit code style: black

pypi version pypi downloads

What is MUSE?

MUSE stands for Multilingual Universal Sentence Encoder - multilingual extension (supports 16 languages) of Universal Sentence Encoder (USE).
MUSE model encodes sentences into embedding vectors of fixed size.

What is MUSE as Service?

MUSE as Service is the REST API for sentence tokenization and embedding using MUSE model from TensorFlow Hub.

It is written using Flask and Gunicorn.

Why I need it?

MUSE model from TensorFlow Hub requires next packages to be installed:

  • tensorflow
  • tensorflow-hub
  • tensorflow-text

These packages take up more than 1GB of memory. The model itself takes up 280MB of memory.

For efficient memory usage when working with MUSE model on several projects (several virtual environments) or/and with teammates (several model copies on different computers) it is better to deploy one instance of the model in one virtual environment where all teammates have access to.

This is what MUSE as Service is made for! ❤️

Requirements

Python >= 3.7

Installation

To install MUSE as Service run:

# clone repo (https/ssh)
git clone https://github.com/dayyass/muse-as-service.git
# git clone git@github.com:dayyass/muse-as-service.git

# install dependencies (preferable in venv)
cd muse-as-service
python3 -m venv venv
source venv/bin/activate
pip install --upgrade pip && pip install -r requirements.txt

Before using the service you need to:

  • download MUSE model executing the following command:
    python models/download_muse.py

Launch the Service

To build a docker image with a service parametrized with gunicorn.conf.py file run:

docker build -t muse_as_service .

NOTE: instead of building a docker image, you can pull it from Docker Hub.

To launch the service (either locally or on a server) use a docker container:

docker run -d -p {host_port}:{container_port} --name muse_as_service muse_as_service

NOTE: container_port should be equal to port in gunicorn.conf.py file.

You can also launch the service without docker, but it is preferable to launch the service inside the docker container:

  • Gunicorn: gunicorn --config gunicorn.conf.py app:app (parametrized with gunicorn.conf.py file)
  • Flask: python app.py --host {host} --port {port} (default host 0.0.0.0 and port 5000)

It is also possible to launch the service using systemd.

GPU support

MUSE as Service supports GPU inference. To launch the service with GPU support you need:

  • install NVIDIA Container Toolkit
  • use CUDA_VISIBLE_DEVICES environment variable to specify GPU device if needed (e.g. export CUDA_VISIBLE_DEVICES=0)
  • launch the service with docker run command above (after docker build) with --gpus all parameter

NOTE: since TensorFlow2.0 tensorflow and tensorflow-gpu packages are merged.

NOTE: depending on CUDA version installed you may need different tensorflow versions (default version tensorflow==2.3.0 supports CUDA 10.1). See table with TF/CUDA compatibility to choose the right one and pip install it.

Usage

Since the service is usually running on server, it is important to restrict access to the service.

For this reason, MUSE as Service uses token-based authorization with JWT for users in sqlite database app.db.

Initially database has only one user with:

  • username: "admin"
  • password: "admin"

To add new user with username and password run:

python src/muse_as_service/database/add_user.py --username {username} --password {password}

NOTE: no passwords are stored in the database, only their hashes.

To remove the user with username run:

python src/muse_as_service/database/remove_user.py --username {username}

MUSE as Service has the following endpoints:

- /login         - POST request with `username` and `password` to get tokens (access and refresh)
- /logout        - POST request to remove tokens (access and refresh)
- /token/refresh - POST request to refresh access token (refresh token required)
- /tokenize      - GET request for `sentence` tokenization (access token required)
- /embed         - GET request for `sentence` embedding (access token required)

You can use python requests package to work with HTTP requests:

import numpy as np
import requests

# params
ip = "localhost"
port = 5000

sentences = ["This is sentence example.", "This is yet another sentence example."]

# start session
session = requests.Session()

# login
response = session.post(
    url=f"http://{ip}:{port}/login",
    json={"username": "admin", "password": "admin"},
)

# tokenizer
response = session.get(
    url=f"http://{ip}:{port}/tokenize",
    params={"sentence": sentences},
)
tokenized_sentence = response.json()["tokens"]

# embedder
response = session.get(
    url=f"http://{ip}:{port}/embed",
    params={"sentence": sentences},
)
embedding = np.array(response.json()["embedding"])

# logout
response = session.post(
    url=f"http://{ip}:{port}/logout",
)

# close session
session.close()

# results
print(tokenized_sentence)  # [
# ["▁This", "▁is", "▁sentence", "▁example", "."],
# ["▁This", "▁is", "▁yet", "▁another", "▁sentence", "▁example", "."]
# ]
print(embedding.shape)  # (2, 512)

However it is better to use built-in client MUSEClient for sentence tokenization and embedding, that wraps the functionality of the python requests package and provides user with a simpler interface.

To install the built-in client run:
pip install muse-as-service

Instead of using endpoints, listed above, directly, MUSEClient provides the following methods to work with:

- login    - method to login with `username` and `password`
- logout   - method to logout (login required)
- tokenize - method for `sentence` tokenization (login required)
- embed    - method for `sentence` embedding (login required)

Usage example:

from muse_as_service import MUSEClient

# params
ip = "localhost"
port = 5000

sentences = ["This is sentence example.", "This is yet another sentence example."]

# init client
client = MUSEClient(ip=ip, port=port)

# login
client.login(username="admin", password="admin")

# tokenizer
tokenized_sentence = client.tokenize(sentences)

# embedder
embedding = client.embed(sentences)

# logout
client.logout()

# results
print(tokenized_sentence)  # [
# ["▁This", "▁is", "▁sentence", "▁example", "."],
# ["▁This", "▁is", "▁yet", "▁another", "▁sentence", "▁example", "."]
# ]
print(embedding.shape)  # (2, 512)

Tests

To use pre-commit hooks run:
pre-commit install

Before running tests and code coverage, you need to:

  • run app.py in background:
    python app.py &

To launch tests run:
python -m unittest discover

To measure code coverage run:
coverage run -m unittest discover && coverage report -m

NOTE: since we launched Flask application in background, we need to stop it after running tests and code coverage with the following command:

kill $(ps aux | grep '[a]pp.py' | awk '{print $2}')

MUSE supported languages

MUSE model supports next languages:

  • Arabic
  • Chinese-simplified
  • Chinese-traditional
  • Dutch
  • English
  • French
  • German
  • Italian
  • Japanese
  • Korean
  • Polish
  • Portuguese
  • Russian
  • Spanish
  • Thai
  • Turkish

Citation

If you use muse-as-service in a scientific publication, we would appreciate references to the following BibTex entry:

@misc{dayyass2021muse,
    author       = {El-Ayyass, Dani},
    title        = {Multilingual Universal Sentence Encoder REST API},
    howpublished = {\url{https://github.com/dayyass/muse-as-service}},
    year         = {2021}
}

Project details


Download files

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

Source Distribution

muse-as-service-1.1.1.tar.gz (13.9 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

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

muse_as_service-1.1.1-py3-none-any.whl (13.9 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 3

File details

Details for the file muse-as-service-1.1.1.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: muse-as-service-1.1.1.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 13.9 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/3.4.2 importlib_metadata/4.6.1 pkginfo/1.7.1 requests/2.25.1 requests-toolbelt/0.9.1 tqdm/4.61.2 CPython/3.9.5

File hashes

Hashes for muse-as-service-1.1.1.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 9b48fbf31ab509dc5de50d1c75bd903bff97ccd867f77b8a46670533ca600227
MD5 b74e707f720d1b1cd5735d570d42847f
BLAKE2b-256 7daf9836f072f7bb08edafc3b9e73b57412c61fb69d993b45e77a655b0dd5040

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file muse_as_service-1.1.1-py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

  • Download URL: muse_as_service-1.1.1-py3-none-any.whl
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 13.9 kB
  • Tags: Python 3
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/3.4.2 importlib_metadata/4.6.1 pkginfo/1.7.1 requests/2.25.1 requests-toolbelt/0.9.1 tqdm/4.61.2 CPython/3.9.5

File hashes

Hashes for muse_as_service-1.1.1-py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 11ca42086bd2f31fdfb44e5ef05ea39b6443f39e32e510515508bab7ea9d42e6
MD5 8fffbb9fa48413f6a3474b5085f5f50c
BLAKE2b-256 cd62d6dbf379b0fb6420a3cbd42b004d72e9f4a9d9efeefc7aad23b7249937fa

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