Skip to main content

Packaged version of the Yolov5 object detector

Project description

packaged ultralytics/yolov5

pip install yolov5

total downloads monthly downloads fcakyon twitter
pypi version ci testing package testing

Overview

You can finally install YOLOv5 object detector using pip and integrate into your project easily.
This yolov5 package contains everything from ultralytics/yolov5 at this commit plus:
1. Easy installation via pip: `pip install yolov5`
2. Full CLI integration with fire package
3. COCO dataset format support (for training)
4. S3 support (model and dataset upload)
5. NeptuneAI logger support (metric, model and dataset logging)
6. Classwise AP logging during experiments

Install

Install yolov5 using pip (for Python >=3.7)
pip install yolov5
Install yolov5 using pip `(for Python 3.6)`
pip install "numpy>=1.18.5,<1.20" "matplotlib>=3.2.2,<4"
pip install yolov5

Use from Python

Basic
import yolov5

# load model
model = yolov5.load('yolov5s')
  
# set model parameters
model.conf = 0.25  # NMS confidence threshold
model.iou = 0.45  # NMS IoU threshold
model.agnostic = False  # NMS class-agnostic
model.multi_label = False  # NMS multiple labels per box
model.max_det = 1000  # maximum number of detections per image

# set image
img = 'https://github.com/ultralytics/yolov5/raw/master/data/images/zidane.jpg'

# perform inference
results = model(img)

# inference with larger input size
results = model(img, size=1280)

# inference with test time augmentation
results = model(img, augment=True)

# parse results
predictions = results.pred[0]
boxes = predictions[:, :4] # x1, y1, x2, y2
scores = predictions[:, 4]
categories = predictions[:, 5]

# show detection bounding boxes on image
results.show()

# save results into "results/" folder
results.save(save_dir='results/')
Alternative
from yolov5 import YOLOv5

# set model params
model_path = "yolov5/weights/yolov5s.pt"
device = "cuda:0" # or "cpu"

# init yolov5 model
yolov5 = YOLOv5(model_path, device)

# load images
image1 = 'https://github.com/ultralytics/yolov5/raw/master/data/images/zidane.jpg'
image2 = 'https://github.com/ultralytics/yolov5/blob/master/data/images/bus.jpg'

# perform inference
results = yolov5.predict(image1)

# perform inference with larger input size
results = yolov5.predict(image1, size=1280)

# perform inference with test time augmentation
results = yolov5.predict(image1, augment=True)

# perform inference on multiple images
results = yolov5.predict([image1, image2], size=1280, augment=True)

# parse results
predictions = results.pred[0]
boxes = predictions[:, :4] # x1, y1, x2, y2
scores = predictions[:, 4]
categories = predictions[:, 5]

# show detection bounding boxes on image
results.show()

# save results into "results/" folder
results.save(save_dir='results/')
Train/Detect/Test/Export
  • You can directly use these functions by importing them:
from yolov5 import train, val, detect, export

train.run(imgsz=640, data='coco128.yaml')
val.run(imgsz=640, data='coco128.yaml', weights='yolov5s.pt')
detect.run(imgsz=640)
export.run(imgsz=640, weights='yolov5s.pt')
  • You can pass any argument as input:
from yolov5 import detect

img_url = 'https://github.com/ultralytics/yolov5/raw/master/data/images/zidane.jpg'

detect.run(source=img_url, weights="yolov5s6.pt", conf_thres=0.25, imgsz=640)

Use from CLI

You can call yolov5 train, yolov5 detect, yolov5 val and yolov5 export commands after installing the package via pip:

Training
  • Finetune one of the pretrained YOLOv5 models using your custom data.yaml:
$ yolov5 train --data data.yaml --weights yolov5s.pt --batch-size 16 --img 640
                                          yolov5m.pt              8
                                          yolov5l.pt              4
                                          yolov5x.pt              2
  • Start a training using a COCO formatted dataset:
# data.yml
train_json_path: "train.json"
train_image_dir: "train_image_dir/"
val_json_path: "val.json"
val_image_dir: "val_image_dir/"
$ yolov5 train --data data.yaml --weights yolov5s.pt
  • Visualize your experiments via Neptune.AI (neptune-client>=0.10.10 required):
$ yolov5 train --data data.yaml --weights yolov5s.pt --neptune_project NAMESPACE/PROJECT_NAME --neptune_token YOUR_NEPTUNE_TOKEN
  • Automatically upload weights and datasets to AWS S3 (with Neptune.AI artifact tracking integration):
export AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID=YOUR_KEY
export AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=YOUR_KEY
$ yolov5 train --data data.yaml --weights yolov5s.pt --s3_upload_dir YOUR_S3_FOLDER_DIRECTORY --upload_dataset
  • Add yolo_s3_data_dir into data.yaml to match Neptune dataset with a present dataset in S3.
# data.yml
train_json_path: "train.json"
train_image_dir: "train_image_dir/"
val_json_path: "val.json"
val_image_dir: "val_image_dir/"
yolo_s3_data_dir: s3://bucket_name/data_dir/
Inference

yolov5 detect command runs inference on a variety of sources, downloading models automatically from the latest YOLOv5 release and saving results to runs/detect.

$ yolov5 detect --source 0  # webcam
                         file.jpg  # image
                         file.mp4  # video
                         path/  # directory
                         path/*.jpg  # glob
                         rtsp://170.93.143.139/rtplive/470011e600ef003a004ee33696235daa  # rtsp stream
                         rtmp://192.168.1.105/live/test  # rtmp stream
                         http://112.50.243.8/PLTV/88888888/224/3221225900/1.m3u8  # http stream
Export

You can export your fine-tuned YOLOv5 weights to any format such as torchscript, onnx, coreml, pb, tflite, tfjs:

$ yolov5 export --weights yolov5s.pt --include 'torchscript,onnx,coreml,pb,tfjs'

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

yolov5-6.1.1.tar.gz (814.4 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

yolov5-6.1.1-py36.py37.py38-none-any.whl (851.5 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 3.6Python 3.7Python 3.8

File details

Details for the file yolov5-6.1.1.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: yolov5-6.1.1.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 814.4 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/4.0.0 CPython/3.10.4

File hashes

Hashes for yolov5-6.1.1.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 5ec847aaba47f7dc0dd647bc9f9f3f8300362d4624e4d43e26df4ae97faaaa2a
MD5 485602994bff8d9a779f4f98787a910e
BLAKE2b-256 82ae58aa3480123d4bae7bc2a78a7f3539b3f547d8ad6087d327f26b5bafbb11

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file yolov5-6.1.1-py36.py37.py38-none-any.whl.

File metadata

  • Download URL: yolov5-6.1.1-py36.py37.py38-none-any.whl
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 851.5 kB
  • Tags: Python 3.6, Python 3.7, Python 3.8
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/4.0.0 CPython/3.10.4

File hashes

Hashes for yolov5-6.1.1-py36.py37.py38-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 208b3ab127121b43235da44760659404ffcfdcf56573b1df22cdc3ca3d751ad0
MD5 e56ec4e0617e1e54f22ee5d6a1c38b22
BLAKE2b-256 be8824a70d80a0391ecb32e966901cf56762e771cd08890b3d4c3950a8a1b3e5

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

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