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torch.jit.trace_module

torch.jit.trace_module(mod, inputs, optimize=None, check_trace=True, check_inputs=None, check_tolerance=1e-05, strict=True, _force_outplace=False, _module_class=None, _compilation_unit=<torch.jit.CompilationUnit object>, example_inputs_is_kwarg=False, _store_inputs=True)[source]

Trace a module and return an executable ScriptModule that will be optimized using just-in-time compilation.

When a module is passed to torch.jit.trace, only the forward method is run and traced. With trace_module, you can specify a dictionary of method names to example inputs to trace (see the inputs) argument below.

See torch.jit.trace for more information on tracing.

Parameters
  • mod (torch.nn.Module) – A torch.nn.Module containing methods whose names are specified in inputs. The given methods will be compiled as a part of a single ScriptModule.

  • inputs (dict) – A dict containing sample inputs indexed by method names in mod. The inputs will be passed to methods whose names correspond to inputs’ keys while tracing. { 'forward' : example_forward_input, 'method2': example_method2_input}

Keyword Arguments
  • check_trace (bool, optional) – Check if the same inputs run through traced code produce the same outputs. Default: True. You might want to disable this if, for example, your network contains non- deterministic ops or if you are sure that the network is correct despite a checker failure.

  • check_inputs (list of dicts, optional) – A list of dicts of input arguments that should be used to check the trace against what is expected. Each tuple is equivalent to a set of input arguments that would be specified in inputs. For best results, pass in a set of checking inputs representative of the space of shapes and types of inputs you expect the network to see. If not specified, the original inputs are used for checking

  • check_tolerance (float, optional) – Floating-point comparison tolerance to use in the checker procedure. This can be used to relax the checker strictness in the event that results diverge numerically for a known reason, such as operator fusion.

  • example_inputs_is_kwarg (bool, optional) – This parameter indicate whether the example inputs is a pack pack of keyword arguments. Default: False.

Returns

A ScriptModule object with a single forward method containing the traced code. When func is a torch.nn.Module, the returned ScriptModule will have the same set of sub-modules and parameters as func.

Example (tracing a module with multiple methods):

import torch
import torch.nn as nn

class Net(nn.Module):
    def __init__(self):
        super().__init__()
        self.conv = nn.Conv2d(1, 1, 3)

    def forward(self, x):
        return self.conv(x)

    def weighted_kernel_sum(self, weight):
        return weight * self.conv.weight


n = Net()
example_weight = torch.rand(1, 1, 3, 3)
example_forward_input = torch.rand(1, 1, 3, 3)

# Trace a specific method and construct `ScriptModule` with
# a single `forward` method
module = torch.jit.trace(n.forward, example_forward_input)

# Trace a module (implicitly traces `forward`) and construct a
# `ScriptModule` with a single `forward` method
module = torch.jit.trace(n, example_forward_input)

# Trace specific methods on a module (specified in `inputs`), constructs
# a `ScriptModule` with `forward` and `weighted_kernel_sum` methods
inputs = {'forward' : example_forward_input, 'weighted_kernel_sum' : example_weight}
module = torch.jit.trace_module(n, inputs)

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