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Source code for torch.amp.autocast_mode

# mypy: allow-untyped-defs
import collections
import functools
import warnings

from typing import Any, Optional

import torch
from torch.types import _dtype

try:
    import numpy as np

    HAS_NUMPY = True
except ModuleNotFoundError:
    np = None  # type: ignore[assignment]

__all__ = [
    "autocast_decorator",
    "autocast",
    "is_autocast_available",
    "custom_fwd",
    "custom_bwd",
]


[docs]def is_autocast_available(device_type: str) -> bool: r""" Return a bool indicating if autocast is available on :attr:`device_type`. Args: device_type(str): Device type to use. Possible values are: 'cuda', 'cpu', 'xpu' and so on. The type is the same as the `type` attribute of a :class:`torch.device`. Thus, you may obtain the device type of a tensor using `Tensor.device.type`. """ return torch._C._is_autocast_available(device_type)
def autocast_decorator(autocast_instance, func): @functools.wraps(func) def decorate_autocast(*args, **kwargs): with autocast_instance: return func(*args, **kwargs) decorate_autocast.__script_unsupported = "@autocast() decorator is not supported in script mode" # type: ignore[attr-defined] return decorate_autocast
[docs]class autocast: r""" Instances of :class:`autocast` serve as context managers or decorators that allow regions of your script to run in mixed precision. In these regions, ops run in an op-specific dtype chosen by autocast to improve performance while maintaining accuracy. See the :ref:`Autocast Op Reference<autocast-op-reference>` for details. When entering an autocast-enabled region, Tensors may be any type. You should not call ``half()`` or ``bfloat16()`` on your model(s) or inputs when using autocasting. :class:`autocast` should wrap only the forward pass(es) of your network, including the loss computation(s). Backward passes under autocast are not recommended. Backward ops run in the same type that autocast used for corresponding forward ops. Example for CUDA Devices:: # Creates model and optimizer in default precision model = Net().cuda() optimizer = optim.SGD(model.parameters(), ...) for input, target in data: optimizer.zero_grad() # Enables autocasting for the forward pass (model + loss) with torch.autocast(device_type="cuda"): output = model(input) loss = loss_fn(output, target) # Exits the context manager before backward() loss.backward() optimizer.step() See the :ref:`Automatic Mixed Precision examples<amp-examples>` for usage (along with gradient scaling) in more complex scenarios (e.g., gradient penalty, multiple models/losses, custom autograd functions). :class:`autocast` can also be used as a decorator, e.g., on the ``forward`` method of your model:: class AutocastModel(nn.Module): ... @torch.autocast(device_type="cuda") def forward(self, input): ... Floating-point Tensors produced in an autocast-enabled region may be ``float16``. After returning to an autocast-disabled region, using them with floating-point Tensors of different dtypes may cause type mismatch errors. If so, cast the Tensor(s) produced in the autocast region back to ``float32`` (or other dtype if desired). If a Tensor from the autocast region is already ``float32``, the cast is a no-op, and incurs no additional overhead. CUDA Example:: # Creates some tensors in default dtype (here assumed to be float32) a_float32 = torch.rand((8, 8), device="cuda") b_float32 = torch.rand((8, 8), device="cuda") c_float32 = torch.rand((8, 8), device="cuda") d_float32 = torch.rand((8, 8), device="cuda") with torch.autocast(device_type="cuda"): # torch.mm is on autocast's list of ops that should run in float16. # Inputs are float32, but the op runs in float16 and produces float16 output. # No manual casts are required. e_float16 = torch.mm(a_float32, b_float32) # Also handles mixed input types f_float16 = torch.mm(d_float32, e_float16) # After exiting autocast, calls f_float16.float() to use with d_float32 g_float32 = torch.mm(d_float32, f_float16.float()) CPU Training Example:: # Creates model and optimizer in default precision model = Net() optimizer = optim.SGD(model.parameters(), ...) for epoch in epochs: for input, target in data: optimizer.zero_grad() # Runs the forward pass with autocasting. with torch.autocast(device_type="cpu", dtype=torch.bfloat16): output = model(input) loss = loss_fn(output, target) loss.backward() optimizer.step() CPU Inference Example:: # Creates model in default precision model = Net().eval() with torch.autocast(device_type="cpu", dtype=torch.bfloat16): for input in data: # Runs the forward pass with autocasting. output = model(input) CPU Inference Example with Jit Trace:: class TestModel(nn.Module): def __init__(self, input_size, num_classes): super().__init__() self.fc1 = nn.Linear(input_size, num_classes) def forward(self, x): return self.fc1(x) input_size = 2 num_classes = 2 model = TestModel(input_size, num_classes).eval() # For now, we suggest to disable the Jit Autocast Pass, # As the issue: https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/issues/75956 torch._C._jit_set_autocast_mode(False) with torch.cpu.amp.autocast(cache_enabled=False): model = torch.jit.trace(model, torch.randn(1, input_size)) model = torch.jit.freeze(model) # Models Run for _ in range(3): model(torch.randn(1, input_size)) Type mismatch errors *in* an autocast-enabled region are a bug; if this is what you observe, please file an issue. ``autocast(enabled=False)`` subregions can be nested in autocast-enabled regions. Locally disabling autocast can be useful, for example, if you want to force a subregion to run in a particular ``dtype``. Disabling autocast gives you explicit control over the execution type. In the subregion, inputs from the surrounding region should be cast to ``dtype`` before use:: # Creates some tensors in default dtype (here assumed to be float32) a_float32 = torch.rand((8, 8), device="cuda") b_float32 = torch.rand((8, 8), device="cuda") c_float32 = torch.rand((8, 8), device="cuda") d_float32 = torch.rand((8, 8), device="cuda") with torch.autocast(device_type="cuda"): e_float16 = torch.mm(a_float32, b_float32) with torch.autocast(device_type="cuda", enabled=False): # Calls e_float16.float() to ensure float32 execution # (necessary because e_float16 was created in an autocasted region) f_float32 = torch.mm(c_float32, e_float16.float()) # No manual casts are required when re-entering the autocast-enabled region. # torch.mm again runs in float16 and produces float16 output, regardless of input types. g_float16 = torch.mm(d_float32, f_float32) The autocast state is thread-local. If you want it enabled in a new thread, the context manager or decorator must be invoked in that thread. This affects :class:`torch.nn.DataParallel` and :class:`torch.nn.parallel.DistributedDataParallel` when used with more than one GPU per process (see :ref:`Working with Multiple GPUs<amp-multigpu>`). Args: device_type(str, required): Device type to use. Possible values are: 'cuda', 'cpu', 'xpu' and 'hpu'. The type is the same as the `type` attribute of a :class:`torch.device`. Thus, you may obtain the device type of a tensor using `Tensor.device.type`. enabled(bool, optional): Whether autocasting should be enabled in the region. Default: ``True`` dtype(torch_dtype, optional): Data type for ops run in autocast. It uses the default value (``torch.float16`` for CUDA and ``torch.bfloat16`` for CPU), given by :func:`~torch.get_autocast_dtype`, if :attr:`dtype` is ``None``. Default: ``None`` cache_enabled(bool, optional): Whether the weight cache inside autocast should be enabled. Default: ``True`` """ def __init__( self, device_type: str, dtype: Optional[_dtype] = None, enabled: bool = True, cache_enabled: Optional[bool] = None, ): if not isinstance(device_type, str): raise ValueError( f"Expected `device_type` of type `str`, got: `{type(device_type)}`" ) if dtype is None: dtype = torch.get_autocast_dtype(device_type) if torch._jit_internal.is_scripting(): self._enabled = enabled self.device = device_type self.fast_dtype = dtype assert dtype is not None return self.device = device_type if not is_autocast_available(self.device): raise RuntimeError( f"User specified an unsupported autocast device_type '{self.device}'" ) self.custom_backend_name = torch._C._get_privateuse1_backend_name() self.fast_dtype = torch.get_autocast_dtype(self.device) if self.device == self.custom_backend_name: necessary_funcs = [ "get_amp_supported_dtype", ] message = f"Tried to use AMP with the `{self.custom_backend_name}` backend, but the backend has not " message += "registered a module or the module miss some necessary funcs. The backend should register " message += "a module by `torch._register_device_module`, and the module must have these funcs: \n" message += "`get_amp_supported_dtype() -> List[torch.dtype]`. \n" assert hasattr(torch, self.custom_backend_name), message self.custom_device_mod = getattr(torch, self.custom_backend_name) for func in necessary_funcs: assert hasattr(self.custom_device_mod, func), ( message + f"But the func `{func}` is missing. \n" ) self._cache_enabled = torch.is_autocast_cache_enabled() if ( enabled and torch.cuda.amp.common.amp_definitely_not_available() and self.device == "cuda" ): warnings.warn( "User provided device_type of 'cuda', but CUDA is not available. Disabling" ) enabled = False if dtype is not None: self.fast_dtype = dtype if cache_enabled is not None: self._cache_enabled = cache_enabled if self.device == "cpu": supported_dtype = [torch.bfloat16, torch.float16] if self.fast_dtype not in supported_dtype and enabled: error_message = "In CPU autocast, but the target dtype is not supported. Disabling autocast.\n" error_message += "CPU Autocast only supports dtype of " error_message += ( ", ".join(str(dtype) for dtype in supported_dtype) + " currently." ) warnings.warn(error_message) enabled = False elif self.device == "xpu": supported_dtype = [torch.bfloat16, torch.float16] if self.fast_dtype not in supported_dtype: error_message = "In XPU autocast, but the target dtype is not supported. Disabling autocast.\n" error_message += "XPU Autocast only supports dtypes of torch.bfloat16 and torch.float16 currently." warnings.warn(error_message) enabled = False elif self.device == "ipu": supported_dtypes = [torch.bfloat16, torch.float16] if self.fast_dtype not in supported_dtypes: error_message = "In IPU autocast, but the target dtype is not supported. Disabling autocast.\n" error_message += "IPU Autocast only supports dtypes of torch.bfloat16 and torch.float16 currently." warnings.warn(error_message) enabled = False elif self.device == "hpu": supported_dtype = [torch.bfloat16, torch.float16] if self.fast_dtype not in supported_dtype: error_message = "In HPU autocast, but the target dtype is not supported. Disabling autocast.\n" error_message += "HPU Autocast only supports dtypes of torch.bfloat16 and torch.float16 currently." warnings.warn(error_message) enabled = False elif self.device == self.custom_backend_name: supported_dtype = self.custom_device_mod.get_amp_supported_dtype() if self.fast_dtype not in supported_dtype: error_message = f"In {self.custom_backend_name} autocast, but the target dtype is not supported. " error_message += f"Disabling autocast.\n {self.custom_backend_name} Autocast only supports dtypes of " error_message += ( ", ".join(str(dtype) for dtype in supported_dtype) + " currently." ) warnings.warn(error_message) enabled = False elif self.device == "cuda": if ( enabled and self.fast_dtype == torch.bfloat16 and not torch.cuda.is_bf16_supported() ): raise RuntimeError( "Current CUDA Device does not support bfloat16. Please switch dtype to float16." ) elif self.device == "xla": supported_dtype = [torch.float16, torch.bfloat16] if self.fast_dtype not in supported_dtype: error_message = "In XLA autocast, but the target dtype is not supported. Disabling autocast.\n" error_message += ( "XLA Autocast only supports dtype of torch.bfloat16 currently." ) warnings.warn(error_message) enabled = False self._enabled = enabled def __enter__(self): if torch._jit_internal.is_scripting(): assert self.fast_dtype is not None return self self.prev_cache_enabled = torch.is_autocast_cache_enabled() self.prev = torch.is_autocast_enabled(self.device) self.prev_fastdtype = torch.get_autocast_dtype(self.device) torch.set_autocast_enabled(self.device, self._enabled) torch.set_autocast_dtype(self.device, self.fast_dtype) # type: ignore[arg-type] torch.autocast_increment_nesting() torch.set_autocast_cache_enabled(self._cache_enabled) def __exit__(self, exc_type: Any, exc_val: Any, exc_tb: Any): # type: ignore[override] if torch._jit_internal.is_scripting(): return # Drop the cache when we exit to a nesting level that's outside any instance of autocast. if torch.autocast_decrement_nesting() == 0: torch.clear_autocast_cache() torch.set_autocast_enabled(self.device, self.prev) torch.set_autocast_dtype(self.device, self.prev_fastdtype) torch.set_autocast_cache_enabled(self.prev_cache_enabled) return False def __call__(self, func): if torch._jit_internal.is_scripting(): return func return autocast_decorator(self, func)
# These functions aren't meant for public usage. # They are what we trace into a graph during pre_dispatch tracing # when we encounter an autocast context manager. def _enter_autocast(*vals): # For pre-dispatch tracing, if a TorchFunction mode is active, we'll want to trace this into a graph. if torch._C._is_torch_function_mode_enabled(): return torch.overrides.handle_torch_function( torch.amp._enter_autocast, [], *vals ) mode = torch.amp.autocast(*vals) mode.__enter__() return mode def _exit_autocast(mode): if torch._C._is_torch_function_mode_enabled(): return torch.overrides.handle_torch_function(torch.amp._exit_autocast, [], mode) mode.__exit__(None, None, None) # Casts Tensors and containers of Tensors. Special-cases passthroughs for strings and np.ndarrays, which # may be falsely detected as "Iterables." def _cast(value, device_type: str, dtype: _dtype): if isinstance(value, torch.Tensor): is_eligible = ( value.is_floating_point() and value.device.type == device_type and (value.dtype is not torch.float64) ) return value.to(dtype) if is_eligible else value elif isinstance(value, (str, bytes)): return value elif HAS_NUMPY and isinstance(value, np.ndarray): return value elif isinstance(value, collections.abc.Mapping): return { _cast(k, device_type, dtype): _cast(v, device_type, dtype) for k, v in value.items() } elif isinstance(value, collections.abc.Iterable): iterable = (_cast(v, device_type, dtype) for v in value) if isinstance(value, (list, tuple)): return type(value)(iterable) else: return iterable else: return value
[docs]def custom_fwd( fwd=None, *, device_type: str, cast_inputs: Optional[_dtype] = None, ): """ Create a helper decorator for ``forward`` methods of custom autograd functions. Autograd functions are subclasses of :class:`torch.autograd.Function`. See the :ref:`example page<amp-custom-examples>` for more detail. Args: device_type(str): Device type to use. 'cuda', 'cpu', 'xpu' and so on. The type is the same as the `type` attribute of a :class:`torch.device`. Thus, you may obtain the device type of a tensor using `Tensor.device.type`. cast_inputs (:class:`torch.dtype` or None, optional, default=None): If not ``None``, when ``forward`` runs in an autocast-enabled region, casts incoming floating-point Tensors to the target dtype (non-floating-point Tensors are not affected), then executes ``forward`` with autocast disabled. If ``None``, ``forward``'s internal ops execute with the current autocast state. .. note:: If the decorated ``forward`` is called outside an autocast-enabled region, :func:`custom_fwd<custom_fwd>` is a no-op and ``cast_inputs`` has no effect. """ if not isinstance(device_type, str): raise ValueError( f"Expected `device_type` of type `str`, got: `{type(device_type)}`" ) if fwd is None: return functools.partial( custom_fwd, device_type=device_type, cast_inputs=cast_inputs ) @functools.wraps(fwd) def decorate_fwd(*args, **kwargs): args[0]._dtype = torch.get_autocast_dtype(device_type) if cast_inputs is None: args[0]._fwd_used_autocast = torch.is_autocast_enabled(device_type) return fwd(*args, **kwargs) else: autocast_context = torch.is_autocast_enabled(device_type) args[0]._fwd_used_autocast = False if autocast_context: with autocast(device_type=device_type, enabled=False): return fwd( *_cast(args, device_type, cast_inputs), **_cast(kwargs, device_type, cast_inputs), ) else: return fwd(*args, **kwargs) return decorate_fwd
# Autograd ensures incoming gradients are the same type as forward outputs. Allowing a separate # cast_inputs argument on custom_bwd is unnecessary and could cause errors if it doesn't match # cast_inputs supplied to custom_fwd.
[docs]def custom_bwd(bwd=None, *, device_type: str): """Create a helper decorator for backward methods of custom autograd functions. Autograd functions are subclasses of :class:`torch.autograd.Function`. Ensures that ``backward`` executes with the same autocast state as ``forward``. See the :ref:`example page<amp-custom-examples>` for more detail. Args: device_type(str): Device type to use. 'cuda', 'cpu', 'xpu' and so on. The type is the same as the `type` attribute of a :class:`torch.device`. Thus, you may obtain the device type of a tensor using `Tensor.device.type`. """ if not isinstance(device_type, str): raise ValueError( f"Expected `device_type` of type `str`, got: `{type(device_type)}`" ) if bwd is None: return functools.partial(custom_bwd, device_type=device_type) @functools.wraps(bwd) def decorate_bwd(*args, **kwargs): with autocast( device_type=device_type, enabled=args[0]._fwd_used_autocast, dtype=args[0]._dtype, ): return bwd(*args, **kwargs) return decorate_bwd

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