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Source code for torch.jit._script

"""TorchScript

This module contains functionality to support the JIT's scripting frontend, notably:
    - torch.jit.script

This is not intended to be imported directly; please use the exposed
functionalities in `torch.jit`.
"""
import functools
import collections
import enum
import inspect
import copy
import pickle
import warnings
from typing import Any, Dict, List, Tuple, Union, Callable


import torch
import torch._jit_internal as _jit_internal
from torch.utils import set_module
from torch.jit._recursive import ScriptMethodStub, wrap_cpp_module, infer_methods_to_compile, _compile_and_register_class
from torch.nn import Module
from torch.jit._state import _enabled
from torch.jit._builtins import _register_builtin
from torch._six import with_metaclass
from torch.jit.frontend import get_jit_def, get_default_args, get_jit_class_def
from torch._jit_internal import _qualified_name
from torch.jit._fuser import _graph_for
from torch.jit._state import (
    _try_get_jit_cached_function,
    _try_get_jit_cached_overloads,
    _set_jit_function_cache,
    _set_jit_overload_cache,
)
from torch.overrides import (
    has_torch_function, has_torch_function_unary, has_torch_function_variadic)
from torch.package import PackageExporter, PackageImporter
from ._serialization import validate_map_location

from torch.jit._monkeytype_config import (
    monkeytype_trace,
    JitTypeTraceConfig ,
    JitTypeTraceStore
)
from torch._classes import classes

type_trace_db = JitTypeTraceStore()  # DB to hold all call traces from MonkeyType

torch._C.ScriptMethod.graph_for = _graph_for  # type: ignore[attr-defined]
torch._C.ScriptFunction.graph_for = _graph_for  # type: ignore[attr-defined]
ScriptFunction = torch._C.ScriptFunction
ScriptFunction.__doc__ = """
Functionally equivalent to a :class:`ScriptModule`, but represents a single
function and does not have any attributes or Parameters.
"""
set_module(ScriptFunction, "torch.jit")


if _enabled:
    Attribute = collections.namedtuple("Attribute", ["value", "type"])
else:

[docs] def Attribute(value, type): # type: ignore[no-redef] return value
Attribute.__doc__ = """ This method is a pass-through function that returns `value`, mostly used to indicate to the TorchScript compiler that the left-hand side expression is a class instance attribute with type of `type`. Note that `torch.jit.Attribute` should only be used in `__init__` method of `nn.Module` subclasses. Though TorchScript can infer correct type for most Python expressions, there are some cases where type inference can be wrong, including: - Empty containers like `[]` and `{}`, which TorchScript assumes to be container of `Tensor` - Optional types like `Optional[T]` but assigned a valid value of type `T`, TorchScript would assume it is type `T` rather than `Optional[T]` In eager mode, it is simply a pass-through function that returns `value` without other implications. Example: .. testcode:: import torch from typing import Dict class AttributeModule(torch.nn.Module): def __init__(self): super(M, self).__init__() self.foo = torch.jit.Attribute(0.1, float) # we should be able to use self.foo as a float here assert 0.0 < self.foo self.names_ages = torch.jit.Attribute({}, Dict[str, int]) self.names_ages["someone"] = 20 assert isinstance(self.names_ages["someone"], int) m = AttributeModule() # m will contain two attributes # 1. foo of type float # 2. names_ages of type Dict[str, int] .. testcleanup:: del AttributeModule del m Args: value: An initial value to be assigned to attribute. type: A Python type Returns: Returns `value` """ def _get_type_trace_db(): # This is a private API. Use of this for external purposes is discouraged. return type_trace_db # Gets a function from the name of a method on a type def _get_function_from_type(cls, name): return getattr(cls, name, None) # ScriptClasses must be new-style classes because we construct them using their # __new__ method. def _is_new_style_class(cls): if hasattr(cls, "__class__"): return "__dict__" in dir(cls) or hasattr(cls, "__slots__") # These OrderedDictWrapper classes replace the actual OrderedDicts in # module with versions that get/set properties inside of Module. # This allows us to reuse most of nn.Module while still storing the # data in C++. # Each OrderedDict needs to support: # x not in view # x in view # view[name] = ... # view.values() # del view[name] # view.items() # view.keys() # len(view) class OrderedDictWrapper(object): def __init__(self, _c): self._c = _c def keys(self): return [k for k, v in self.items()] def values(self): return [v for k, v in self.items()] def __len__(self): return len(self.values()) def __delitem__(self, k): raise RuntimeError("cannot delete methods or parameters of a script module") def items(self): return self._c.items() def __setitem__(self, k, v): if k not in self: raise RuntimeError( "Can't add a new parameter after ScriptModule construction." " Tried to add '{}".format(k) ) self._c.setattr(k, v) def __contains__(self, k): return self._c.contains(k) def __getitem__(self, k): if k not in self: raise KeyError(k) return self._c.getattr(k) class OrderedModuleDict(OrderedDictWrapper): def __init__(self, module, python_dict): super(OrderedModuleDict, self).__init__(torch._C.ModuleDict(module)) # contains _both_ script modules and non-script python-only modules # because script modules are subclassed in python and the # C++ Module class will not hold references to them, # to ensure that you always get the same python value here # we store it in the python dict as well self._python_modules = python_dict def items(self): r = self._python_modules.items() return r def __contains__(self, k): return k in self._python_modules def __setitem__(self, k, v): # Cases where sub-module can be re-assigned after ScriptModule construction # 1. If the attr is an module interface type, it's guaranteed that the module is # not inlined in the graph, so it's safe to swap a new ScriptModule in. # 2. if the new value if a ScriptModule with the same JIT type, IR won't change # and it's legit to swap a new module in. # In these two cases we allow swapping a new scripted module and update the # corresponding python module dict to keep sync. # Note: the value to be swapped in has to be ScriptModule instead of nn.Module, # otherwise it's illegal and we throw error. if isinstance(v, ScriptModule): self._c.setattr(k, v) self._python_modules[k] = v else: raise RuntimeError( "Cannot re-assign modules in a ScriptModule with non-scripted " "module, tried to replace existing module '{}': {}".format(k, v) ) def __getitem__(self, k): return self._python_modules[k] # For each user-defined class that subclasses ScriptModule, this meta-class: # (1) finds all the methods annotated with @script_method in a ScriptModule and # removes them from the class attributes # (2) puts a wrapper around the class's __init__ method to recursively compile # all of the script_methods with the module after the original __init__ has # run. This has to occur after the user-defined __init__ so that submodules and # parameters are initialized _before_ the script compiler resolve references to # `self.param` or `self.module`. class ScriptMeta(type): def __init__(cls, name, bases, attrs): # noqa: B902 # Aggregate all the ScriptMethods and constants from superclasses cls._methods: Dict[str, Any] = {} cls._constants_set = set(getattr(cls, "__constants__", ())) for base in reversed(bases): for k, v in getattr(base, "_methods", {}).items(): cls._methods[k] = v base_constants = getattr(base, "_constants_set", set()) cls._constants_set = cls._constants_set.union(base_constants) # find all the script methods of the current class for k, v in sorted(attrs.items()): if isinstance(v, ScriptMethodStub): delattr(cls, k) cls._methods[v.original_method.__name__] = v if getattr(cls, "_disable_script_meta", False): # We leave built-in ScriptModule types alone, since this metaclass # is only for compiling user classes that inherit from # ScriptModule. return super(ScriptMeta, cls).__init__(name, bases, attrs) original_init = getattr(cls, "__init__", lambda self: None) @functools.wraps(original_init) def init_then_script(self, *args, **kwargs): num_methods = len(cls._methods) original_init(self, *args, **kwargs) added_methods_in_init = len(cls._methods) > num_methods if type(self) == cls: def make_stubs(module): cls = type(module) if hasattr(cls, "_methods"): return [v for k, v in sorted(cls._methods.items())] else: return infer_methods_to_compile(module) self.__dict__[ "_actual_script_module" ] = torch.jit._recursive.create_script_module(self, make_stubs, share_types=not added_methods_in_init) # Delete the Python attributes that now shadow the ScriptModule # ones, so that __getattr__ and __setattr__ will properly find # the scripted versions. concrete_type = self._actual_script_module._concrete_type for name in concrete_type.get_attributes(): delattr(self, name) for name, _ in concrete_type.get_modules(): delattr(self, name) for name in ("_parameters", "_buffers", "_modules"): delattr(self, name) cls.__init__ = init_then_script # type: ignore[misc] super(ScriptMeta, cls).__init__(name, bases, attrs) class _CachedForward(object): def __get__(self, obj, cls): return self.__getattr__("forward") # type: ignore[attr-defined] class ScriptWarning(Warning): pass def script_method(fn): if not _enabled: return fn # NOTE: we need to traverse two frames here because the meta-class frame # for ScriptModule will be present, as opposed to invoking @script on a # a function or invoking define() on a CompilationUnit. # The stack will look like: # # 0. createResolutionCallback() # 1. script_method() # 2. ScriptModule metaclass frame # 3. Surrounding scope # # createResolutionCallback internally adds 1 to get us to the scope of this # function (the calling function). Adding 2 gets us to the proper surrounding scope. _rcb = _jit_internal.createResolutionCallbackFromFrame(frames_up=2) ast = get_jit_def(fn, fn.__name__, self_name="ScriptModule") return ScriptMethodStub(_rcb, ast, fn) class ConstMap: def __init__(self, const_mapping): self.const_mapping = const_mapping def __getattr__(self, attr): return self.const_mapping[attr] def unpackage_script_module(importer: PackageImporter, script_module_id: str) -> torch.nn.Module: """ Called by ``torch.package.PackageImporter``'s Pickler's ``persistent_load`` function. Performs work of loading and returning a ScriptModule from a ``torch.package`` archive. """ if not isinstance(importer.zip_reader, torch._C.PyTorchFileReader): raise RuntimeError( "Loading ScriptObjects from a PackageImporter created from a " "directory is not supported. Use a package archive file instead." ) cu = torch._C.CompilationUnit() cpp_module = torch._C._import_ir_module_from_package( cu, importer.zip_reader, importer.storage_context, validate_map_location(importer.last_map_location), script_module_id, ) return wrap_cpp_module(cpp_module) if _enabled: _magic_methods = [ "__iter__", "__len__", "__neg__", "__mul__", "__contains__", "__add__", "__sub__", "__pow__", "__truediv__", "__mod__", "__ne__", "__eq__", "__lt__", "__gt__", "__le__", "__ge__", "__and__", "__or__", "__xor__", "__getitem__", "__setitem__", "__call__", "__int__", "__float__", "__bool__", "__str__", "__enter__", "__exit__", ] class RecursiveScriptClass(object): """ An analogue of RecursiveScriptModule for regular objects that are not modules. This class is a wrapper around a torch._C.ScriptObject that represents an instance of a TorchScript class and allows it to be used in Python. Attributes: _c [torch._C.ScriptObject]: The C++ object to which attribute lookups and method calls are forwarded. _props [Dict[str, property]]: A dictionary of properties fetched from self._c and exposed on this wrppaer. """ def __init__(self, cpp_class): super(RecursiveScriptClass, self).__init__() self.__dict__["_initializing"] = True self._c = cpp_class # Add wrapped object's properties to this class instance. self._props = {prop.name: property(prop.getter, prop.setter) for prop in self._c._properties()} self.__dict__["_initializing"] = False def __getattr__(self, attr): if "_initializing" in self.__dict__ and self.__dict__["_initializing"]: return super(RecursiveScriptClass, self).__getattr__(attr) # type: ignore[misc] if attr in self._props: return self._props[attr].fget() return getattr(self._c, attr) def __setattr__(self, attr, value): if "_initializing" in self.__dict__ and self.__dict__["_initializing"]: return super(RecursiveScriptClass, self).__setattr__(attr, value) if attr in self._props: return self._props[attr].fset(value) setattr(self._c, attr, value) # Delegate calls to magic methods like __len__ to the C++ module backing the # RecursiveScriptClass. def forward_magic_method(self, method_name, *args, **kwargs): if not self._c._has_method(method_name): raise TypeError() self_method = self.__getattr__(method_name) return self_method(*args, **kwargs) def __getstate__(self): raise pickle.PickleError("ScriptClasses cannot be pickled") def __iadd__(self, other): if self._c._has_method("__iadd__"): return self.forward_magic_method("__iadd__", other) else: return self.forward_magic_method("__add__", other) for method_name in _magic_methods: def method_template(self, *args, **kwargs): return self.forward_magic_method(method_name, *args, **kwargs) setattr(RecursiveScriptClass, method_name, method_template) # this is a Python 'non-data descriptor' that causes the first access # to ScriptModule's forward to look up the forward method and stash # it in the objects dict. Due to the standard rules for attribute lookup, # subsequent lookups will just directly return the previously looked up method. # This is necessary because nn.Module defines forward as a method. If we # did nothing, __getattr__ would not be called. Instead we'd get nn.Module.forward # which always throws an exception. class ScriptModule(with_metaclass(ScriptMeta, Module)): # type: ignore[misc] r""" A wrapper around C++ ``torch::jit::Module``. ``ScriptModule``\s contain methods, attributes, parameters, and constants. These can be accessed the same way as on a normal ``nn.Module``. """ __jit_unused_properties__ = ['code', 'code_with_constants', 'graph', 'inlined_graph', 'original_name'] def __init__(self): super(ScriptModule, self).__init__() forward = _CachedForward() def __getattr__(self, attr): if "_actual_script_module" not in self.__dict__: return super(ScriptModule, self).__getattr__(attr) return getattr(self._actual_script_module, attr) def __setattr__(self, attr, value): if "_actual_script_module" not in self.__dict__: # Unwrap torch.jit.Attribute into a regular setattr + record # the provided type in __annotations__. # # This ensures that if we use the attr again in `__init__`, it # will look like the actual value, not an instance of Attribute. if isinstance(value, Attribute): # NB: Ensure that we set __annotations__ on the specific # class in question, and not on a superclass (which would # be wrong wrong wrong!). # See also https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/issues/39463 if "__annotations__" not in self.__class__.__dict__: self.__class__.__annotations__ = {} self.__annotations__[attr] = value.type value = value.value return super(ScriptModule, self).__setattr__(attr, value) setattr(self._actual_script_module, attr, value) def define(self, src): if "_actual_script_module" in self.__dict__: # If we have completed initialization, just defer to the # backing RecursiveScriptModule to eagerly compile the provided # source. return self._actual_script_module.define(src) # Otherwise, we are still in the object's __init__. # In that case, add `src` as a stub to be compiled. # # We use frames_up=1 to get to the proper surrounding scope. The stack # will look like: # 0. createResolutionCallback # 1. define() # 2. surrounding scope. # # createResolutionCallback internally adds 1 to get us to our frame, then # we add 1 to get to the proper surrounding scope. rcb = _jit_internal.createResolutionCallbackFromFrame(frames_up=1) ast = torch._C._parse_source_def(src) self._methods[ast.name().name] = ScriptMethodStub(rcb, ast, None) def _replicate_for_data_parallel(self): return self._actual_script_module._replicate_for_data_parallel() def __reduce_package__(self, exporter: PackageExporter): """ Called by ``torch.package.PackageExporter``'s Pickler's ``persistent_id`` when saving TorchScript objects. Performs act of saving a ScriptModule inside of a ``torch.package`` archive. Returns method to load the ScriptModule from a ``torch.package.PackageImporter``'s Pickler's ``persistent_load`` function. """ script_module_id = exporter.get_unique_id() exporter.script_module_serializer.serialize(self._c, int(script_module_id)) return (unpackage_script_module, (script_module_id,)) class RecursiveScriptModule(ScriptModule): # XXX: RecursiveScriptModule inherits from ScriptModule for the sole # reason that it retains the existing isinstance(ScriptModule) # behavior. r""" The core data structure in TorchScript is the ``ScriptModule``. It is an analogue of torch's ``nn.Module`` and represents an entire model as a tree of submodules. Like normal modules, each individual module in a ``ScriptModule`` can have submodules, parameters, and methods. In ``nn.Module``\s methods are implemented as Python functions, but in ``ScriptModule``\s methods are implemented as TorchScript functions, a statically-typed subset of Python that contains all of PyTorch's built-in Tensor operations. This difference allows your ``ScriptModule``\s code to run without the need for a Python interpreter. ``ScriptModule``\s should not be created manually, instead use either :func:`tracing <torch.jit.trace>` or :func:`scripting <torch.jit.script>`. Tracing and scripting can be applied incrementally and :ref:`composed as necessary <Types>`. * Tracing records the tensor operations as executed with a set of example inputs and uses these operations to construct a computation graph. You can use the full dynamic behavior of Python with tracing, but values other than Tensors and control flow aren't captured in the graph. * Scripting inspects the Python code of the model and compiles it to TorchScript. Scripting allows the use of many `types`_ of values and supports dynamic control flow. Many, but not all features of Python are supported by the compiler, so changes to the source code may be necessary. """ _disable_script_meta = True def __init__(self, cpp_module): self.__dict__["_initializing"] = True self._c = cpp_module super(RecursiveScriptModule, self).__init__() # Delete the 'training' attribute set up by `Module.__init__`. It # will get set on the underlying cpp module, so we delete it here # to avoid this version shadowing the cpp module version. delattr(self, "training") @staticmethod def _construct(cpp_module, init_fn): """ Construct a RecursiveScriptModule that's ready for use. PyTorch code should use this to construct a RecursiveScriptModule instead of instead of calling `__init__` directly, as it makes sure the object is properly finalized (and in the future, we may take control of how the RecursiveScriptModule instance is created). Args: cpp_module: The C++ Module that will hold the actual state of this RecursiveScriptModule instance. init_fn: Lambda that initializes the RecursiveScriptModule passed to it. """ script_module = RecursiveScriptModule(cpp_module) init_fn(script_module) # Finalize the ScriptModule: replace the nn.Module state with our # custom implementations and flip the _initializing bit. RecursiveScriptModule._finalize_scriptmodule(script_module) return script_module @staticmethod def _finalize_scriptmodule(script_module): script_module._parameters = OrderedDictWrapper( torch._C.ParameterDict(script_module._c) ) script_module._buffers = OrderedDictWrapper( torch._C.BufferDict(script_module._c) ) script_module._modules = OrderedModuleDict( script_module._c, script_module._modules ) script_module._initializing = False def _reconstruct(self, cpp_module): """ Re-construct an instance of RecursiveScriptModule using an instance of a C++ module. Args: cpp_module: The C++ module that this RecursiveScriptModule will be rebuilt around. """ self.__init__(cpp_module) # type: ignore[misc] # Copy the concrete type from the C++ module to this ScriptModule. self._concrete_type = torch._C.ConcreteModuleType.from_jit_type( self._c._type() ) # Copy submodules from the C++ module to this ScriptModule. modules = {} for name, cpp_module in torch._C.ModuleDict(self._c).items(): modules[name] = wrap_cpp_module(cpp_module) self._modules = OrderedModuleDict(self._c, modules) # Copy parameters and buffers. self._parameters = OrderedDictWrapper(torch._C.ParameterDict(self._c)) self._buffers = OrderedDictWrapper(torch._C.BufferDict(self._c)) # Get rid of the functions from the old C++ module. self.__dict__ = { k: v for k, v in self.__dict__.items() if not isinstance(v, torch._C.ScriptMethod) } self.__dict__["_initializing"] = False @property def graph(self): r""" Returns a string representation of the internal graph for the ``forward`` method. See :ref:`interpreting-graphs` for details. """ return self._c._get_method("forward").graph @property def inlined_graph(self): r""" Returns a string representation of the internal graph for the ``forward`` method. This graph will be preprocessed to inline all function and method calls. See :ref:`interpreting-graphs` for details. """ return self.forward.inlined_graph @property def code(self): r""" Returns a pretty-printed representation (as valid Python syntax) of the internal graph for the ``forward`` method. See :ref:`inspecting-code` for details. """ return self.forward.code @property def code_with_constants(self): r""" Returns a tuple of: [0] a pretty-printed representation (as valid Python syntax) of the internal graph for the ``forward`` method. See `code`. [1] a ConstMap following the CONSTANT.cN format of the output in [0]. The indices in the [0] output are keys to the underlying constant's values. See :ref:`inspecting-code` for details. """ r = self.forward.code_with_constants return (r[0], ConstMap(r[1])) def save(self, f, **kwargs): r""" save(f, _extra_files={}) See :func:`torch.jit.save <torch.jit.save>` for details. """ return self._c.save(str(f), **kwargs) def _save_for_lite_interpreter(self, *args, **kwargs): r""" _save_for_lite_interpreter(f) Add (or update) the bytecode session to the script model. The updated model is used in lite interpreter for mobile applications. Args: f: a string containing a file name. _extra_files: Map from filename to contents which will be stored as part of 'f'. """ return self._c._save_for_mobile(*args, **kwargs) def _save_to_buffer_for_lite_interpreter(self, *args, **kwargs): return self._c._save_to_buffer_for_mobile(*args, **kwargs) def save_to_buffer(self, *args, **kwargs): return self._c.save_to_buffer(*args, **kwargs) def get_debug_state(self, *args, **kwargs): return self._c.get_debug_state() def extra_repr(self): return "original_name={}".format(self.original_name) def graph_for(self, *args, **kwargs): return self.forward.graph_for(*args, **kwargs) @property def original_name(self): if type(self) == str(self._c._type().name()): return "" return str(self._c._type().name()) def define(self, src): # We use frames_up=1 to get to the proper surrounding scope. The stack # will look like: # 0. createResolutionCallback # 1. define() # 2. surrounding scope. # # createResolutionCallback internally adds 1 to get us to our frame, then # we add 1 to get to the proper surrounding scope. rcb = _jit_internal.createResolutionCallbackFromFrame(frames_up=1) self._c._define(self._concrete_type, src, rcb) def __getattr__(self, attr): if "_initializing" not in self.__dict__: raise RuntimeError( "ScriptModule has not been initialized, did you forget to call super's init?" ) if self._initializing: return super(RecursiveScriptModule, self).__getattr__(attr) # _modules check is before hasattr since modules are included as attributes in _c, # but we want to get the python wrapper from _modules instead of the raw _c object. if attr in self._modules: return self._modules[attr] elif self._c.hasattr(attr): return self._c.getattr(attr) elif self._c._has_method(attr): script_method = self._c._get_method(attr) # cache method so future calls do not go through __getattr__ # to improve invocation performance self.__dict__[attr] = script_method return script_method return super(RecursiveScriptModule, self).__getattr__(attr) def __setattr__(self, attr, value): if self._initializing: return super(RecursiveScriptModule, self).__setattr__(attr, value) if attr in self._modules: self._modules[attr] = value elif self._c.hasattr(attr): self._c.setattr(attr, value) elif ( hasattr(self, "_concrete_type") and attr in self._concrete_type.get_constants().keys() ): # TODO: we don't have _concrete_type set after load(), and in general we lose constant information. # We should encode constants as class type attributes (or something) so it persists across save/load. raise AttributeError( "Cannot mutate TorchScript constant value: '{}'. Value: '{}'".format( attr, value ) ) else: # We allow setting Python attributes on the ScriptModule, for # when people want to stash some convenience info on it. # TODO: it's possible that the following is confusing: # s = torch.jit.script(...) # s.python_attr = ... # s.save() <--- this doesn't have `python_attr` # It's fairly trivial to save enough info to warn in this case. return super(RecursiveScriptModule, self).__setattr__(attr, value) def __copy__(self): return torch.jit._recursive.wrap_cpp_module(copy.copy(self._c)) def __deepcopy__(self, memo): return torch.jit._recursive.wrap_cpp_module(copy.deepcopy(self._c, memo)) # Python magic methods do method lookups on an object's class type, instead of looking up # the method defines on the class instance. In order to continue to expose the magic methods # of builtin-containers (ModuleList, Sequential, ModuleDict) to Python, we # define magic methods here as a shim to the correct attribute. def forward_magic_method(self, method_name, *args, **kwargs): self_method = getattr(self, method_name) if getattr(self_method, "__func__", None) == getattr( RecursiveScriptModule, method_name ): raise NotImplementedError() return self_method(*args, **kwargs) def __iter__(self): return self.forward_magic_method("__iter__") def __getitem__(self, idx): return self.forward_magic_method("__getitem__", idx) def __len__(self): return self.forward_magic_method("__len__") def __contains__(self, key): return self.forward_magic_method("__contains__", key) # dir is defined by the base nn.Module, so instead of throwing if # it is not overridden, we call into the nn.Module __dir__ method def __dir__(self): self_method = self.__dir__ if self_method.__func__ == _get_function_from_type( # type: ignore[attr-defined] RecursiveScriptModule, "__dir__" ): return super(RecursiveScriptModule, self).__dir__() return self_method() # to resolve bool(value), Python looks if __bool__ is defined then __iter__ # is defined then returns true for classes. Since __iter__() on this # class throws if it isn't overridden, we define __bool__ to preserve default behavior def __bool__(self): self_method = self.__bool__ if self_method.__func__ == _get_function_from_type( # type: ignore[attr-defined] RecursiveScriptModule, "__bool__" ): return True return self_method() def _replicate_for_data_parallel(self): # we have to initialize ScriptModule properly so that # it works with pybind11 def init_fn(script_module): # Don't do anything here, we'll initialize the ScriptModule below return return RecursiveScriptModule._construct( self._c._replicate_for_data_parallel(), init_fn ) # Need to copy all RecursiveScriptModule methods to ScriptModule. # # This is because `super(MyScriptModule, self).foo()` does not use # `__getattr__` to look up `foo`. So we need to make each method available on # the ScriptModule manually. for name, item in RecursiveScriptModule.__dict__.items(): if not callable(item) and not isinstance(item, property): continue if name.startswith("__") or hasattr(ScriptModule, name): continue # We can copy over the implementation wholesale because besides the # `super()` thing above, ScriptModule behaves exactly like # RecursiveScriptModule setattr(ScriptModule, name, item) def _get_methods(cls): import inspect # In Python 3 unbound methods are functions, but in Python 2 they are methods return inspect.getmembers( cls, predicate=lambda x: inspect.isfunction(x) or inspect.ismethod(x) ) _compiled_methods_allowlist = { "forward", "register_buffer", "register_parameter", "add_module", "_apply", "apply", "cuda", "cpu", "to", "type", "float", "double", "half", "state_dict", "_save_to_state_dict", "load_state_dict", "_load_from_state_dict", "_named_members", "parameters", "named_parameters", "buffers", "named_buffers", "children", "named_children", "modules", "named_modules", "zero_grad", "share_memory", "_get_name", "extra_repr", "_slow_forward", "_tracing_name", "eval", "train", "get_extra_state", "set_extra_state" } def _make_fail(name): def fail(self, *args, **kwargs): raise RuntimeError(name + " is not supported on ScriptModules") return fail for name, method in _get_methods(torch.nn.Module): if name.startswith("__"): continue if ( name not in RecursiveScriptModule.__dict__ and name not in _compiled_methods_allowlist ): setattr(RecursiveScriptModule, method.__name__, _make_fail(name)) else: # TODO MAKE SURE THAT DISABLING WORKS class RecursiveScriptClass(object): # type: ignore[no-redef] def __init__(self): super().__init__()
[docs] class ScriptModule(torch.nn.Module): # type: ignore[no-redef] def __init__(self, arg=None): super().__init__()
class RecursiveScriptModule(ScriptModule): # type: ignore[no-redef] def __init__(self, arg=None): super().__init__() def call_prepare_scriptable_func_impl(obj, memo): if not isinstance(obj, torch.nn.Module): return obj obj_id = id(obj) # If obj_id is in memo, obj has already been prepared or is being # prepared in another call up the stack. if obj_id in memo: return memo[id(obj)] obj = obj.__prepare_scriptable__() if hasattr(obj, '__prepare_scriptable__') else obj # type: ignore[operator] # Record obj in memo to avoid infinite recursion in the case of cycles in the module # hierarchy when recursing below. memo[obj_id] = obj new_obj_dict = {} for name, sub_module in obj.__dict__.items(): if name == '_modules': for k, v in sub_module.items(): sub_module[k] = call_prepare_scriptable_func_impl(v, memo) new_obj_dict[name] = sub_module elif isinstance(sub_module, torch.nn.Module) and not isinstance(sub_module, ScriptModule): new_obj_dict[name] = call_prepare_scriptable_func_impl(sub_module, memo) else: new_obj_dict[name] = sub_module for k, v in new_obj_dict.items(): obj.__dict__[name] = v return obj def call_prepare_scriptable_func(obj): memo: Dict[int, torch.nn.Module] = {} return call_prepare_scriptable_func_impl(obj, memo) def create_script_dict(obj): """ Create a ``torch._C.ScriptDict`` instance with the data from ``obj``. Args: obj (dict): The Python dictionary that is used to initialize the ``ScriptDict`` returned by this function. Returns: An instance of ``torch._C.ScriptDict`` that has the same data as ``obj`` and can be passed between Python and TorchScript with reference semantics and zero copy overhead. """ return torch._C.ScriptDict(obj) # type: ignore[attr-defined] def create_script_list(obj, type_hint=None): """ Create a ``torch._C.ScriptList`` instance with the data from ``obj``. Args: obj (dict): The Python list that is used to initialize the ``ScriptList`` returned by this function. Returns: An instance of ``torch._C.ScriptList`` that has the same data as ``obj`` and can be passed between Python and TorchScript with reference semantics and zero copy overhead. """ return torch._C.ScriptList(obj) # type: ignore[attr-defined]
[docs]def script(obj, optimize=None, _frames_up=0, _rcb=None, example_inputs: Union[List[Tuple], Dict[Callable, List[Tuple]], None] = None): r""" Scripting a function or ``nn.Module`` will inspect the source code, compile it as TorchScript code using the TorchScript compiler, and return a :class:`ScriptModule` or :class:`ScriptFunction`. TorchScript itself is a subset of the Python language, so not all features in Python work, but we provide enough functionality to compute on tensors and do control-dependent operations. For a complete guide, see the :ref:`language-reference`. Scripting a dictionary or list copies the data inside it into a TorchScript instance than can be subsequently passed by reference between Python and TorchScript with zero copy overhead. ``torch.jit.script`` can be used as a function for modules, functions, dictionaries and lists and as a decorator ``@torch.jit.script`` for :ref:`torchscript-classes` and functions. Args: obj (callable, class, or ``nn.Module``): The ``nn.Module``, function, class type, dictionary, or list to compile. example_inputs (Union[List[Tuple], Dict[Callable, List[Tuple]], None]): Provide example inputs to annotate the arguments for a function or ``nn.Module``. Returns: If ``obj`` is ``nn.Module``, ``script`` returns a :class:`ScriptModule` object. The returned :class:`ScriptModule` will have the same set of sub-modules and parameters as the original ``nn.Module``. If ``obj`` is a standalone function, a :class:`ScriptFunction` will be returned. If ``obj`` is a ``dict``, then ``script`` returns an instance of `torch._C.ScriptDict`. If ``obj`` is a ``list``, then ``script`` returns an instance of `torch._C.ScriptList`. **Scripting a function** The ``@torch.jit.script`` decorator will construct a :class:`ScriptFunction` by compiling the body of the function. Example (scripting a function): .. testcode:: import torch @torch.jit.script def foo(x, y): if x.max() > y.max(): r = x else: r = y return r print(type(foo)) # torch.jit.ScriptFunction # See the compiled graph as Python code print(foo.code) # Call the function using the TorchScript interpreter foo(torch.ones(2, 2), torch.ones(2, 2)) .. testoutput:: :hide: ... ****Scripting a function using example_inputs** Example inputs can be used to annotate a function arguments. Example (annotating a function before scripting): .. testcode:: import torch def test_sum(a, b): return a + b # Annotate the arguments to be int scripted_fn = torch.jit.script(test_sum, example_inputs=[(3, 4)]) print(type(scripted_fn)) # torch.jit.ScriptFunction # See the compiled graph as Python code print(scripted_fn.code) # Call the function using the TorchScript interpreter scripted_fn(20, 100) .. testoutput:: :hide: ... **Scripting an nn.Module** Scripting an ``nn.Module`` by default will compile the ``forward`` method and recursively compile any methods, submodules, and functions called by ``forward``. If a ``nn.Module`` only uses features supported in TorchScript, no changes to the original module code should be necessary. ``script`` will construct :class:`ScriptModule` that has copies of the attributes, parameters, and methods of the original module. Example (scripting a simple module with a Parameter): .. testcode:: import torch class MyModule(torch.nn.Module): def __init__(self, N, M): super(MyModule, self).__init__() # This parameter will be copied to the new ScriptModule self.weight = torch.nn.Parameter(torch.rand(N, M)) # When this submodule is used, it will be compiled self.linear = torch.nn.Linear(N, M) def forward(self, input): output = self.weight.mv(input) # This calls the `forward` method of the `nn.Linear` module, which will # cause the `self.linear` submodule to be compiled to a `ScriptModule` here output = self.linear(output) return output scripted_module = torch.jit.script(MyModule(2, 3)) Example (scripting a module with traced submodules): .. testcode:: import torch import torch.nn as nn import torch.nn.functional as F class MyModule(nn.Module): def __init__(self): super(MyModule, self).__init__() # torch.jit.trace produces a ScriptModule's conv1 and conv2 self.conv1 = torch.jit.trace(nn.Conv2d(1, 20, 5), torch.rand(1, 1, 16, 16)) self.conv2 = torch.jit.trace(nn.Conv2d(20, 20, 5), torch.rand(1, 20, 16, 16)) def forward(self, input): input = F.relu(self.conv1(input)) input = F.relu(self.conv2(input)) return input scripted_module = torch.jit.script(MyModule()) To compile a method other than ``forward`` (and recursively compile anything it calls), add the :func:`@torch.jit.export <torch.jit.export>` decorator to the method. To opt out of compilation use :func:`@torch.jit.ignore <torch.jit.ignore>` or :func:`@torch.jit.unused <torch.jit.unused>`. Example (an exported and ignored method in a module):: import torch import torch.nn as nn class MyModule(nn.Module): def __init__(self): super(MyModule, self).__init__() @torch.jit.export def some_entry_point(self, input): return input + 10 @torch.jit.ignore def python_only_fn(self, input): # This function won't be compiled, so any # Python APIs can be used import pdb pdb.set_trace() def forward(self, input): if self.training: self.python_only_fn(input) return input * 99 scripted_module = torch.jit.script(MyModule()) print(scripted_module.some_entry_point(torch.randn(2, 2))) print(scripted_module(torch.randn(2, 2))) Example ( Annotating forward of nn.Module using example_inputs):: import torch import torch.nn as nn from typing import NamedTuple class MyModule(NamedTuple): result: List[int] class TestNNModule(torch.nn.Module): def forward(self, a) -> MyModule: result = MyModule(result=a) return result pdt_model = TestNNModule() # Runs the pdt_model in eager model with the inputs provided and annotates the arguments of forward scripted_model = torch.jit.script(pdt_model, example_inputs={pdt_model: [([10, 20, ], ), ], }) # Run the scripted_model with actual inputs print(scripted_model([20])) """ global type_trace_db if not _enabled: return obj if optimize is not None: warnings.warn( "`optimize` is deprecated and has no effect. Use `with torch.jit.optimized_execution() instead" ) # No-op for modules, functions, class instances that are already scripted if isinstance(obj, RecursiveScriptClass): return obj if isinstance(obj, ScriptModule): return obj if isinstance(obj, ScriptFunction): return obj if example_inputs: # If MonkeyType is installed, enable profile directed type annotation # Check if example_inputs are defined and generate call traces # for the method by running eager mode version of the method with # the provide example inputs. This logs all the traces in type_trace_db type_trace_db = JitTypeTraceStore() if monkeytype_trace: monkeytype_config = JitTypeTraceConfig(type_trace_db) with monkeytype_trace(monkeytype_config): if isinstance(example_inputs, Dict): # If the obj is an nn.Module or a class, then each method is # executed with the arguments provided in the example inputs. # example inputs here will be of type Dict(class.method, (arguments)) # This is used to infer type annotations for those methods # which are not called directly under the hood of monkeytype. for module, example_input in example_inputs.items(): for example in example_input: module(*example) elif isinstance(example_inputs, List): for examples in example_inputs: obj(*examples) else: raise ValueError("Error: Unable to infer types. Please format the inputs to type `List[Tuple]`" " or `Dict[Callable, List[Tuple]]` to be run with MonkeyType.") else: warnings.warn("Warning: monkeytype is not installed. Please install https://github.com/Instagram/MonkeyType " "to enable Profile-Directed Typing in TorchScript. Refer to " "https://github.com/Instagram/MonkeyType/blob/master/README.rst to install MonkeyType. ") if isinstance(obj, torch.nn.Module): obj = call_prepare_scriptable_func(obj) return torch.jit._recursive.create_script_module( obj, torch.jit._recursive.infer_methods_to_compile ) if isinstance(obj, dict): return create_script_dict(obj) if isinstance(obj, list): return create_script_list(obj) if inspect.isclass(obj): qualified_name = _qualified_name(obj) # If this type is a `nn.Module` subclass, they probably meant to pass # an instance instead of a Module if issubclass(obj, torch.nn.Module): raise RuntimeError( "Type '{}' cannot be compiled since it inherits" " from nn.Module," " pass an instance instead".format(obj) ) # Enums are automatically usable in TorchScript, explicitly scripting # is not necessary, but not harmful either. if issubclass(obj, enum.Enum): return obj if not _is_new_style_class(obj): raise RuntimeError( "TorchScript classes must be new-style classes. " "Please inherit from 'object'." ) if len(obj.mro()) > 2: raise RuntimeError( "TorchScript classes does not support inheritance yet. " "Please directly inherit from 'object'." ) if _rcb is None: _rcb = _jit_internal.createResolutionCallbackFromFrame(_frames_up + 1) _compile_and_register_class(obj, _rcb, qualified_name) return obj elif inspect.isfunction(obj) or inspect.ismethod(obj): qualified_name = _qualified_name(obj) # this is a decorated fn, and we need to the underlying fn and its rcb if hasattr(obj, "__script_if_tracing_wrapper"): obj = obj.__original_fn _rcb = _jit_internal.createResolutionCallbackFromClosure(obj) _check_directly_compile_overloaded(obj) maybe_already_compiled_fn = _try_get_jit_cached_function(obj) if maybe_already_compiled_fn: return maybe_already_compiled_fn ast = get_jit_def(obj, obj.__name__) if _rcb is None: _rcb = _jit_internal.createResolutionCallbackFromClosure(obj) fn = torch._C._jit_script_compile( qualified_name, ast, _rcb, get_default_args(obj) ) # Forward docstrings fn.__doc__ = obj.__doc__ _set_jit_function_cache(obj, fn) return fn else: return torch.jit._recursive.create_script_class(obj)
# overloads are registered in _jit_internal and compiled here so that _overload # can be used in nn/functional.py without an import cycle def _check_overload_defaults(impl_defaults, overload_defaults, loc): for name, overload_value in overload_defaults.items(): if name not in impl_defaults or impl_defaults[name] != overload_value: raise torch.jit.frontend.FrontendError( loc, "Default parameters on overloads do not affect the runtime so they " "must equal to the default parameter on the implementation function. Found on " "parameter {name}".format(name=name), ) def _compile_function_with_overload(overload_fn, qual_name, impl_fn): overload_decl = get_jit_def(overload_fn, overload_fn.__name__).decl() overload_signature = torch.jit.annotations.get_signature( overload_fn, None, None, inspect.ismethod(overload_fn) ) impl_ast = get_jit_def(impl_fn, impl_fn.__name__) overload_defaults = get_default_args(overload_fn) implementation_defaults = get_default_args(impl_fn) _rcb = _jit_internal.createResolutionCallbackFromClosure(impl_fn) _check_overload_defaults( implementation_defaults, overload_defaults, overload_decl.range() ) fn = torch._C._jit_script_compile_overload( qual_name, overload_decl, impl_ast, _rcb, implementation_defaults, overload_signature, ) return fn def _get_overloads(obj): # check for cached compiled fns existing_compiled_fns = _try_get_jit_cached_overloads(obj) qual_name = _qualified_name(obj) uncompiled_overloads = _jit_internal._get_fn_overloads(qual_name) if uncompiled_overloads is None: return existing_compiled_fns if obj in uncompiled_overloads: raise RuntimeError(_jit_internal.get_overload_no_implementation_error_message( 'function', obj)) compiled_fns = [] for overload_fn in uncompiled_overloads: compiled_fns.append( _compile_function_with_overload(overload_fn, qual_name, obj) ) if existing_compiled_fns: compiled_fns = existing_compiled_fns + compiled_fns # cache compilation, remove information stored to do compilation _set_jit_overload_cache(obj, compiled_fns) _jit_internal._clear_fn_overloads(qual_name) return compiled_fns def _check_directly_compile_overloaded(obj): qual_name = _qualified_name(obj) if _jit_internal._get_fn_overloads(qual_name) or _try_get_jit_cached_overloads(obj): raise RuntimeError( "Function {} cannot be directly compiled because it" " is overloaded. It must be used in a context of a function" " where its inputs can determine which overload to call.".format(qual_name) ) def interface(obj): if not inspect.isclass(obj): raise RuntimeError("interface must be applied to a class") if not _is_new_style_class(obj): raise RuntimeError("TorchScript interfaces must inherit from 'object'") # Expected MRO is: # User module # torch.nn.modules.module.Module # object is_module_interface = issubclass(obj, torch.nn.Module) and len(obj.mro()) == 3 if not is_module_interface and len(obj.mro()) > 2: raise RuntimeError( "TorchScript interface does not support inheritance yet. " "Please directly inherit from 'object' or 'nn.Module'." ) qualified_name = _qualified_name(obj) rcb = _jit_internal.createResolutionCallbackFromFrame(1) # if this type is a `nn.Module` subclass, generate a module interface type # instead of a class interface type; a module interface type only compiles # the user provided methods as part of the interface ast = get_jit_class_def(obj, obj.__name__) mangled_classname = torch._C._jit_script_interface_compile( qualified_name, ast, rcb, is_module_interface ) obj.__torch_script_interface__ = mangled_classname return obj def _recursive_compile_class(obj, loc): _qual_name = _qualified_name(obj) # We're starting a new compilation, so update the error call stack in # case it fails error_stack = torch._C.CallStack(_qual_name, loc) rcb = _jit_internal.createResolutionCallbackForClassMethods(obj) return _compile_and_register_class(obj, rcb, _qual_name) CompilationUnit = torch._C.CompilationUnit set_module(CompilationUnit, "torch.jit") def pad(s: str, padding: int, offset: int = 0, char: str = ' '): if padding >= len(s): padding -= len(s) return ''.join([char for _ in range(padding + offset)]) + s class _ScriptProfileColumn: def __init__(self, header: str, alignment: int = 4, offset: int = 0): self.header = header self.alignment = alignment self.offset = offset self.rows: Dict[int, Any] = {} def add_row(self, lineno: int, value: Any): self.rows[lineno] = value def materialize(self): max_length = len(self.header) rows: List[Tuple[int, str]] = [] for (key, value) in self.rows.items(): cell = str(value) rows.append((key, cell)) max_length = max(len(cell), max_length) if self.alignment > 0: padding = max_length + self.alignment padding -= padding % self.alignment else: padding = 0 rows = [(key, pad(cell, padding, self.offset)) for key, cell in rows] return pad(self.header, padding, self.offset), rows class _ScriptProfileTable: def __init__(self, cols: List[_ScriptProfileColumn], source_range: List[int]): self.cols = cols self.source_range = source_range def dump_string(self): outputs: List[str] = [] cells: List[Tuple[str, Dict[int, str]]] = [] header_buffer = '' for col in self.cols: header, rows = col.materialize() header_buffer += header cells.append((header, dict(rows))) outputs.append(header_buffer) outputs.append(pad('', len(header_buffer), 0, '=')) for line in self.source_range: row_buffer = '' for header, rows in cells: cell = rows.get(line) if cell is None: row_buffer += pad('', len(header)) else: row_buffer += cell outputs.append(row_buffer) return '\n'.join(outputs) class _ScriptProfile: def __init__(self): self.profile = classes.profiling._ScriptProfile() def enable(self): self.profile.enable() def disable(self): self.profile.disable() def dump_string(self) -> str: outputs: List[str] = [] for source_stats in self.profile._dump_stats(): source_ref = source_stats.source() source_lines = source_ref.text().splitlines() dedent = min([len(line) - len(line.lstrip(' ')) for line in source_lines]) source_lines = [line[dedent:] for line in source_lines] start_line = source_ref.starting_lineno() end_line = start_line + len(source_lines) source_range = range(start_line, end_line) lineno = _ScriptProfileColumn("Line #") hits = _ScriptProfileColumn("Hits") time_ns = _ScriptProfileColumn("Time (ns)") line_contents = _ScriptProfileColumn("Line Contents", 0, 1) stats = source_stats.line_map() for line in source_range: lineno.add_row(line, line) line_contents.add_row(line, source_lines[line - start_line]) stat = stats.get(line) if stat is not None: hits.add_row(line, stat.count()) time_ns.add_row(line, stat.duration_ns()) table = _ScriptProfileTable([lineno, hits, time_ns, line_contents], list(source_range)) outputs.append(table.dump_string()) return '\n\n'.join(outputs) def dump(self): print(self.dump_string()) def _unwrap_optional(x): assert x is not None, "Unwrapping null optional" return x _register_builtin(_unwrap_optional, "aten::_unwrap_optional") _register_builtin(_jit_internal.is_scripting, "aten::is_scripting") _register_builtin(has_torch_function, "aten::has_torch_function") _register_builtin(has_torch_function_unary, "aten::has_torch_function") _register_builtin(has_torch_function_variadic, "aten::has_torch_function")

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