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A helper library for TFX

Project description

tfx-helper

A helper library for TFX

Why?

This package contains small utilities that help in creation of TFX pipelines:

  • supports running pipeline locally or on Vertex AI Pipelines (with all training, tuning and serving also happening inside Vertex AI),
  • abstracts local vs cloud execution environment outside of the pipeline definition (no need for if use_gcp: conditions inside your pipeline code - write a uniform pipeline creation code and run it on both local and cloud),
  • construct complex custom_config for TFX extension components for you (configuration of extension components is complex and not well documented - we did the research for you and are exposing a simple API),
  • enable GPU in training/tuning/serving with a single argument,
  • enable declaring per-component resource requirements (you can now run Evaluator component on a beefier machine if you have a large model),
  • use generator function syntax in pipeline definition to avoid boilerplate,
  • avoid passing a hundred parameters into your pipeline definition (cloud configuration, like service_account is now only part of cloud-targeted runner)

In addition we provide a set of helper functions for visualization of TFX pipeline artifacts.

How?

Install

pip install tfx-helper

Pipeline definition

  1. Use our helper component interface in you pipeline definition.
  2. Return a collection of components.
  3. For multi-version components (Trainer, Tuner, Pusher) construction use the helper.
from tfx_helper.interface import PipelineHelperInterface

def create_pipeline(
    pipeline_helper: PipelineHelperInterface, # pass in the helper as interface
    *,
    # all your pipeline parameters
    train_epochs: int,  # maximum number of training epochs in trainer
    ... # other parameters
) -> Iterable[BaseComponent]: # return a collection of components
    ...
    # create `Transform` in the usual way
    transform = tfx.components.Transform(
        examples=example_gen.outputs["examples"],
        schema=schema_gen.outputs["schema"],
        preprocessing_fn="models.preprocessing.preprocessing_fn",
        splits_config=tfx.proto.SplitsConfig(
            analyze=["train", "valid"],
            transform=["train", "valid", "eval"],
        ),
    )
    yield transform
    ...
    # use the helper to create a `Trainer` in a uniform way
    trainer = pipeline_helper.construct_trainer(
        run_fn="models.model.run_fn",
        examples=transform.outputs["transformed_examples"],
        transform_graph=transform.outputs["transform_graph"],
        schema=schema_gen.outputs["schema"],
        hyperparameters=hparams,
        train_args=tfx.proto.TrainArgs(splits=["train"]),
        eval_args=tfx.proto.EvalArgs(splits=["valid"]),
        # custom parameters to the training callback
        custom_config={"epochs": train_epochs, "patience": train_patience},
    )
    yield trainer
    ...

Pipeline local runner

Create a pipeline runner that will take your uniform pipeline definition and materialize it for running locally (through DirectRunner):

from tfx_helper.local import LocalPipelineHelper


def run() -> None:
    """Create and run a pipeline locally."""
    input_dir = ...
    output_dir = ...
    serving_model_dir = ...
    # Create pipeline helper instance of local flavour.
    pipeline_helper = LocalPipelineHelper(
        pipeline_name="sentimentanalysis",
        output_dir=output_dir,
        # Where should the model be pushed to
        model_push_destination=tfx.proto.PushDestination(
            filesystem=tfx.proto.PushDestination.Filesystem(
                base_directory=serving_model_dir
            )
        ),
    )

    components = create_pipeline(
        # Pass our pipeline helper instance
        pipeline_helper,
        # The rest of the parameters are pipeline-specific.
        data_path=input_dir,
        ... # other arguments
    )
    # Run the pipeline
    pipeline_helper.create_and_run_pipeline(components)

Notice that no cloud-specific configuration was needed neither in the runner nor in the pipeline definition.

Pipeline cloud runner

Create a pipline runner that will take you uniform pipeline definition and materialize it for running in the cloud (on Vertex AI Pipelines through KubeflowV2DagRunner):

from tfx_helper.interface import Resources
from tfx_helper.vertex_ai import VertexAIPipelineHelper

def run() -> None:
    output_dir = "gs://..."
    # minimal (less than the standard `e2-standard-4`) resource for components
    # that won't execute computations
    minimal_resources = Resources(cpu=1, memory=4)
    # create a helper instance of cloud flavour
    pipeline_helper = VertexAIPipelineHelper(
        pipeline_name="...",
        output_dir=output_dir,
        google_cloud_project="...",
        google_cloud_region="europe-west4",
        # all the components will use our custom image for running
        docker_image="europe-west4-docker.pkg.dev/.../...-repo/...-image:latest",
        service_account="...@....iam.gserviceaccount.com",
        # name of the Vertex AI Endpoint
        serving_endpoint_name="...",
        # Number of parallel hyperparameter tuning trails
        num_parallel_trials=2,
        # GPU for Trainer and Tuner components
        trainer_accelerator_type="NVIDIA_TESLA_T4",
        # Machine type for Trainer and Tuner components
        trainer_machine_type="n1-standard-4",
        # GPU for serving endpoint
        serving_accelerator_type="NVIDIA_TESLA_T4",
        # Machine type for serving endpoint
        serving_machine_type="n1-standard-4",
        # Override resource requirements of components. The dictionary key is the ID
        # of the component (usually class name, unless changed with `with_id` method).
        resource_overrides={
            # evaluator needs more RAM than standard machine can provide
            "Evaluator": Resources(cpu=16, memory=32),
            # training is done as Vertex job on a separate machine
            "Trainer": minimal_resources,
            # tuning is done as Vertex job on a separate set of machines
            "Tuner": minimal_resources,
            # pusher is just submitting a job
            "Pusher": minimal_resources,
        },
    )
    # Run the pipeline
    components = create_pipeline(
        pipeline_helper,
        # Input data in Cloud Storage
        data_path="gs://...",
        ... # other arguments
    )
    # Run the pipeline
    pipeline_helper.create_and_run_pipeline(components, enable_cache=True)

Viewing pipeline artifacts

The TFX pipeline artifacts can be visualized inside Jupyter Notebook cells using (mostly) custom interactive widgets. In order to be able to display those widgets, the following prerequisites need to be fulfilled:

  • widget extensions need to be installed,

    jupyter nbextension enable --py widgetsnbextension --sys-prefix
    jupyter nbextension install --py --symlink tensorflow_model_analysis --sys-prefix
    jupyter nbextension enable --py tensorflow_model_analysis --sys-prefix
    
  • notebook needs to be trusted.

Getting recent artifact directory

Each TFX artifact is stored in the TFX pipeline's output location in a directory for given component (by name) and component output (by name) as well as run identifier. For locally ran pipelines we provide a utility that can be used to get the most recent artifact directory:

from tfx_helper.visualization.newest_subdir import NewestLocalPathGetter, NewestPathGetterInterface

path_getter: NewestPathGetterInterface = NewestLocalPathGetter(
    artifact_dir=pipeline_output, pipeline_name=pipeline_name
)

best_hparams_path = path_getter('Tuner', 'best_hyperparameters')
evaluation_path = path_getter('Evaluator', 'evaluation')

The obtained directory can be used with our set of helper functions that help you preview the artifacts in an easy manner.

Please note that the name of a pipeline component can be customized. If you define in your pipeline:

stats_gen = tfx.components.StatisticsGen(...)

then you should use:

evaluation_path = path_getter('StatisticsGen', 'statistics')

but if you customize the name:

stats_gen = tfx.components.StatisticsGen(...).with_id("raw_stats_gen")

then you should use:

evaluation_path = path_getter('raw_stats_gen', 'statistics')

Viewing dataset statistics

Use the display_stats helper to compare statistics of two splits of the same dataset:

from tfx_helper.visualization.display_stats import display_stats

display_stats(path_getter('raw_stats_gen', 'statistics'))

Use the compare_stats helper to compare statistics between two datasets.

from tfx_helper.visualization.display_stats import compare_stats

compare_stats(
    left_dir=path_getter('raw_stats_gen', 'statistics'),
    right_dir=path_getter('inference_stats_gen', 'statistics')
)

Viewing dataset schema

Use the display_schema helper to preview dataset schema:

from tfx_helper.visualization.display_schema import display_schema

display_schema(path_getter('SchemaGen', 'schema'))

Viewing dataset anomalies

If you use ExampleValidator component, you can preview its anomalies detection report using display_anomalies helper:

from tfx_helper.visualization.display_anomalies import display_anomalies

display_anomalies(path_getter('ExampleValidator', 'anomalies'), split_name='all')

Viewing best hyper parameters

To view the values of best hyperparameters chosen by the Tuner component, you can use the display_hyperparams helper:

from tfx_helper.visualization.display_hyperparams import display_hyperparams

display_hyperparams(path_getter('Tuner', 'best_hyperparameters'))

Viewing model evaluation results

If you use slicing_specs in EvalConfig to your Evaluator component, then you might be willing to view what kind of slices were produced during evaluation:

from tfx_helper.visualization.display_metrics import get_slice_names

get_slice_names(path_getter('Evaluator', 'evaluation'))

To view the overall metrics for your model use display_metrics:

from tfx_helper.visualization.display_metrics import display_metrics

display_metrics(path_getter('Evaluator', 'evaluation'))

To view metrics by slice use:

display_metrics(path_getter('Evaluator', 'evaluation'), column='HomePlanet')

To view the overall plots for your model use display_plots:

from tfx_helper.visualization.display_metrics import display_plots

display_plots(path_getter('Evaluator', 'evaluation'))

To view plots for a specific slice use:

display_plots(path_getter('Evaluator', 'evaluation'), slice_key={'HomePlanet': 'Earth'})

To check whether the candidate model passed validation (when you have thresholds configured in EvalConfig) use passed_validation:

from tfx_helper.visualization.display_metrics import passed_validation

passed_validation(path_getter('Evaluator', 'evaluation'))

Viewing binary classification confusion matrices

To view a binary classification confusion matrix constructed from the evaluation result of your model (data availability determined by presence of ConfusionMatrixPlot in EvalConfig to your Evaluator component):

from tfx_helper.visualization.confusion_matrix import plot_binary_classification_confusion_matrix

plot_binary_classification_confusion_matrix(path_getter('Evaluator', 'evaluation'))

We provide a pipeline component for finding the best (by geometric mean) threshold to use from the thresholds gathered during evaluation:

from tfx_helper.components.threshold_optimizer.component import (
    BinaryClassificationThresholdOptimizer,
)

threshold_optimizer = BinaryClassificationThresholdOptimizer(
    model_evaluation=evaluator.outputs["evaluation"]
)

To view the confusion plot with the optimized threshold use:

from tfx_helper.visualization.threshold_optimization import load_best_threshold

best_threshold = load_best_threshold(
    path_getter('ThresholdOptimizer', 'best_threshold')
)
plot_binary_classification_confusion_matrix(
    path_getter('Evaluator', 'evaluation'), threshold=best_threshold
)

More info

Link to article describing creation of TFX pipeline for sentiment analysis using this helper library: https://dlabs.ai/resources/courses/bert-sentiment-analysis-on-vertex-ai-using-tfx/

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