Skip to content
/ haste Public

Haste: a fast, simple, and open RNN library

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

lmnt-com/haste

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

83 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation


GitHub release (latest SemVer including pre-releases) Open In Colab GitHub

We're hiring! If you like what we're building here, come join us at LMNT.

Haste is a CUDA implementation of fused RNN layers with built-in DropConnect and Zoneout regularization. These layers are exposed through C++ and Python APIs for easy integration into your own projects or machine learning frameworks.

Which RNN types are supported?

What's included in this project?

  • a standalone C++ API (libhaste)
  • a TensorFlow Python API (haste_tf)
  • a PyTorch API (haste_pytorch)
  • examples for writing your own custom C++ inference / training code using libhaste
  • benchmarking programs to evaluate the performance of RNN implementations

For questions or feedback about Haste, please open an issue on GitHub or send us an email at [email protected].

Install

Here's what you'll need to get started:

Once you have the prerequisites, you can install with pip or by building the source code.

Using pip

pip install haste_pytorch
pip install haste_tf

Building from source

make               # Build everything
make haste         # ;) Build C++ API
make haste_tf      # Build TensorFlow API
make haste_pytorch # Build PyTorch API
make examples
make benchmarks

If you built the TensorFlow or PyTorch API, install it with pip:

pip install haste_tf-*.whl
pip install haste_pytorch-*.whl

If the CUDA Toolkit that you're building against is not in /usr/local/cuda, you must specify the $CUDA_HOME environment variable before running make:

CUDA_HOME=/usr/local/cuda-10.2 make

Performance

Our LSTM and GRU benchmarks indicate that Haste has the fastest publicly available implementation for nearly all problem sizes. The following charts show our LSTM results, but the GRU results are qualitatively similar.

Here is our complete LSTM benchmark result grid:
N=1 C=64 N=1 C=128 N=1 C=256 N=1 C=512
N=32 C=64 N=32 C=128 N=32 C=256 N=32 C=512
N=64 C=64 N=64 C=128 N=64 C=256 N=64 C=512
N=128 C=64 N=128 C=128 N=128 C=256 N=128 C=512

Documentation

TensorFlow API

import haste_tf as haste

gru_layer = haste.GRU(num_units=256, direction='bidirectional', zoneout=0.1, dropout=0.05)
indrnn_layer = haste.IndRNN(num_units=256, direction='bidirectional', zoneout=0.1)
lstm_layer = haste.LSTM(num_units=256, direction='bidirectional', zoneout=0.1, dropout=0.05)
norm_gru_layer = haste.LayerNormGRU(num_units=256, direction='bidirectional', zoneout=0.1, dropout=0.05)
norm_lstm_layer = haste.LayerNormLSTM(num_units=256, direction='bidirectional', zoneout=0.1, dropout=0.05)

# `x` is a tensor with shape [N,T,C]
x = tf.random.normal([5, 25, 128])

y, state = gru_layer(x, training=True)
y, state = indrnn_layer(x, training=True)
y, state = lstm_layer(x, training=True)
y, state = norm_gru_layer(x, training=True)
y, state = norm_lstm_layer(x, training=True)

The TensorFlow Python API is documented in docs/tf/haste_tf.md.

PyTorch API

import torch
import haste_pytorch as haste

gru_layer = haste.GRU(input_size=128, hidden_size=256, zoneout=0.1, dropout=0.05)
indrnn_layer = haste.IndRNN(input_size=128, hidden_size=256, zoneout=0.1)
lstm_layer = haste.LSTM(input_size=128, hidden_size=256, zoneout=0.1, dropout=0.05)
norm_gru_layer = haste.LayerNormGRU(input_size=128, hidden_size=256, zoneout=0.1, dropout=0.05)
norm_lstm_layer = haste.LayerNormLSTM(input_size=128, hidden_size=256, zoneout=0.1, dropout=0.05)

gru_layer.cuda()
indrnn_layer.cuda()
lstm_layer.cuda()
norm_gru_layer.cuda()
norm_lstm_layer.cuda()

# `x` is a CUDA tensor with shape [T,N,C]
x = torch.rand([25, 5, 128]).cuda()

y, state = gru_layer(x)
y, state = indrnn_layer(x)
y, state = lstm_layer(x)
y, state = norm_gru_layer(x)
y, state = norm_lstm_layer(x)

The PyTorch API is documented in docs/pytorch/haste_pytorch.md.

C++ API

The C++ API is documented in lib/haste/*.h and there are code samples in examples/.

Code layout

  • benchmarks/: programs to evaluate performance of RNN implementations
  • docs/tf/: API reference documentation for haste_tf
  • docs/pytorch/: API reference documentation for haste_pytorch
  • examples/: examples for writing your own C++ inference / training code using libhaste
  • frameworks/tf/: TensorFlow Python API and custom op code
  • frameworks/pytorch/: PyTorch API and custom op code
  • lib/: CUDA kernels and C++ API
  • validation/: scripts to validate output and gradients of RNN layers

Implementation notes

  • the GRU implementation is based on 1406.1078v1 (same as cuDNN) rather than 1406.1078v3
  • Zoneout on LSTM cells is applied to the hidden state only, and not the cell state
  • the layer normalized LSTM implementation uses these equations

References

  1. Hochreiter, S., & Schmidhuber, J. (1997). Long Short-Term Memory. Neural Computation, 9(8), 1735–1780. https://doi.org/10.1162/neco.1997.9.8.1735
  2. Cho, K., van Merrienboer, B., Gulcehre, C., Bahdanau, D., Bougares, F., Schwenk, H., & Bengio, Y. (2014). Learning Phrase Representations using RNN Encoder-Decoder for Statistical Machine Translation. arXiv:1406.1078 [cs, stat]. http://arxiv.org/abs/1406.1078.
  3. Wan, L., Zeiler, M., Zhang, S., Cun, Y. L., & Fergus, R. (2013). Regularization of Neural Networks using DropConnect. In International Conference on Machine Learning (pp. 1058–1066). Presented at the International Conference on Machine Learning. http://proceedings.mlr.press/v28/wan13.html.
  4. Krueger, D., Maharaj, T., Kramár, J., Pezeshki, M., Ballas, N., Ke, N. R., et al. (2017). Zoneout: Regularizing RNNs by Randomly Preserving Hidden Activations. arXiv:1606.01305 [cs]. http://arxiv.org/abs/1606.01305.
  5. Ba, J., Kiros, J.R., & Hinton, G.E. (2016). Layer Normalization. arXiv:1607.06450 [cs, stat]. https://arxiv.org/abs/1607.06450.
  6. Li, S., Li, W., Cook, C., Zhu, C., & Gao, Y. (2018). Independently Recurrent Neural Network (IndRNN): Building A Longer and Deeper RNN. arXiv:1803.04831 [cs]. http://arxiv.org/abs/1803.04831.

Citing this work

To cite this work, please use the following BibTeX entry:

@misc{haste2020,
  title  = {Haste: a fast, simple, and open RNN library},
  author = {Sharvil Nanavati},
  year   = 2020,
  month  = "Jan",
  howpublished = {\url{https://github.com/lmnt-com/haste/}},
}

License

Apache 2.0