Shortcuts

Source code for torch.nn.utils.spectral_norm

"""
Spectral Normalization from https://arxiv.org/abs/1802.05957
"""
import torch
from torch.nn.functional import normalize
from typing import Any, Optional, TypeVar
from ..modules import Module


class SpectralNorm:
    # Invariant before and after each forward call:
    #   u = normalize(W @ v)
    # NB: At initialization, this invariant is not enforced

    _version: int = 1
    # At version 1:
    #   made  `W` not a buffer,
    #   added `v` as a buffer, and
    #   made eval mode use `W = u @ W_orig @ v` rather than the stored `W`.
    name: str
    dim: int
    n_power_iterations: int
    eps: float

    def __init__(self, name: str = 'weight', n_power_iterations: int = 1, dim: int = 0, eps: float = 1e-12) -> None:
        self.name = name
        self.dim = dim
        if n_power_iterations <= 0:
            raise ValueError('Expected n_power_iterations to be positive, but '
                             'got n_power_iterations={}'.format(n_power_iterations))
        self.n_power_iterations = n_power_iterations
        self.eps = eps

    def reshape_weight_to_matrix(self, weight: torch.Tensor) -> torch.Tensor:
        weight_mat = weight
        if self.dim != 0:
            # permute dim to front
            weight_mat = weight_mat.permute(self.dim,
                                            *[d for d in range(weight_mat.dim()) if d != self.dim])
        height = weight_mat.size(0)
        return weight_mat.reshape(height, -1)

    def compute_weight(self, module: Module, do_power_iteration: bool) -> torch.Tensor:
        # NB: If `do_power_iteration` is set, the `u` and `v` vectors are
        #     updated in power iteration **in-place**. This is very important
        #     because in `DataParallel` forward, the vectors (being buffers) are
        #     broadcast from the parallelized module to each module replica,
        #     which is a new module object created on the fly. And each replica
        #     runs its own spectral norm power iteration. So simply assigning
        #     the updated vectors to the module this function runs on will cause
        #     the update to be lost forever. And the next time the parallelized
        #     module is replicated, the same randomly initialized vectors are
        #     broadcast and used!
        #
        #     Therefore, to make the change propagate back, we rely on two
        #     important behaviors (also enforced via tests):
        #       1. `DataParallel` doesn't clone storage if the broadcast tensor
        #          is already on correct device; and it makes sure that the
        #          parallelized module is already on `device[0]`.
        #       2. If the out tensor in `out=` kwarg has correct shape, it will
        #          just fill in the values.
        #     Therefore, since the same power iteration is performed on all
        #     devices, simply updating the tensors in-place will make sure that
        #     the module replica on `device[0]` will update the _u vector on the
        #     parallized module (by shared storage).
        #
        #    However, after we update `u` and `v` in-place, we need to **clone**
        #    them before using them to normalize the weight. This is to support
        #    backproping through two forward passes, e.g., the common pattern in
        #    GAN training: loss = D(real) - D(fake). Otherwise, engine will
        #    complain that variables needed to do backward for the first forward
        #    (i.e., the `u` and `v` vectors) are changed in the second forward.
        weight = getattr(module, self.name + '_orig')
        u = getattr(module, self.name + '_u')
        v = getattr(module, self.name + '_v')
        weight_mat = self.reshape_weight_to_matrix(weight)

        if do_power_iteration:
            with torch.no_grad():
                for _ in range(self.n_power_iterations):
                    # Spectral norm of weight equals to `u^T W v`, where `u` and `v`
                    # are the first left and right singular vectors.
                    # This power iteration produces approximations of `u` and `v`.
                    v = normalize(torch.mv(weight_mat.t(), u), dim=0, eps=self.eps, out=v)
                    u = normalize(torch.mv(weight_mat, v), dim=0, eps=self.eps, out=u)
                if self.n_power_iterations > 0:
                    # See above on why we need to clone
                    u = u.clone(memory_format=torch.contiguous_format)
                    v = v.clone(memory_format=torch.contiguous_format)

        sigma = torch.dot(u, torch.mv(weight_mat, v))
        weight = weight / sigma
        return weight

    def remove(self, module: Module) -> None:
        with torch.no_grad():
            weight = self.compute_weight(module, do_power_iteration=False)
        delattr(module, self.name)
        delattr(module, self.name + '_u')
        delattr(module, self.name + '_v')
        delattr(module, self.name + '_orig')
        module.register_parameter(self.name, torch.nn.Parameter(weight.detach()))

    def __call__(self, module: Module, inputs: Any) -> None:
        setattr(module, self.name, self.compute_weight(module, do_power_iteration=module.training))

    def _solve_v_and_rescale(self, weight_mat, u, target_sigma):
        # Tries to returns a vector `v` s.t. `u = normalize(W @ v)`
        # (the invariant at top of this class) and `u @ W @ v = sigma`.
        # This uses pinverse in case W^T W is not invertible.
        v = torch.chain_matmul(weight_mat.t().mm(weight_mat).pinverse(), weight_mat.t(), u.unsqueeze(1)).squeeze(1)
        return v.mul_(target_sigma / torch.dot(u, torch.mv(weight_mat, v)))

    @staticmethod
    def apply(module: Module, name: str, n_power_iterations: int, dim: int, eps: float) -> 'SpectralNorm':
        for k, hook in module._forward_pre_hooks.items():
            if isinstance(hook, SpectralNorm) and hook.name == name:
                raise RuntimeError("Cannot register two spectral_norm hooks on "
                                   "the same parameter {}".format(name))

        fn = SpectralNorm(name, n_power_iterations, dim, eps)
        weight = module._parameters[name]
        if isinstance(weight, torch.nn.parameter.UninitializedParameter):
            raise ValueError(
                'The module passed to `SpectralNorm` can\'t have uninitialized parameters. '
                'Make sure to run the dummy forward before applying spectral normalization')

        with torch.no_grad():
            weight_mat = fn.reshape_weight_to_matrix(weight)

            h, w = weight_mat.size()
            # randomly initialize `u` and `v`
            u = normalize(weight.new_empty(h).normal_(0, 1), dim=0, eps=fn.eps)
            v = normalize(weight.new_empty(w).normal_(0, 1), dim=0, eps=fn.eps)

        delattr(module, fn.name)
        module.register_parameter(fn.name + "_orig", weight)
        # We still need to assign weight back as fn.name because all sorts of
        # things may assume that it exists, e.g., when initializing weights.
        # However, we can't directly assign as it could be an nn.Parameter and
        # gets added as a parameter. Instead, we register weight.data as a plain
        # attribute.
        setattr(module, fn.name, weight.data)
        module.register_buffer(fn.name + "_u", u)
        module.register_buffer(fn.name + "_v", v)

        module.register_forward_pre_hook(fn)
        module._register_state_dict_hook(SpectralNormStateDictHook(fn))
        module._register_load_state_dict_pre_hook(SpectralNormLoadStateDictPreHook(fn))
        return fn


# This is a top level class because Py2 pickle doesn't like inner class nor an
# instancemethod.
class SpectralNormLoadStateDictPreHook:
    # See docstring of SpectralNorm._version on the changes to spectral_norm.
    def __init__(self, fn) -> None:
        self.fn = fn

    # For state_dict with version None, (assuming that it has gone through at
    # least one training forward), we have
    #
    #    u = normalize(W_orig @ v)
    #    W = W_orig / sigma, where sigma = u @ W_orig @ v
    #
    # To compute `v`, we solve `W_orig @ x = u`, and let
    #    v = x / (u @ W_orig @ x) * (W / W_orig).
    def __call__(self, state_dict, prefix, local_metadata, strict,
                 missing_keys, unexpected_keys, error_msgs) -> None:
        fn = self.fn
        version = local_metadata.get('spectral_norm', {}).get(fn.name + '.version', None)
        if version is None or version < 1:
            weight_key = prefix + fn.name
            if version is None and all(weight_key + s in state_dict for s in ('_orig', '_u', '_v')) and \
                    weight_key not in state_dict:
                # Detect if it is the updated state dict and just missing metadata.
                # This could happen if the users are crafting a state dict themselves,
                # so we just pretend that this is the newest.
                return
            has_missing_keys = False
            for suffix in ('_orig', '', '_u'):
                key = weight_key + suffix
                if key not in state_dict:
                    has_missing_keys = True
                    if strict:
                        missing_keys.append(key)
            if has_missing_keys:
                return
            with torch.no_grad():
                weight_orig = state_dict[weight_key + '_orig']
                weight = state_dict.pop(weight_key)
                sigma = (weight_orig / weight).mean()
                weight_mat = fn.reshape_weight_to_matrix(weight_orig)
                u = state_dict[weight_key + '_u']
                v = fn._solve_v_and_rescale(weight_mat, u, sigma)
                state_dict[weight_key + '_v'] = v


# This is a top level class because Py2 pickle doesn't like inner class nor an
# instancemethod.
class SpectralNormStateDictHook:
    # See docstring of SpectralNorm._version on the changes to spectral_norm.
    def __init__(self, fn) -> None:
        self.fn = fn

    def __call__(self, module, state_dict, prefix, local_metadata) -> None:
        if 'spectral_norm' not in local_metadata:
            local_metadata['spectral_norm'] = {}
        key = self.fn.name + '.version'
        if key in local_metadata['spectral_norm']:
            raise RuntimeError("Unexpected key in metadata['spectral_norm']: {}".format(key))
        local_metadata['spectral_norm'][key] = self.fn._version


T_module = TypeVar('T_module', bound=Module)

[docs]def spectral_norm(module: T_module, name: str = 'weight', n_power_iterations: int = 1, eps: float = 1e-12, dim: Optional[int] = None) -> T_module: r"""Applies spectral normalization to a parameter in the given module. .. math:: \mathbf{W}_{SN} = \dfrac{\mathbf{W}}{\sigma(\mathbf{W})}, \sigma(\mathbf{W}) = \max_{\mathbf{h}: \mathbf{h} \ne 0} \dfrac{\|\mathbf{W} \mathbf{h}\|_2}{\|\mathbf{h}\|_2} Spectral normalization stabilizes the training of discriminators (critics) in Generative Adversarial Networks (GANs) by rescaling the weight tensor with spectral norm :math:`\sigma` of the weight matrix calculated using power iteration method. If the dimension of the weight tensor is greater than 2, it is reshaped to 2D in power iteration method to get spectral norm. This is implemented via a hook that calculates spectral norm and rescales weight before every :meth:`~Module.forward` call. See `Spectral Normalization for Generative Adversarial Networks`_ . .. _`Spectral Normalization for Generative Adversarial Networks`: https://arxiv.org/abs/1802.05957 Args: module (nn.Module): containing module name (str, optional): name of weight parameter n_power_iterations (int, optional): number of power iterations to calculate spectral norm eps (float, optional): epsilon for numerical stability in calculating norms dim (int, optional): dimension corresponding to number of outputs, the default is ``0``, except for modules that are instances of ConvTranspose{1,2,3}d, when it is ``1`` Returns: The original module with the spectral norm hook Example:: >>> m = spectral_norm(nn.Linear(20, 40)) >>> m Linear(in_features=20, out_features=40, bias=True) >>> m.weight_u.size() torch.Size([40]) """ if dim is None: if isinstance(module, (torch.nn.ConvTranspose1d, torch.nn.ConvTranspose2d, torch.nn.ConvTranspose3d)): dim = 1 else: dim = 0 SpectralNorm.apply(module, name, n_power_iterations, dim, eps) return module
[docs]def remove_spectral_norm(module: T_module, name: str = 'weight') -> T_module: r"""Removes the spectral normalization reparameterization from a module. Args: module (Module): containing module name (str, optional): name of weight parameter Example: >>> m = spectral_norm(nn.Linear(40, 10)) >>> remove_spectral_norm(m) """ for k, hook in module._forward_pre_hooks.items(): if isinstance(hook, SpectralNorm) and hook.name == name: hook.remove(module) del module._forward_pre_hooks[k] break else: raise ValueError("spectral_norm of '{}' not found in {}".format( name, module)) for k, hook in module._state_dict_hooks.items(): if isinstance(hook, SpectralNormStateDictHook) and hook.fn.name == name: del module._state_dict_hooks[k] break for k, hook in module._load_state_dict_pre_hooks.items(): if isinstance(hook, SpectralNormLoadStateDictPreHook) and hook.fn.name == name: del module._load_state_dict_pre_hooks[k] break return module

Docs

Access comprehensive developer documentation for PyTorch

View Docs

Tutorials

Get in-depth tutorials for beginners and advanced developers

View Tutorials

Resources

Find development resources and get your questions answered

View Resources